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Author Topic: Bitcoin patent relating to sports betting  (Read 298 times)
Easternbloc (OP)
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March 02, 2017, 01:56:04 PM
 #1

Alleged founder of Bitcoin teams up with sports betting giant to patent various aspects of Bitcoin, including sportsbetting:

http://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/bitcoin-wright-patents/
LuanX3
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March 02, 2017, 03:19:43 PM
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I don't think that is even possible now. They don't own this technology and nor will they be able to prove it is theirs. There have been so much sportsbetting sites using bitcoins and the concept of every aspects it has. This will not push through for sure, there are quite a lot of this already.
Wendigo
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March 02, 2017, 04:37:40 PM
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Ayre said last year that he saw a “growing convergence” of bitcoin and online gambling, according to the website CalvinAyre.com. Documents reviewed by Reuters show Wright’s links to online gambling go back decades and that bitcoin grew out of code originally developed with gambling in mind. Early bitcoin code, seen by Reuters and analysed by a computer coding consultant with no ties to Wright or any blockchain-related project, contains unimplemented functions related to poker.

Hmm so now it appears that Wright has been deep in online gambling for years and Bitcoin has emerged from code aimed towards gambling applications? This is new to me lol. I am pretty sure Wright and his friend the gambling tycoon are trying to patent squat here and collect some cash from infringements.
pedrog
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March 02, 2017, 04:45:09 PM
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I was under the impression software patents only exist in USA but it seems they also exist in Britain, are they exclusive to Britain or are they shared with USA?

Isn't gambling kind of illegal or highly restricted in USA?

Wendigo
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March 02, 2017, 05:08:04 PM
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I was under the impression software patents only exist in USA but it seems they also exist in Britain, are they exclusive to Britain or are they shared with USA?

Isn't gambling kind of illegal or highly restricted in USA?

Wright and his friend are trying to file global patents not limited to the USA and Britain. Actually they are trying to file them under a company based in Antigua. Gambling is not illegal in the USA, it's regulated with the exception of some states where it's banned I think. Here are some excerpts about this:

Quote
Reuters has previously reported that Wright was filing patents through a company called EITC Holdings, which is based in Antigua.

Ayre lives in Antigua, and EITC Holdings is headed by associates of Ayre, according to one source close to Wright and one with direct knowledge of his business, as well as corporate documents reviewed by Reuters. Australian Stefan Matthews, who began working for Ayre in 2011, was a director of EITC Holdings until at least late 2016. It isn't clear if he's still associated with the company. Canadian Robert MacGregor, another long-term Ayre associate, was a director of EITC Holdings until mid-April 2016. The documents do not disclose the shareholders of the company.



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The range of patent applications lodged by Wright and colleagues is wide. Five, registered on Dec. 14, were made by EITC Holdings with the bland description “computer-implemented method and system,” public filings show. One, registered on Dec. 28, was described as “Determining a common secret for two blockchain nodes for the secure exchange of information” - apparently a way to use the blockchain to exchange encrypted data. Other applications by Wright and his associates relate to sports betting and a blockchain-based operating system for simple electronic devices.

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Emails from Wright to Ayre’s associate Matthews, reviewed by Reuters, set out plans to file 150 patents. A person with direct knowledge of Wright’s businesses said he and associates ultimately aim to file closer to 400. None has been approved so far and it’s not clear whether the patents would be enforceable if granted, but Wright’s associates have been quoted as saying the patents could be sold “for upwards of a billion dollars.”

Quote
They face stiff competition from other players who are spending significant sums to explore blockchain’s potential. About 70 banks (and Thomson Reuters) have joined a company called R3, which is examining whether blockchain could cut costs in the way financial markets execute transactions. A spokesperson for R3 did not respond to requests for comment.

Wright and his friend are Bitcoin patent trolls.
pedrog
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March 02, 2017, 05:20:05 PM
Last edit: March 02, 2017, 06:00:57 PM by pedrog
 #6

There's no such thing as 'global patents' when it comes to software, there are no software patents in Europe, for example, and if big companies like Apple and Microsoft could not lobby politicians to do it, those guys don't have a chance.

Well, USA market is huge so they can still make a buck out of it there.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Software_patent

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