Amazon's 1-Click (or One-Click, OneClick, various people use different names for it) patent application has just been denied in Europe. Again. Dispassionate obervers like, umm, myself, always thought ...
From outdated party decorations to that iTunes single you didn’t really mean to buy, Amazon has been behind every unintentional, one-click purchase on the internet. Until now. READ THE PATENT: Method ...
Getting rid of your money is about to get a whole lot easier now that Amazon’s iron grip on 1-click payment has finally loosened. This week marked the long-awaited end of the online retail giant’s ...
An interesting little point to be made about Amazon's One Click patent, that idea that they and they alone deserve to gain revenue from having worked out how to make an internet payment simply. Not ...
The ability to purchase merchandise over the Internet by clicking a single button on a Web page after selecting merchandise. In 1999, Amazon.com was issued a patent on "1-Click," described as "Method ...
Amazon customers ordering via its 1-Click service may pay up to £4.75 more than they need to, because a default setting means some are automatically charged even if what they're buying is el igible ...
Amazon’s patent on one-click shopping has survived the scrutiny of the US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO). In an official notice published this month, the USPTO declared its intent to issue a ...