TiVo Files Patent For RFID Schema 129
JamesAlfaro wrote to mention an article on the site TechWeb, which reports that Tivo has filed a patent for an RFID-based preferences schema. From the article: "The multimedia mobile personalization system would have a remote control that recognizes the viewer's RFID tag closest to the PVR. The remote control identifies and notifies the multimedia device through the RFID chip in the person's clothing or body to tailor the media content to their preferences. The remote control device would identify and link the viewer to the system using an 'RFID tag that is attached to a key ring, necklace, watch, in his wallet, or even a sub dermal tag inserted somewhere in the user's body.'"
Massive technological overkill (Score:5, Insightful)
Because choosing preferences onscreen or by pressing a button on a remote control is so labour-intensive and laborious. It's a wonder mankind manages to use things as they are.
Re:Massive technological overkill (Score:5, Funny)
"It appears that Tom has entered the room. Shall I switch to Channel 54 - HotTeenAnal?"
Re:Massive technological overkill (Score:2)
What I want to know is what happens if two different people are both in the room with RFID?
Could you hide an RFID tag in someones living room that always goes to porn? (or MTV, which judging by the current quality of music may be more embarassing to be caught watching)
How about hijacking preferences, so the Tivo thinks Susy's preference is always the nature channel?
And if we are all walking around with RFID tags embedded in us, who else could track/find us?
Re:Massive technological overkill (Score:2)
Re:Massive technological overkill (Score:2, Interesting)
My point is: Your kind of argument is soooo lame, it is even lamer than TiVo's patent.
Re:Massive technological overkill (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Massive technological overkill (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Massive technological overkill (Score:2)
Re:Massive technological overkill (Score:2, Interesting)
1. Security. I don't want my girlfriend to be able to change my preferences. I don't want visitors (kids and/or family) to be able to select my "super ultra hardcore porn channel".
2. Speed. When I grab the remote with RFID-scanner my tv instantly knows who I am. I don't have to go through a list of users.
Disclamer: I actually don't think RFID is the best solution for this 'problem'. I think face-recognition is way better.
Re:Massive technological overkill (Score:1)
Re:Massive technological overkill (Score:1)
Re:Massive technological overkill (Score:2)
Then really you need password-protected preferences settings, not RFID recognition. The device doesn't detect the user's identity, but the serial number of an electronic tag. Your watch or necklace or whatever is easy to steal, so this is less secure than typing in a PIN on a remote to change prefs.
As the patent says, the preferences are stored local to the machine, not on the RFID tag. The tag only contains a serial number (cos that's
The ID Monster? (Score:2)
A "massive technological overkill" is only that one step too far which shatters the achievements from a few thousand years of civilisation. Replacing remote controls by tagging eve
Re:The ID Monster? (Score:1)
-1 too many irrational emotional appeals
Even your use of bold font seems shocked, outraged, and over the top. I just can't take it seriously.
Sorry to everyone I was about to mod up, but it had to be said.
Re:Massive technological overkill (Score:1)
Just Overkill (Score:4, Funny)
I do
Re:Just Overkill (Score:2, Insightful)
With hundreds of channel it really isn't convenient to use little up/down arrows on the television anymore - effectively the user interface is borked if you don't have the remote. Neither of my DVD players will allow me to play a DVD without the remotes (they have a play button, but no method of choosing items on the DVD menu).
Re:Just Overkill (Score:4, Interesting)
This brings up an issue which has always bugged me: Why don't they put a 'page' button on the set so you can FIND the damned remote? Geeze. This seems like a no-brainer to me.
Mod Parent Up (Score:1)
Re:Just Overkill (Score:1)
http://www.keyringer.com/ [keyringer.com]
http://www.sharperimageeurope.com/iu667.html [sharperimageeurope.com]
http://www.findonefindall.com/ [findonefindall.com]
finally...
http://www.magnavox.com/index.cfm [magnavox.com]
Re:Just Overkill (Score:2)
I also got to play Phillips CD-based home entertainment/video game console that had IR (or RF?) wireless controllers with PS dual-shock style controllers (without the force feedbac
Re:Just Overkill (Score:2)
That's what the Play button is for. Pushing it is the same as choosing "play movie" on the front menu. At least that's what happens on my DVD player.
Re:Just Overkill (Score:1)
It does this on neither of my DVD players (a Pioneer and a Toshiba). On both that simply plays the initial DVD, but then it sits on the main menu where the play button does nothing (actually both of them put a "what are you? A dumbass? It is playing" icon on the screen when you press it at the menu).
Re:Just Overkill (Score:2)
Re:Just Overkill (Score:1)
Re:Just Overkill (Score:2)
Re:Just Overkill (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Must be a parallel universe you live in (Score:2)
Re:Just Overkill (Score:2)
Re:Massive technological overkill (Score:2)
When I first got a TiVo, I hung around on some TiVo community messageboards. One of the boards solicited suggestions for new features, and "profiles for multiple users" was on the list of suggestions they'd seen plenty of times before, and didn't want to get again thanks.
It makes absolute sense to me for TiVo to support multiple profiles: if one person in the house loves soaps, and the other hates them, surely TiVo should b
Re:Massive technological overkill (Score:2)
TiVo probably could make a lot more money selling personalized remotes. Each remote could be coded by something like a dipswitch in the battery compartment. This would make it possible, but somewhat inconvenient, to have personal prefs.
A lot of people would just buy additional remotes for all of their family members, and even faceplates like the ones used on cellphones. This leads u
Re:Massive technological overkill (Score:2)
Action: Find anything related to Jeans and Walmart
Re:Massive technological overkill (Score:1)
It used to be TiVo might think you're gay. Now it out's you!
Re:Massive technological overkill (Score:1)
Re:Massive technological overkill (Score:2)
And for those of you who will get the Simpsons reference: The Tivo, The!
FRIST PSOT (Score:2, Informative)
Cor, that feels great, I've always wanted to do that.
Ert, sub-dermal tag? (Score:2, Insightful)
I'll be getting off the ride now thanks!! I know they want to cover that in their patent but it gives me the creeps.
Well... (Score:2)
Re:Well... (Score:1)
Re:Well... (Score:1)
Re:Well... (Score:2)
Re:Well... (Score:2)
Re:Well... (Score:3, Funny)
What? That's old hat. Now they inject you with tiny men, like on Fantastic Voyage, and they speak words of wisdom when "the others" become mean and nasty...
They tried to tell me it was some kind of schizophrenia or something but I scoff at their "medical science". I know the great Cthulhu is just helping me do what's best for me.
Where did I put that chainsaw.... hmmmm....
Re:Well... (Score:2)
Re:Well... (Score:2)
Unique IDs, national ID cards, RFID tags... they don't suddenly let people track you. I've just turned 18, and currently carry so many things which I can be traced with / be profiled on it's obscene. Phone, debit card, ID, drivers licence, BCU member card, Connexions card, student card and more. I have tens if not hundreds of different ID numbers and all I want is one bloody card to carry around instead of the usual 20.
Whilst privacy nuts may shout and scream about single ID, all it d
Privacy nuts (Score:2)
Re:Ert, sub-dermal tag? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Ert, sub-dermal tag? (Score:2)
Re:Ert, sub-dermal tag? (Score:2)
But I have a better idea. Those little fingerprint readers would be perfect for this. Y'know, like the ones used on the blackdog linux box or on the security mice. I mean you've got the remote in your hand, you're touching it with your fingertip, why not just read the finger that's holding the remote or pushing the button? No external hardware required.
Screw 'em, I think I'll patent this.
lame (Score:3, Insightful)
with a system that uses a remote, why would you assume the person closest is the one whose preferences you need?
I find it humors(in a nervous laugh kind of way) that they assume we will all have rfid embedded in our cloths or person.
Re:lame (Score:2)
I remember reading about something like this (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I remember reading about something like this (Score:1)
I jest.
Slightly.
Re:I remember reading about something like this (Score:1)
Re:I remember reading about something like this (Score:2)
This patent is good (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm sorry... (Score:4, Insightful)
Recognizing an identity and reacting to it, is a primary function and obvious function of RFID. You know like using lightbulbs to illuminate your closet.
Re:I'm sorry... (Score:2)
Re:I'm sorry... (Score:2)
Not really. It's more like a patent on using paint to protect your fridge or something. The fact that RFID tags are used for identification, and the fact that TV remotes can benefit from individualized preferences do not together make the idea "obvious" for patent purposes. There must be a documented motivation to combine the technologies, or the practice of combining them must be known to a person of ordinary skill in the relev
Re:I'm sorry... (Score:1)
You claim that "There must be a documented motivation to combine the technologies, or the practice of combining them must be known to a person of ordinary skill in the relevant art." But the "person skilled in the art" clause in patent law, does not refer to an actual person who has done it before. It asks that if an im
Re:I'm sorry... (Score:3, Informative)
The original poster is 100% correct. No offense, but I have no clue where "
Re:I'm sorry... (Score:1)
I was going from the top of 35 U.S.C. 103 Conditions for patentability; non-obvious subject matter. [uspto.gov]. Which I appear to have misinterpreted.
A patent may not be obtained though the invention is not identically disclosed or described as set forth in section 102 of this title, if the differences between the subject matter sought to be patented and the prior art are such that the subject matter as a whole would have been obvious at the time the invention was made to a person having ord
Re:I'm sorry... (Score:2)
Of course that's the correct statute, but it's only a few paragraphs long. The case law and MPEP surrounding what 35 USC 103 actually means could be succinctly summarized in about 1000 pages. MPEP 2143-2144 is probably about 50 pages in print and barely scratches the surface of what is meant by "obvious".
The world would be a much simpler place if every citizen could read the statutes and understand what they mean. Unfortunately, it's just not so. The definition
Re:I'm sorry... (Score:1)
Perhaps not the best source for law, but a http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Person_having_ordinar y_skill_in_the_art#The_Federal_Circuit [wikipedia.org]">wikipedia article sugests that this is a fairly recent (last twenty years) development in Federal Circuit appeals, called the "suggestion test", which isn't really supported in section 103. Obviously it has now made its way into the officia
Re:I'm sorry... (Score:2)
That's true. The documented motivation requirement is, as I understand it, primarily a procedural requirement that safeguards the USPTO against the appearance of favoritism or bias. If CorpA submits a patent and the USPTO seemingly arbitrarily rules that anybody could have co
Re:I'm sorry... (Score:1)
This just in... (Score:1)
IR bar code reader (Score:2)
I don't need yet another dongle or id card to carry around. Devices that have an IR port for remote control it shouldn't be that hard to add the ability to scan a bar code.
Re:IR bar code reader (Score:2)
Re:IR bar code reader (Score:2)
Re:IR bar code reader (Score:2)
Re:IR bar code reader (Score:2)
Use for targetting ads? (Score:3, Insightful)
Your remote control is now big brother...
Re:Use for targetting ads? (Score:2)
Re:Use for targetting ads? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Use for targetting ads? (Score:2)
So sort of like those cars... (Score:2)
Or really this is just another technical version of "logging in" to a personalised service, just using RF-ID as the authentication device.
Hardly novel, hardly new, its just the same technology as ever put together in a VERY slightly different way. RF-ID is already used to do automatic authentication and "personalisation" in many places today.
Love that US Patent system. I'm
Re:So sort of like those cars... (Score:2)
As Slashdotted earlier: (Score:1)
Mooooooooommmmmmm !!! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Mooooooooommmmmmm !!! (Score:4, Funny)
-Wrap Johnny in tinfoil
-Lock him in a Faraday cage
-Microwave him
-Take away the tag (if it's externally attached to Johnny)
-Remove the tag (if it's not)
Obligatory ISR... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Obligatory ISR... (Score:1)
I wish I knew how to mod you up.
Recap: (Score:2, Funny)
by LilGuy (150110) on Tuesday November 22, @06:02PM (#14091831)
Embed me please! I want never again to have to manually pay for anything, prove my identity, or set my TiVo to my preferences. Thanks.
--
Ordering food (Score:5, Funny)
by nizo (81281) on Tuesday November 22, @06:28PM (#14092075)
Actually if they can have one that broadcasts food preferences (I hate onions and pickles) we might be on to something here. I wonder if it is worth some of my privacy to not have t
Re: Recap! (Score:1)
And if multiple people are in the room? (Score:3, Interesting)
But it also brings up a good question... What if I have 3 or 4 people aprox. the same distance away from the box? For that matter, what if the person closest to the box isn't the person who should be deciding what to watch at that point in time?
But really, this is just another example of why I built my own PVR instead of going the Tivo route: They just don't seem to get what "I" want in a PVR. At the top of that list is that I don't want Tivo controlling what I watch, and what I can record (and they do both). Under that top item though are lots of other reasons as ridicuous as this idea... they just seem so out of touch with what consumers want, and instead of finding out, and tailoring their offerings to what consumers want, they kiss ass to the media companies, allowing them to dictate what Tivo users can and can't do/have.
This will NEVER actually happen... (Score:2)
Re:This will NEVER actually happen... (Score:2)
Re:This will NEVER actually happen... (Score:2)
Plus, economies of scale do not bode well for that. Let's take GPSs as an example since they're a similar technology, construction wise, although there are probably 10,000 GPS devices sold for every at range RFID reader. How much do handheld GPSs still cost, despite massive market penetration? Weren't people predicting they'd be
Come on... (Score:2)
I couldnt resist this but;... (Score:1)
1: You know this sort of thing was talked about in the bible right???!!!
2: There was a song back about 1970 by Zegar and Evans;... "In the year 2525"... Ain't gonna need no arms, ain't gonna need no hands...
The Real Reason (Score:3, Interesting)
I have felt a disturbance in the force. (Score:1)
cried out as one and all it said was hat's.
Nielsen Media Research... (Score:2)
Diagrams (Score:2, Informative)
Revelation (Score:1)
Mark of the couch potato!
Boom Chicka Boom! (Score:1)
Still no cure for cancer...
end of advertising (as we know it)? (Score:1)
Equally true, IMO, is that they could tell just how many of us leave the room (toilet/coffee/etc) during the ads. This ability could have all sorts of implications. Do they then refuse to pay so much to the carriers since most people don't view the ads, thereby raising the price of cable TV? Do they make ads even more annoying, by making them shorter, but more frequent (maybe
Patent??? (Score:1)