Thursday, December 21, 2023

Holiday Special Post! Magnetic Tape and IP Are Disappointing Star Wars Fans

Let's talk about copyright, and in particular, Star Wars.

For those who may not know, Star Wars is among the most valuable franchises, and has more IP than I'd care to try to list. And while the franchise spans games, toys, books, TV shows, clothing, amusement parks, and probably food items, it all stemmed from a project in the 1970s that came with no small amount of scorn and doubt. 

Today, we all know and love the original Star Wars movie (later A New Hope), copyright 1977. However, many have only seen specific edited versions, or "special editions", that came later. In fact, there aren't a lot of viewable copies of a widescreen (normal. Today that's just normal.) original version. That is something of a collector's item--and not just according to the label.

Yes, dear readers, I have a copy of the original trilogy on VHS in widescreen. 

An image of a boxed set of the original Star Wars movie trilogy on VHS tapes, widescreen version
Widescreen was once an optional format
And, like many people, I would like to own that version on a slightly more contemporary media format. Why I can't purchase it on DVD or stream it is another story. Briefly, after editing his films Lucas didn't want the older version distributed, meaning that I might be able to find a bootlegged version or a non-professionally edited copy, but not the true originals. 

So, with help from the staff in the Digital Media Commons (shout out to Ian), I decided that this slow time of year was perfect to transfer it to DVD. [Look, I know that it's copyrighted material and I am pretty familiar with the basics of copyright; but I didn't intend sell, distribute, show in public, etc. the DVD. I just wanted to be able to watch my movies at home.]

An image of a message on a screen that says copying is not allowed, shown over the Star Wars typeface font
Bad news, fans

As it turns out, someone foresaw this type of activity, and there's a built-in mechanism that prevented me from making a DVD copy. Apparently, a part of the magnetic tape has been encoded. This is distressing because VHS has a fairly short shelf-life, and there aren't many players left that don't destroy or damage a tape due to age. Furthermore, finding a VHS player that is compatible with modern TVs or screens is challenging, and becoming impossible. Even the converters are harder to find, and tend to be more unreliable.

An image of a boxed set of the original Star Wars movie trilogy on VHS tapes, showing the three tapes boxes
A boxed set of sci-fi, space drama joy, a Collector's Edition!
What is most frustrating about this, in my opinion, is how many times people likely recorded the movies from onto VHS, or Tivos, or whatever, back in the day. This fairly common practice clearly never affected the value of the original property. I mean, it's worth billions! People attempting to make a copy of this specific VHS could not have been widespread enough to affect the overall value of the Star Wars franchise, either. 

Here's some potential evidence for my reasoning that people who recorded Star Wars material haven't destroyed the value of the original.

In 1978, there was a televised event, the Star Wars Holiday Special. It was made to capitalize on the success of Star Wars, and also the holiday season. It was aired a single time, because it was simply just so awful. In fact, the people behind it did their best to try to forget it ever happened and hope that the rest of the world would, too.

Well, people don't always forget things, and fortuitously (?), some viewer decided to record the Holiday Special. As one might expect, the advent of the internet and the web led to it turning up online, and the Holiday Special had quite the renaissance decades later. It feels like only one copy of it was ever retained, because most of us have seen an ad for a local news report after the special. Who knows, maybe someone has the original shots and tapes somewhere. But given Lucas' opinion and attitude towards the Holiday Special (which is allegedly that he was mostly uninvolved and wasn't it awful what those TV people did?), it is no surprise that he didn't have his company distribute copies.

Despite the train wreck that is the Holiday Special and its refusal to die, Star Wars didn't lose any of its value. Not even immediately following the international airing of it, and almost universal bad reviews. The later bootleg versions that so many of us fans have seen haven't tarnished the value, either. 

So why stymie fans like myself, who just want a semi-modern copy of movies they love? We aren't a large enough force to impact the value of Star Wars, and never have been. By the time this collectors' edition was released, all three films had been out for years, and available on multiple media formats.

An image of a boxed set of the original Star Wars movie trilogy on VHS tapes, showing the three tapes boxes and the VHS for the first movie
A VHS I failed to copy today
I'm going to assume that perhaps most commercially made VHS of a similar quality has these built-in safeguards, and that it isn't just Lucasfilm or 20th Century Fox being particularly cruel about their IP. Perhaps it was standard manufacturing process to include.

I'm still mad, though. I was planning on watching the movies during the break.

Monday, December 11, 2023

The Mystery of the Hy Jacker

We're Texans here at Rice, and Texans love their cowboy boots. But something not everyone knows about cowboy boots is that they can be hard to remove.

During a conversation with a colleague from Rice's Lilie, I learned about the greatest boot jack ever sold: a transportable, fold-able, metal boot jack. She found it on Ebay, and asked me what the "patent pending" inscription meant.

It's hard to say without some. First, a product can only claim to have a patent pending if it meets a couple of criteria. At the most basic, some kind of patent application needs to have been filed. However, it could be either a provisional patent application or a regular (or nonprovisional) utility patent application. Without getting too deep into the technicalities and legal side of things, a provisional patent application is an unexamined version of an application that acts similar to a placeholder. Someone might file this before seeking out investors or clients, to ensure their claim on an invention is valid. After all, patents are granted to the first to file, and only inventions undisclosed prior to the patent process are patentable. Applicants then have 12 months (with some exceptions) to file the nonprovisional utility patent application, which is examined and can lead to obtaining a patent. 

Inventions that have a nonprovisional utility patent application on file can claim to have a patent pending, but might also say "patent applied for". [I suspect that "patent applied for" may be avoided because it is longer and just doesn't sound quite as good. Alliterations are appealing.]

However, her real interest was if it was too niche of a product, because if this boot jack was granted a patent, wouldn't it be easier to find? Perhaps more common on the market and not just a vintage listing?

Well, this got me wondering about the fate of the Hy Jacker and its patent. I did a basic preliminary search for portable, foldable boot jacks on Lens.org, and found one potential match. Yet, as my colleague had also learned from her own brief Lens search, this was not the same invention. She subsequently sent me a link with images of the Hy Jacker for reference.

A photo of the base of the Hy Jacker that shows an inscription of the Hy Jacker registered trademark and the words patent pending
The Hy Jacker's IP inscription
This is where the search heated up a little, and made its way into potential blog post territory.

I immediately noticed that right above "patent pending" was inscribed Hy Jacker, complete with federal registration mark.

A photo of the base of the Hy Jacker that shows an inscription of the Hy Jacker registered trademark and the words patent pending
Another view of the same part

Ah ha! With that, I could potentially search the trademark database for information on the manufacturer, which might give me a concrete piece of information to use in a patent search.

I might teach most people how to perform keyword patent searches, but if you ever have specific information on a patent, use it. That is much easier; save your keywords for discovery searches.

Finding the Hy Jacker trademark record was fairly easy. Issued registration number 1255353 in 1983, Hy Jacker® had a fairly short life as a federally registered mark. It was cancelled in 1990, for failure to file an acceptable declaration under Section 8. Which means, essentially, that the owners did not inform the USPTO it was still in use. (Or not in use under certain acceptable special circumstances, as it may be.) Since there are no documents available through the TSDR, it is hard to learn further details about the fate of the Hy Jacker® trademark.

An stylized text image of the words hy jacker from the trademark registration record for the hy jacker
Word image on the registration certificate and record
What we do gain is information on the name of the company and its location. If a patent was ever issued, this will help us. 

Unfortunately, we also learned that this product was probably manufactured between 1983 and 1990, so if it never was granted a patent, we may not be able to find much. Patent Public Search only has nonprovisional patent applications post March 2001. There are other resources that might have patent applications prior to that, but none of them have databases of provisional applications. 

VOILÀ! Our luck held! A quick session with Patent Public Search revealed that the Hy Jacker® received two patents, around the same time the trademark was registered. It was granted one utility and one design patent. 

An image of results from a Patent Public Search that shows a design and utility patent issued for a collapsible bootjack to HyJacker Products
Patent Public Search isn't for everyone, but I'm a librarian so I like query syntax
And, my colleague at Lilie may be in luck, too: these patents are definitely expired... she should get some of her entrepreneurship contacts on board with recreating the Hy Jacker®! 

Now, I don't know the fate of the Hy Jacker® company, but it seems to have been a sad one. It appears to have failed within a few years, maybe because the market wasn't large enough, or saturation was reached too quickly with a long-lasting product, or if perhaps the inventor (Robert C. McCormick) or the business ran out of money after registering too much IP too quickly. So it might not be a great idea to restart a business based on this product. But at the very least, she could have a few more made without fear of IP infringement.

Mystery solved, folks. Got any other IP cold cases? Your PTRC Rep is just a message/phone call away from closure.

Monday, December 4, 2023

AI Is Getting Better...

A quick update post: generative AIs are improving. If you review some of my previous posts about their ability to perform some of my tasks, patent searches in particular, you'll recall that the most basic available tools (ChatGPT 3, for example) failed abysmally in all respects. 

From there, they improved slightly, but most still were unable to produce accurate results, if any.

After testing a few more recent iterations, I found some improvements. The best so far is from Perplexity.ai, which produced one set of search results, to an extent: 

A screen capture of Perplexity.ai's response to the question "is there a patent for a new silicone hydrogel material for contact lenses?"  that includes 5 results
At least there are results and they mostly make sense

Of course, if you're familiar with US patents, you've likely spotted that some of these aren't truly recent--we surpassed patent 11 million in the US in May of 2021, so patent no. 6,861,123 is... old. Three are also patent applications, from 2021, 2023, and 2014. One is almost a decade old, and potentially none have been granted.

I tried a more specific prompt, hoping for less generic results, and that was just too much to handle:

A screen shot of Perplexity.ai's answer to "Can you search for patents related to contact lens materials, made of silicone hydrogel, with an extremely high oxygen permeability?" that does not provide any answers
Generative AI is really amateur compared to a librarian

However, it is worth noting that Perplexity.ai always provides sources.

Also, generative AI clearly isn't meant to replace advanced searching. Maybe one day.