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I see 2 mistakes in her ruling. | 326 comments | Create New Account
Comments belong to whoever posts them. Please notify us of inappropriate comments.
I see 2 mistakes in her ruling.
Authored by: Chromatix on Thursday, January 31 2013 @ 12:21 AM EST
The wording of "substantially centred" in the claim language is to avoid implementers being able to trivially work around the patent by deliberately offsetting the box by a few pixels.

Note also that the perceptual centre of a screen (or page) can easily be some distance above the physical centre. This is well known among graphic designers. So by moving the box upwards, it would still be laterally centred and the user wouldn't notice (or might even prefer) the vertical offset.

Now, if it said "substantially centred" in the disclosure - the part which is supposed to teach how to implement the invention - then you might have a point. But cases don't tend to centre on the disclosure but the claims.

[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]

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