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'(FC patent claims cover all 453,600 initial positions including these
two.)'
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<p>False.
<p>I read your entire patent text. It does not say that.
<p>What the USPTO obviously approved was your single 'preferred embodiment'
which you described with sufficient detail and clarity.
<p>Although they allowed your extremely long statement (including a mixture
of verbose, vague and abstract rambling) to remain verbatim, you did NOT
clearly and explicitly claim all 453,600 permutations of initial
positions. [Of course, such an outrageous claim would have provoked the
rejection of your patent application.] Apparently, you are very hopeful
that your brief, bureaucratically-indecipherable description of 'other
embodiments' covers all such possibilities with legal and financial
force. You should give-up all hope.
<p>Most experts within the chess variant community regard every unique
variation as an entirely different game with the proof being in the fact
that incisive games play-out with entirely different move lists.
<p>For example, when Derek Nalls argued on the Yahoo group that Minister's
Chess (US Patent #RE32,716) was a ripoff of Russian Symmetrical Chess,
everyone who spoke-up disagreed with him. Even though the board and
initial positions of pieces are identical, there are a couple of
contrasting special moves which can possibly (yet not necessarily will)
affect the mid-game and/or endgame.
<p>So, you will need to pay the USPTO 453,599 more patent fees if you want to
control everything that badly. I doubt you can justify such a huge
investment, though. I hope you do not intend to sue or threaten everyone
(such as Aronson) who wishes to play or invent games of the general class
related (in your presumptuous opinion) to Falcon Chess.
<p>Of course, if US patent examiners were competent in the field of chess
variants AND incorruptible from the offerring of large amounts of money,
no patents for chess variants would have ever been granted to anyone due
to insufficient uniqueness compared to predating works in the public
domain. In other words, your patent which covers ONLY a single initial
position could probably be thrown out of court ... if ever challenged.