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IAAL. Yep, it has been initially classified by the USPTO as belonging to class 705, which is for business methods.


Title is misleading. It's not a patent, rather it's a published patent application. But, yeah, it's dumb...


why is it dumb? There has been studies about how people make better decisions about the future if they can see their future self, otherwise people treat their future self as "some other dude/gal".

as if your future self is "another person" that can deal with whatever happens, and its really not much of your concern.


I respect your opinion and don't question the alleged research. But, I personally can't imagine being persuaded to invest in an IRA based on a gimmicky face aging tool. See aerovistae's above comment on the real world application.


"That's a problem for Future Homer. Man, I don't envy that guy."

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jQvvmT3ab80


1. This is merely a published patent application, and not an issued patent. An inventor may file a patent application that claims whatever he/she wants. An application has no legal effect until it has been examined and issued by the USPTO.

2. This particular patent application claims priority to a patent application filed on November 28, 2000. This means that any prior art must have been published before that date. It does not appear that your links contains any such prior art.

I know it is quite popular on the Internet to criticize the USPTO for its perceived "incompetence", but please make sure that you have the "competence" of understanding the basics of the US patent application process before making disparaging remarks.


Yeah, I get the distinction between "applied" and "granted". The old link had less information, without further searching around for the casual reader. The fact that 16 out of 17 claims had been mentioned as invalidated, but still leaving one remaining, was suggestive of part of the patent being granted.

Are you claiming the USPO doesn't grant overreaching patents, by the dozen?

The "prior to 2000" part is interesting, though. I wonder who filed what patent in 2000 about emulating old bitty boxes?


Thanks for this clarification. The TechCrunch title was obviously misleading, so we changed it.

Edit: we also changed the url from http://techcrunch.com/2014/11/28/nintendo-patents-game-boy-e... to a more substantive article that it points to.


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