1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to a method and apparatus for automated ordering and in particular to a method and apparatus for automated ordering using a mobile telephone or the like to read a code and transmit information. A method and apparatus for automated payment using a mobile phone is also provided.
2. Description of the Related Art
Food preparation and delivery shops, such as pizza delivery shops, need fast and accurate order information from customers placing orders. Customers need a secure system to make payments for such orders.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,197,478 B2 is related to placing orders using a URL address.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,991,739 is related to matching an address of a user placing an order to an address of a nearest order fulfillment facility.
Co-pending U.S. application Ser. No. 11/875,733 is related to compressing large URL addresses.
The present invention provides a method and apparatus for automated order placement for electronic commerce. In one example, a user photographs a graphical code element associated with an item the user wishes to order using a camera phone. The camera phone decodes the graphical element and places an order for the desired item electronically. The order is placed accurately and quickly.
The present method and apparatus also provides for authentication for payment of electronic transactions using a mobile telephone. The mobile telephone is used to verify the identity of the user for the payment. User identification may be verified using a variety of identification means.
The present method and apparatus brings together a mobile telephone 10 in
The two dimensional grid code 18 in
The mobile telephone 10 may also have an identification functionality 22 so as to authenticate the identity of the user. The mobile telephone provides a positive confirmation of the user's identity through the use of a PIN code, by a fingerprint reader, a facial recognition function, or other user identification means. The authentication may also be by object recognition instead of or in addition to face recognition. The telephone 10 serves for user identity verification, adding a layer of security to the electronic payment. The telephone 10 authenticates the user identity and transmits the payment request, so that the telephone is the payment mechanism. The mobile telephone payment may be tied to a credit card account so that payment is made by a charge to a credit card account or the payment may be made by a wire transfer, or by some other electronic payment or transaction.
A further development provides that the user may interact with a seller using the code reading 14 and displaying 24 capabilities of the mobile telephone 10. A person seeking payment for goods or services causes their mobile telephone display 24 to show a graphical code element such as 18 in
An exchange of information between mobile telephones is done by visual display of a code such as code 18 displayed on the display 21 and by reading of the visually displayed code using the camera component 12. This visual component of the transaction is typically done in the presence of people. It also limits the exchange to those devices that are visible to the people carrying out the transaction and prevents, for example, surreptitious reading of exchanged data, as can happen with radio communications. This adds a level of security that may not be present for non-visual communications between electronic devices using, for example, Bluetooth technology or other radio frequency transmissions absent the use of complex authentication means.
This visual exchange is further authenticated by the verification of the user's identity by the delivery person. One element of authentication is by delivery to a particular address and the delivery person receiving payment for the goods from a person at that address. Additional forms of verification could include taking a picture of the face of the customer and matching the picture using biometric analysis software, or by using a built in biometric device such as a fingerprint or other biometric reader incorporated into the device. This can be carried out using a mobile telephone or other mobile device of the delivery person. Other verification methods may include visual, voice or keystroke entry of a personal code. The verification code may be entered visually by directing the camera to a code, such as a grid code, for example, a semacode or other code format. The verification may be carried out by a plug in memory chip, one example of which is a memory chip that is plugged into the mobile phone and another example of which is input via a USB (universal serial bus) or other connector. Another identify verification may be carried out by one or more pre-stored codes that are accessed via a keyboard request, for example. Yet another verification may be provided by speaker dependent voice recognition by prompting with a passphrase that is compared to a prerecorded passphrase recording.
The display of a two dimensional graphical code element 18 on the mobile telephone 10 can be presented in a store, for example, for scanning by the store's scanning or code reading apparatus. User information or product information is thereby conveyed to the store. Where the code has been transmitted to the user for example as an electronic coupon including the graphical code element, the user may display the code element 18 on the display 24 of the mobile phone 10 to the store scanner to redeem the coupon. Thus, the mobile telephone display 24 triggers a coupon redemption.
The store, restaurant or other seller may provide a graphical code element 18 to the user representing the price of the items provided to the user and the user photographs or scans the graphical code element 18 using the camera component 12 to provide a payment to the seller. For example, a customer in a restaurant may receive a bill for the meal with a code element 18 and the customer pays the bill using the camera and code reading functionality 12 and 14 on the customer's mobile phone 10 to pay the bill.
Mobile telephones 10 having built-in cameras 12 and the ability to transmit the images obtained by the camera function have become readily available. Such mobile telephones typically have display screens 24 which display images obtained by the camera as well as to display images transmitted to the telephone. Mobile telephones are also available that include Internet access functionalities including the ability to access Internet sites on the World Wide Web using a URL (Uniform Resource Locator) through a web browser function 20. Such mobile telephones transmit the URL request and receive and display the information at that location. As such, the present method uses available technology to perform the method steps. It is also foreseen that the mobile telephone may be provided with a code scanner in place of or in addition to the camera functionality.
References to a mobile telephone for purposes of the present invention encompass many different devices and all such devices are within the scope of this invention. For example, a handheld wireless email device, personal organizer, personal music player, personal game device, or other such devices all fall under the definition of mobile telephone as used here. Further, the invention is not limited to mobile device but may include wired devices, such as wired telephones, scanners, bar code and two-dimensional code readers, cash registers and other point-of-sale devices.
An example of a method according to one embodiment is illustrated in
According to one embodiment of the present invention, a pizza delivery company, for example, provides a publication showing items offered by the company for pick up or delivery. For example, the company distributes an advertisement listing or showing the various items offered for pick up or delivery by the company. The advertisement may be coupons, magazine or newspaper ads, mail ads or other advertising for the company. Instead of advertising, the publication may be a menu showing items available from the company. The publication includes a graphical code element 18 associated with one or more items that are offered by the company. For example, the publication may be a carry-out restaurant menu with a listing of the food items available for carry out or delivery and having a graphical code element associated with each food item.
A user desiring a food item, uses a camera phone 10 or other similar device to photograph the graphical code 18 for the desired food item. The user may use some other device, such as a scanner for example, to capture the information from the graphical code element. One example of a graphical code element is a semacode, which is a two dimensional, grid-like graphical element having information encoded therein. A sample of a two-dimensional grid code is shown in
http://semacode.com/,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semacode, or
http://www.mobiletags.biz/app/topic/index—004.cfm?fuseaction=OpenTopic&coid=13&lang=en&CFID=3114563&CFTOKEN=ad9de683bd832081-B9672F07-96BB-5A17-A01FBACD5AEDEA68
The user's camera phone 10 is provided with software or other tools 14 so that it is capable of reading the code that has been photographed or otherwise scanned by the camera phone. The decoded information of one embodiment is a URL address for an Internet site. In a preferred development, the URL is an order accepting site for the company through which orders may be placed for the item selected by the customer. For example, the publication shows a particular style of pizza in a particular size with particular toppings. By photographing the graphical code element associated with that pizza, the camera phone reads the code element and obtains the URL address of the company offering that pizza.
The quantity of information encoded in such two dimensional code elements is limited, so lengthy URL addresses may be shorted by providing a small URL or compressed URL in the code, that in turn redirects the user to a longer URL or is decoded to obtain the longer URL. On example of a system for providing this function is shown in co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/875,73.
The user's camera phone 10 may also provide user specific information at 38 in
In order to make the delivery to the user's home or business, the order must be placed with a shop near the user, and preferably the nearest shop to the user. A system for matching the user address to the nearest food delivery shop is thereby provided. One such system is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 5,991,739.
It is also foreseen that the code element 18 may be transmitted to the user's phone so that the user need not photograph the code element but instead would select the code element that has been sent to the phone as a message, for example. A coupon, menu or other promotional information may be sent to the user's phone 10. The user may select a food item from the information and preferably select a graphical code in the information. The graphical code element is read as before, the code transmitted and the item is thereby ordered.
In addition to the automation of the sales transaction, provisions can be included in the design of the user interface to allow the entry of a Personal Identification Number or “PIN” code, known only to the owner of the cell phone. This same functionality can also be provided by the insertion of a “token” or electronic key that might include a synchronized time value, to provide a secondary mechanism for authentication. An example of such a token is provided under the tradename RSA SecurID. Alternative authentication or identification means may be provided; for example, a magnetic strip card reading capability may be provided on the mobile telephone or as an add-on thereto, or a dongle, memory element or other code containing element may be connected to the mobile telephone. Each of these may be within the functional block 22 in
The computational capability of the computing element in the cell phone can also be utilized to perform additional functions such as ticket splitting, currency conversions, and other transaction related activities.
Payments 68 in
It is foreseen that this invention can be used for ordering and paying for items other than food items. Products or services may be ordered or paid for using the present method and apparatus. All such other items are encompassed by the present invention.
Although other modifications and changes may be suggested by those skilled in the art, it is the intention of the inventors to embody within the patent warranted hereon all changes and modifications as reasonably and properly come within the scope of their contribution to the art.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/038,924, filed Mar. 24, 2008, which is incorporated herein by reference. This application is a continuation application of co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/409,227, filed Mar. 23, 2009, which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12409227 | Mar 2009 | US |
Child | 14857236 | US |