Conducting transactions over the Internet has become fairly commonplace. However, more people own televisions than computers and in general people spend more time watching television than surfing the Internet. Television viewers represent a captive audience. However, television tends to be a purely passive experience. Yet consumers, particularly those that are inclined toward impulse buying, would certainly enjoy the ability to immediately purchase products that they see during a broadcast, whether the product is displayed during a commercial advertisement or during the content of the television show or movie.
Currently there are only a limited number of interactive features available for television viewers. Commercial transactions occur in only one direction—advertisements from the broadcast sponsors to the broadcast viewers. Completing the transaction—payment from the viewer to the sponsor—must occur by other means. This invention addresses the ability to complete the transaction much in the same way that e-commerce allows transactions via the Internet. The transactions described by this invention are not limited to television broadcasts, but are applicable to other types of broadcasts including streaming media on the Internet. This invention can be used to allow commercial transactions via any type of content broadcast.
The present invention allows companies to conduct transactions during a broadcast. One transaction would be a product purchase whereby product information is sent to the viewer, payment and shipping information is sent back to the company selling the product. Other types of transactions are possible. For example, medical diagnoses can be transmitted whereby medical symptoms are sent to a doctor and prescription information is returned to the viewer. In another application, conversations about the content being broadcast can be transmitted between two or more people, for example in a fan club. Other applications of this invention are also possible and these examples are used for illustration purposes and are not intended to limit the invention's applications. For use in this patent, the term “broadcast” encompasses all forms of transmitting media content to an end user, including radio wave broadcasts such as network television and network radio broadcasts, cable broadcasts such as cable television, and streaming media broadcasts such as video and audio over an Internet connection that may be via telephone lines, television cables, radio waves, etc.
The invention provides a method and apparatus for recording the amount of time spent watching a particular broadcast. The invention also provides a method and apparatus for recording the sponsoring companies or organizations for each broadcast. The invention provides a method and apparatus for the viewer to send information to another location.
In one embodiment, the user watches an Internet connected television. At various regular intervals, such as the vertical blanking interval of the television signal, HTTP protocol communications from a Web server are sent to the television, which places a cookie or updates an existing cookie on the television hard drive. This cookie contains information including the time of day, the television channel, the name of the television show, and each sponsor of the show. At that time or at a later time of the viewer's choosing, the viewer can use the Internet connected television to connect to a website. This website can belong to the television network or a particular sponsor or a central clearing house for coupons. When connecting to the website, using the standard HTTP protocol, the website examines the cookie and retrieves the information in it. Each sponsor can then offer advertisements, coupons, discounts, and other enticements to purchase goods based on the amount of time the viewer spent watching a sponsored broadcast. Each viewer can respond with an e-commerce transaction that includes credit card information and shipping information in order to initiate a purchase and have the product shipped to the viewer.
In a second embodiment, the user watches an Internet connected television. At various regular intervals, such as the vertical blanking interval of the television signal, data is sent to a centralized database for the network or the sponsor or a third party reseller. The data contain information including the time of day, the television channel, the name of the television show, and each sponsor of the show. The data also contain a user identifier such as a name, user ID, credit card number and verification information, billing address, or shipping address. At that time, or at a later time, the viewer can use the Internet connected television to connect to a website that has access to the central database. This website can belong to the television network or a particular sponsor or a third party reseller. When connecting to the website, using the standard HTTP protocol, the user identification information is sent to the website which then examines the central database and retrieves the information in it for this particular user. Each sponsor can then offer advertisements, coupons, discounts, and other enticements to purchase goods based on the amount of time the viewer spent watching a sponsored broadcast. Or the sponsor can initiate a product purchase and shipment.
In a third embodiment, the user watches a streaming media broadcast from a Web server using a computer with an Internet connection. At various regular intervals during the broadcast, HTTP protocol communications from a Web server are sent to the computer, which places a cookie or updates and existing cookie on the computer hard drive. This cookie contains information including the time of day, the website that is the source of the broadcast, the name of the broadcast content, and each sponsor of the broadcast. At that time or at a later time of the viewer's choosing, the viewer can use the computer to connect to a website. This website can belong to the television network or a particular sponsor or a third party reseller. When connecting to the website, using the standard HTTP protocol, the website examines the cookie and retrieves the information in it. Each sponsor can then offer advertisements, coupons, discounts, and other enticements to purchase goods based on the amount of time the viewer spent watching a sponsored broadcast. Or the sponsor can initiate a product purchase and shipment.
In a fourth embodiment, the user watches a streaming media broadcast from a Web server using a computer with an Internet connection. At various regular intervals during the broadcast, data is sent to a centralized database for the network or the sponsor or a third party reseller. The data contains information including the time of day, the website that is the source of the broadcast, the name of the broadcast content, and each sponsor of the show. The data also contain a user identifier such as a name, user ID, credit card number, billing address, or shipping address. At any time, the viewer can use the computer to connect to a website that has access to the central database. This website can belong to the television network or a particular sponsor or a central clearing house for coupons. When connecting to the website, using the standard HTTP protocol, the user identifier information is sent to the website which then examines the central database and retrieves the information in it for this particular user. Each sponsor can then offer advertisements, coupons, discounts, and other enticements to purchase goods based on the amount of time the viewer spent watching a sponsored broadcast. Each viewer can respond with an e-commerce transaction that includes credit card information and shipping information in order to initiate a purchase and have the product shipped to the viewer.
Further features and advantages of various embodiments of the present invention are described in the detailed description below, which is given by way of example only.
The present invention will be understood more fully from the detailed description given below and from the accompanying drawings of the preferred embodiment of the invention, which, however, should not be taken to limit the invention to the specific embodiment but are for explanation and understanding only.
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The present invention will be understood more fully from the detailed description given below and from the accompanying drawings of the preferred embodiment of the invention, which, however, should not be taken to limit the invention to the specific embodiment but are for explanation and understanding only.
Exemplary configurations according to the present invention are illustrated in
The television 106 receives one-way transmissions 104 from the network broadcast transmitter 101. Embedded in the transmission are HTTP protocol messages containing information about the show being broadcast, the sponsors of the show, and the current time. Other information can also be embedded and sent to the television 106 such as information about specific products for sale including pricing information. The embedded information is stored on the hard disk 107 in the form of a cookie. At that time or at a later time, the television 106 connects to the database server 103 which is part of a website on the Internet 102. The database server 103 queries the cookie on the television 106 in order to determine which shows were watched, during which times, which advertisers sponsored those shows or those segments of shows, and which products were being advertised. Based on this information, the database server can search its database for coupons, advertisements, discounts, and other enticements to buy products or services from the advertiser, and deliver these enticements via the Internet 102 to the television 106. Similarly the database server can search its database product information such as pricing and availability, and the database server can deliver this information via the Internet 102 to the television 106.
In another embodiment, the television 106 receives one-way transmissions 104 from the network broadcast transmitter 101. Embedded in the transmission are HTTP protocol messages containing information about the show being broadcast, the sponsors of the show, and the current time. Other information can also be embedded and sent to the television 106 such as information about specific products for sale including pricing information. The embedded information is stored on the hard disk 107. During the broadcast or at a later time, the television 106 connects to the database server 103 which is part of a website on the Internet 102. The television 106 sends the information on the hard disk 107 to the database server 103 via the Internet 102. The database server 103 stores the information in its database. At that time or at a later time, based on which advertiser sponsored the show or show segments, the amount of time spent watching the show or show segments, and which products were being advertised, the database server can search the database for coupons, advertisements, discounts, and other enticements to buy products or services from the advertiser, and deliver these enticements via the Internet 102 to the television 106. Similarly the database server can search its database product information such as pricing and availability, and the database server can deliver this information via the Internet 102 to the television 106.
The computer 203 receives transmissions from the streaming media server 200 via the Internet 102. Embedded in the transmission are messages containing information about the show being broadcast, the sponsors of the show, and the current time. Other information can also be embedded and sent to the television 106 such as information about specific products for sale including pricing information. The embedded information is stored on the computer's hard disk in the form of a cookie. At that time or at a later time, the computer 203 connects to the database server 103 which is part of a website on the Internet 102. The database server 103 queries the cookie on the computer 203 in order to determine which shows were watched, during which times, which advertisers sponsored those shows or those segments of shows, and which products were being advertised. Based on this information, the database server can search its database for coupons, advertisements, discounts, and other enticements to buy products or services from the advertiser, and deliver these enticements via the Internet 102 to the computer 203. Similarly the database server can search its database product information such as pricing and availability, and the database server can deliver this information via the Internet 102 to the television 106.
In another embodiment, the computer 203 receives transmissions from the streaming media server 200 via the Internet 102. Embedded in the transmission are messages containing information about the show being broadcast, the sponsors of the show, and the current time. Other information can also be embedded and sent to the television 106 such as information about specific products for sale including pricing information. The embedded information is stored on the computer's hard disk. During the broadcast or at a later time, the computer 203 connects to the database server 103 which is part of a website on the Internet 102. The computer 203 transmits the information on its hard disk to the database server 103 via the Internet 102. The database server 103 stores the information in the database. At a later time, based on which advertiser sponsored the show or show segments, the amount of time spent watching the show or show segments, and which products were being advertised, the database server can search its database for coupons, advertisements, discounts, and other enticements to buy products or services from the advertiser, and deliver these enticements via the Internet 102 to the computer 203. Similarly the database server can search its database product information such as pricing and availability, and the database server can deliver this information via the Internet 102 to the television 106.
A sponsor block, such as 601 or 602, contains multiple records. One record contains the name of the sponsor. Another record contains information about the sponsor. Other records contain links to content that is sponsored by the sponsor. Having both content blocks and sponsor blocks in the database, with links to each other, allows the database to easily be searched for all content sponsored by a specific sponsor, or all sponsors of particular content.
Block 707 is executed when a time slice has ended or the viewer has switched to another type of broadcast. When this block is executed, the viewing counters are recorded in the database on the client machine. Execution is then transferred to block 708.
Block 708 is executed at the start of a new time slice. This block resets the viewing counters and transfers execution to block 700, starting the entire process over.
Various modifications and adaptations of the operations that are described here would be apparent to those skilled in the art based on the above disclosure. Many variations and modifications within the scope of the invention are therefore possible. The present invention is set forth by the following claims.
The present application is a continuation-in-part application of copending U.S. patent application, entitled “METHOD FOR ADVERTISERS TO SPONSOR BROADCASTS WITHOUT COMMERCIALS,” Ser. No. 09/767,819, filed on Jan. 22, 2001.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09767819 | Jan 2001 | US |
Child | 11160815 | Jul 2005 | US |