Archive for the ‘Non-Patent’ Category
May 13, 2009
Knocking out a patent is not at all an easy task. What you require is a very focused and constantly new ways to look for buried patents that cannot be reached using conventional techniques.
All around the world people are using keyboards to search for prior-art. Why can’t we can talk to search for relevant results. Now it looks too much
Yes we can!!!..
Audio Search.
Well we have already discussed about searching in YouTube and other Video search engines. Yes, these are very good techniques but they are again limited by keyword based search.
However, there are still ways you can catch what people are saying in these videos.
1) www.blinkx.com
Blinkx technology listens to the speech track of a given video, identifying and extracting speech tags that represent key words and phrases spoken within the video. These tags complement text metadata tags, improving the description of the video and lighting up as the corresponding words are spoken in the video. The speech tags can be used to navigate – both within the video, allowing users to jump directly to the point in a video that a word is spoken, and also from the video, as a starting point to find other relevant videos.
2) Snipp.TV
Snipp.TV has designed a user interface that addresses the unique needs of multimedia search:
1) Provides for quick results-sorting based on Spoken Tags*
2) Enables users to see "snippets" of multimedia content that includes the spoken words they were looking for
3) Provides a summarized textual representation of key words in the audio track and textual data about the file.
3) Google Audio Indexing
Google has also come up with a similar concept, but its in experimental stage and the search is only limited to videos related to Politics. I hope in future it could act as one of the biggest Audio/Video search engine.
Do remember in Patent Invalidation the idea is to identify Bang-on results!!! Traditional strategies are not going to help.
So go and get creative.. and crack every invalidation that you get.
Posted in Databases, Google, Invention, KeyString, Keywords, Language Search, Non-Patent, Patent | 3 Comments »
May 13, 2009
Ask any researcher to provide you with non-patent literature instead of patent literature and he will
Its difficult to hunt for non-patent literature instead of patent literature and this is because of many reasons.
- Non-patent world is not yet structured as patent world
- Non-availability of good search interfaces
- Non-availability of single interface for search
- Difficult to find publication (date) information of non-patent publications
- and many others…
We have talked about one non-patent search strategy which uses Google Timeline.
Another good way of analyzing non-patent is through Viewzi. Viewzi provides a preview of the dates of the web pages, which helps a lot in quickly browsing through the results.
For example, if you are searching for something related to Multi-touch screen technology, you would get results something like this:
http://www.viewzi.com/search/cronotron/multi-touch%20screen

Its easy to navigate and provides more results per page for review. A very good source for non-patent search in patent invalidation search. This can also be very useful in patentability or novelty searches.
Moreover, if Viewzi is used in landscape analysis it can provide useful information about the market and companies/authors that are active in the domain.
A very useful tool in all kind of analysis related to patents.
Posted in Databases, Date, Filing Date, Google, Non-Patent, Patent, Search Psychology | 1 Comment »
August 28, 2008
As we have discussed earlier, patent literature is not the most important mode to invalidate a patent. Products that are present in the market (from sometime) also forms a very good prior art for invalidating the patent.
I agree that not many products mention the process/methodology that are used by them internally, leave apart the technical specification available on website (as its not available for all products). Further, it becomes more important in those cases where you believe that the product must be using the technology of as claimed in the patent but you have no proof to prove the assumption.
I am assuming here that the relevant text is not available from the specification of the product as well as not much information is available on Google.
A technique that can be used in such cases to check for some references it to search on slideshare or Youtube. Since Google is not able to provide results from these websites they are always left behind.
Now, why to search in these websites. There are many inventors, R&D people, professors etc. who host their presentations or talks on these websites. If these people are connected with some product they even provide information on the technology that is being used in the product. Thats what we are looking for!!!…
Most importantly this also becomes a very important strategy for infringement analysis or licensing deals or claim charts or patent valuation etc.
Tags:infringement, Infringement Analysis, Invalidation, licensing, licensing deals, Patent, Product Infringement, Slideshare, Youtube
Posted in Google, Infringement Analysis, Inventors, Non-Patent, Patent, Product, licensing | Leave a Comment »
July 24, 2008
Can anyone search this blog with its name (“My Search Strategies“)
No?
How can you reach here if you want to? forget about the other keywords that might bring you to this place
Any idea why?
Spelling mistakes!!
This is the major reason why we and the examiners miss out lots of relevant prior art.
While choosing the name of the blog I mistyped as I was in a hurry and even after wordpress confirming the name from me 3 times I missed it (happens). Similarly, there are various patents that include such misspelled words that get missed out even after multiple quality checks.
Now next time when you search keep all possible spelling variations in mind and include all possible word variations in your (keystrings or keystrngs or keystings or kystrings).
I cracked on invalidation using this strategy. If I would have not used it, I would have never been able to identify that hidden patent!!!
“Invalidation is an art not a science”
Tags:KeyString, Keyword, Patent Errors, Spelling
Posted in Databases, KeyString, Keywords, Non-Patent, Patent, Search Psychology | 4 Comments »
July 3, 2008
Everybody want to know the answers to such questions:
Where to search?
What to search?
How to search?
But nobody think about what are the things that are not searchable or the things that would be missing in your search. Here are few that are listed by Greg on his website.
What’s Not Included
Search engines include millions of pages in their databases, but none of them come close to indexing the entire Web, much less the entire Internet. Here is a list of some of what is missing:
The content in sites requiring a log in
CGI output such as data requested by a form
Intranets; pages not linked from anywhere else
Commercial resources with domain limitations
Sites that use a robots.txt file to keep files and/or directories off limits
Non-Web resources
Thats why I always say that even if you have not found anything in your search, it doesn’t mean that the patent cannot be invalidated. There are still lots of things that are/maybe present which are not seachable.
The same things applied for patentability search.
Tags:Google, Invalidation, Non-Patent, Patentability
Posted in Databases, Google, Invention, Non-Patent, Search Psychology | Leave a Comment »
June 30, 2008
During Invalidation sometime it becomes very difficult to hunt for non-patent references on Google. As Google provide results based on the page rank.
A very good technique to avoid this problem is by using Timeline View from Google Experimental Lab.

You need to go to Experimental Lab of Google and join the Timeline view experiment. Thereafter, all the search that you will conduct on Google will be performed under this experiment.

Advantages:
Good tool in Patentability and Invalidations
Good tool for conducting market analysis for a patent
Good tool for identifying the growth in a particular technology
Good tool for learning about history of a particular invention/product
Good tool for identifying the lauch of a particular product
A timeline chart showing the growth or drop in number of results
Please note that the results shown under a particular year in the chart doesn’t implies that they were published in that particular year. For example, the result talking about a technology in 1995 doesn’t implies that reference was published in 1995. But it provides enough hints to modify the future search to reach the exact reference for that particular year.
Tags:Google, Google Experiment, Invalidation, Non-Patent, Patentability Search, Priority Date, Time
Posted in Filing Date, Google, Non-Patent, Patent, Priority Date, Search Psychology | 1 Comment »
August 29, 2007
There are many high quality technical newsletters available across the internet. Some of them are developed by highly skilled people in the domain.
The strategy is:
+ Create an emailID or a feed reader specific to a technology
+ After some time within 6-12 months your email ID will be ready to be used as your own search engine with high quality database.
The advatage of this strategy is that it exposes the things that are not easily searchable (the content of these newsletters doesn’t appear in search engines such as Google). Moreover, these news letters covers information about all the latest technologies and eminent people/scientist/companies that exists in the domain.
Therefore, these newsletters will provide us a way to find out invenors and the companies who are active in a particular technology.
This strategy could be best used for a patentability search.
I would call this as collective intelligence. (using information collected by intelligent people in searching)
Posted in Non-Patent, Patent | Leave a Comment »