Next Patent: Session ticket authentication scheme
Next Patent: Session ticket authentication scheme
[0001] Not applicable.
[0002] Not applicable.
[0003] Not applicable.
[0004] 1. Field of the Invention
[0005] The present invention relates, in general, to methods and apparatus for point-of-sale activation of software and metered accounts, and to delivery and sale of digitally-encoded products over a global telecommunications network, and related packaging and retail presentation thereof.
[0006] 2. Description of Related Art
[0007] This invention is related to the invention disclosed in Fiala et al., U.S. Pat. No. 5,918,909 (issued Jul. 6, 1999), for a Package and Card with Data-Encoded Strip and Method of Using Same, fully incorporated by reference herein. The downloadable and streaming content delivery of the present invention may preferably employ the encoding and decoding technology disclosed in Coifman et al., U.S. Pat. No. 5,384,725 (issued Jan. 24, 1995) for a Method and Apparatus for Encoding and Decoding Using Wavelet-Packets, fully incorporated by reference herein.
[0008] None of these references, either singly or in combination, disclose or suggest the present invention.
[0009] This document describes different related methods and processes concerning the modification, customization or personalization of an existing digital content, at or prior to the time of delivery, via a digital communications network or some other means of digital communication between devices.
[0010] The invention relates to:
[0011] Methods of customization of the content of a digital audio or video object or objects or material, delivered via the Internet or other digital communication network, whether as a downloadable file or files or in streaming form, where additional or incidental content has been included based on selections made by or based on decisions made using information that has been directly or indirectly provided or incidental content created by the individuals involved in either customizing, sending or receiving the material.
[0012] Methods of managing access to and customization of digital content that is associated with a collectable greeting or gift card that has been sold through retail using Point-of-Sale (“POS”) activation.
[0013] Methods for secure sales of customizable digital content in a retail environment using POS activation.
[0014] Methods for persistent storage of the specific customized digital content provided to a specific recipient in a central database to meet digital rights management requirements.
[0015] Methods of using customized digital greeting cards or customized customer receipts or similar methods for special promotional sweepstakes and activities.
[0016] Methods of securing the installed copy of customized digital material on the delivery device.
[0017] The invention includes methods for customizing the content of digital media that is delivered as a downloadable file or via streaming delivery over the Internet or other digital communications network or targeted digital broadcasting solution. This can be accomplished using a greeting, celebration or gift card with a unique identification code that functions as a receipt or token to allow a user to customize or personalize a set of audio or video digital objects using the Internet, an Interactive Voice Response (“IVR”) system or similar automated system prior to giving the card to the intended recipient, or that allows the content to be automatically customized based on information provided by the user or the recipient.
[0018] A special feature of some embodiments of the invention is a greeting or gift card with a PIN or account number that can be used as a token to initiate the download or streaming presentation of a personalized digital message or entertainment including digital content for the recipient of the card. The invention combines existing technology to create a powerful link between the Internet and retail.
[0019] The invention provides a PIN or code related to a unique unit of the product or which allows for the identification of a specific recipient and to combine the personalized digital content with the associated digital material to create a unique copy of the digital product for the specific recipient.
[0020] A similar method can be employed for promotional activities and sweepstakes. When making a purchase, the customer would receive a promotional greeting card, or else a unique PIN with simple instructions could be printed on the customer receipt for purchase of the product/service. In this scenario, the customer would be instructed to visit a web site or to call an IVR system, and enter their information to make use of the product as described above.
[0021] An alternate implementation of the promotional greeting card product would be to instruct the customer to look for a secondary PIN or password that will be made available to the customer by some other means, such as in print or broadcast advertising.
[0022] This feature for a secondary PIN or password can be as simple as having an airplane skywrite a PIN in the sky, optionally coupled with a retailer announcing and instructing customers, that if they have seen the PIN and URL written in the sky, to go to that URL or website and register by entering the obvious PIN and a unique receipt number from their purchase that day or over a specified time period or number of days. The customer remembers or notes the PIN that was sky-written by the airplane, and has a valid receipt number, which is provided at registration and which will be recognized and accepted by the retailer.
[0023] The invention includes methods for locking a customized digital object or objects, that will be downloaded in its (their) entirety to the recipient, to the specific device that is receiving the download and will be used for playback of the digital object or objects so that the digital object or objects cannot be copied from one device to another without significant effort. This helps to make the product more secure and protects the intellectual property rights of the owner or owners of the content of the digital object or objects.
[0024] The invention includes methods for creating a back-up copy of the unique digital material that was downloaded by a recipient so that in the case that the recipient should lose the material, it will be possible to download the back-up copy retained for that specific user without infringing on the intellectual property rights of the content owner or owners.
[0025] The content of an existing digital material can be modified, or additional content added, at the time of delivery by inserting selected complimentary material, based on personal preferences that have been previously expressed directly or indirectly by some party involved in receiving or sending the material, and stored in a database.
[0026] This invention addresses an important question often asked by the Internet business community, namely, “How do you drive customers to a website on the Internet?” One answer is the retail distribution of POS activated products that leverage the power of retail to make customers aware of the product offering while being able to purchase that product at the same time, but then driving the customer to the web site in order to take delivery of the product or service purchased.
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[0037] Referring to the drawing figures, the various features and structure of the preferred embodiments of the invention will now be described in greater detail.
[0038] First, a detailed description will be given of the personalization feature(s) of the preferred embodiments of the present invention:
[0039] We all have vivid memories associated with music from our childhood and adolescence. Those memories often include relationships with very special people, imprinted in our minds, marked by time and music. Hearing those old musical favorites can make us wonder about what could have been. What if it had been different? This invention is to create a permanent memory related to an old favorite or a new favorite, whether that favorite is a musical song or songs, or video digital content.
[0040] Simply put, the present invention is a digital product or digital content with an included custom voice mail message or personalized digital item or item or items selected from a menu of available custom content. One method of implementation of the invention is by distribution of the right to access and use a digital material that is associated with a package (
[0041] The preferred embodiment of a packaged product intended for point-of-sale activation of a stored value product is shown in
[0042]
[0043]
[0044]
[0045] As an example, a customer could purchase a digital interactive entertainment product based on an “Elvis Presley” (or other celebrity) theme. The product, for example, could be made up of a traditional greeting card that includes a gift card for downloading an Elvis Presley song together with a special greeting selected from a number of possible greetings in Elvis Presley's voice (recorded by a celebrity impersonator), and a personalized greeting. Available greetings could be printed on the package, and could include things like: “Happy Birthday Baby”; “Happy Anniversary Baby”; “With all my Love Baby”; “Baby, you've just got to forgive me”; “Love and kisses and get well soon, Honey”; “Marry me Honey, and I'll be your Teddy Bear forever”; etc. The product may even allow the user to select which Elvis Presley song to include from a selection that could also be printed on the package. There may even be additional material that the user can select from or customize that is related to the theme of Elvis Presley such as messages intended for an answering machine or downloadable ring tones for cell phones that can be accessed separately or even from other delivery systems using the account or PIN number of the product. The stored value product card in the product would be designed to be a theme based collector card. A person intending to send some type of celebratory or congratulatory greeting would purchase the product. The purchaser would be presented with instructions on how to personalize the product, and, by following those instructions, could add a personal message in his/her own voice via an IVR or Internet-based solution, or by uploading the message in a digitized format, such as “Darling, I love you so much, I just had to ask you” and/or select a specific message, provided in Elvis's voice, to be included with the downloadable content, e.g., “Marry me Honey, and I'll be your Teddy Bear forever,” and/or select one of a number of available Elvis Presley songs, e.g., “It's Now or Never”. The purchaser would then give the product to the intended recipient. The recipient would then follow the instructions provided with the product to download the digital content, such as a music file, etc., to some local storage and playback device (e.g., a personal computer). The selected or personal voice greeting would be included in the delivery as an integrated component of the digital music file, for example, or as a separate component that is integrated with the digital music upon playback using timing codes or another well-known method of synchronization, or as a completely separate component. Also, by following the instructions included with the product, the recipient could be able to download (in digital or analog format), for example, an Elvis-related message intended for a telephone answering machine, or an Elvis-related downloadable ring tone for a cell phone.
[0046] The ability to personalize the digital content made available to the consumer to download may be related or tied to a PIN or code that is either activated by means presently used at a cash register or retail purchase location today (such as point-of-sale activation), or the PIN or code could instead be provided already activated (“hot”) in which case the “hot” PIN or code would be packaged or included in retail consumer products or promotional products for added value for the buyer. For example, a card or PIN can be included within a manufacturer's box of laundry detergent or cosmetics package. In such an embodiment of the invention, the PIN or code would be individually printed on the inside of the product carton or on a card inserted inside of a product's package. The PIN or code can be used by the buyer to access an Internet website at an indicated address (i.e., by a Uniform Resource Locator, or “URL”, of a website), or at a well-known URL otherwise known by the buyer, to register the authorizing PIN or codes and personalize and download the content as described herein for the various embodiments of the invention. The downloaded content may be generic or may be personalized as described herein. In such an embodiment of the invention, in which digital content is provided and delivered in order to provide promotional added value, the PIN could be pre-activated (“hot”) and thus would be available for immediate use after registration by the purchaser of the product (e.g., laundry detergent or cosmetics). Alternatively, the content provider might require that the PIN included with the product be provided at registration together with a unique code that is printed at purchase on the product purchaser's purchase receipt, thereby ensuring to the manufacturer that only paying customers are able to register authorizing PINs or codes, and also ensuring to the manufacturer that only paying customers receive delivery of content provided in accordance with the invention. As a specific example of this embodiment of the invention, showing how digital information and content could be delivered to a cellular telephone as an example of a receiving device for digital content, a cosmetics product could include a PIN inside the cosmetics product package together with the URL of a PIN registration and content download website, together with instructions that would direct the cosmetics product purchaser to download a free cellular telephone “ringtone” once the PIN has been registered at the cosmetic manufacturer's website on the Internet. It shall be understood that the term “ringtone” is used herein in its common usage, namely, a tone sequence that can be played by a cellular telephone when an incoming call arrives. The value to the cosmetics manufacturer would be that its paying customer would receive added value for each product purchased, and registration of the pre-activated (“hot”) PIN with the manufacturer, a step necessary for download retrieval of the delivered digital content, could be used by the manufacturer as an opportunity to obtain certain marketing research information from a customer who is known to have purchased the manufacturer's product. At registration, the cosmetics product manufacturer could selectively limit the delivery of specific content based on the unique PIN and/or printed codes provided on the purchase receipt, thereby tailoring the content delivery to the product purchased or to the purchase outlet, as desired by the manufacturer.
[0047] Although the use of POS activation packaging, and a method for securing/locking the downloaded customized digital material to a specific device are included in the embodiment described above, the primary embodiment of the invention is the ability to personalize or customize a downloadable digital content as described above. The addition of POS activation, and digital rights management controls is added as a preferred embodiment as they enhance the value and viability of the product concept that is embodied in the invention. A product as that described above could be sold through retail or over the Internet without POS activation, and without digital rights management controls, and still be an embodiment of the invention.
[0048]
[0049] When using an IVR system (
[0050] Elvis Presley's voice, for use on a telephone message system, asks the listener to “please leave a message.”
[0051] A wrestling entertainer's voice, such as a WWF Wrestler's voice, demands that the listener “leave a message quickly” in a gruff manner.
[0052] There are an almost-infinite number of voice message possibilities.
[0053] The IVR (
[0054] The details of a personally recorded voice greeting will now be described. After purchasing a product to obtain a valid and active PIN and related website, the customer is ready to personalize the content. With, for example, the use of a computer accessing a web site, or an IVR system using a provided “800” or “900” number, a customer can dial up the IVR, or, using IP telephony or using any other hand-held communications device, can access a website or customization processor that instructs the caller to enter the PIN number associated to the product that has previously been purchased, scanned, and activated at the point of purchase. Once the customization system (
[0055] Applicability of the present invention for delivery of greetings by a celebrity, a celebrity impersonator, or a vocal artist for use on home telephone answering machines will now be described. This is an entirely separate feature available within a delivered digital product or sold separately for certain embodiments of the present invention. An example of such embodiments of the invention could be to offer a number of voice messages from celebrity vocalists or celebrity impersonators. By using an IVR or computer access, multiple choice, numerically selected, prerecorded celebrity messages would be offered and selected for download. A library of messages could be accessed via a website and a favorite (or several favorites based on the vended product) would be selected as offered by the product. As an example, an Elvis Presley voice impersonator could provide different and entertaining, possibly comedic, voice greetings that could be downloaded and recorded on a Compact Disc (“CD”) (or other digital or analog storage medium), just as any music or video can be transferred to CD. Using this copy, the greeting could then be played on a sound system so that the greeting could be recorded for use on a telephone message answering machine.
[0056] The consumer may use so-called “800” or “900” telephone numbers to select possibly three or four, or any other number, of predetermined greetings from a library of greetings provided for the customer or recipient of the gift card. By using a multiple choice selection, product selection would be an inexpensive process providing that the consumer has had experience with the type of product or providing that the instructions were “user friendly.” A more elaborate and personal method of specifying and/or creating an interactive greeting would be for the consumer to use an IVR system by calling a provided “800” or “900” number and following the prompts to create a personal voice message. In a manner similar to that used with well-known voice message recording devices or voice mail systems, the IVR could be used to edit and proof the personalized greetings provided in accordance with the present invention. Voice mail systems provided by telephone companies could use the prerecorded messages delivered in accordance with the present invention by simply playing the message to the voice mail recording device or using well-known techniques in these systems to upload a message or recording to the voice mail system.
[0057] Methods for creating personalized messages in accordance with the present invention will now be described. An interactive greeting or message can be provided using any of many well-known methods including, for example, use of the Internet to create e-mail, to send digital photos, and to send digital voice files. These types of messages or digital photos can be received from computers, hand-held computers, newer cellular telephones, or by using kiosks provided at retail outlets or through any other playback mechanism. Once the digital interactive personal content has been modified, created, previewed, and approved, it is sent to a database for subsequent delivery. Once in the database, the personalized data is attached, in proper order, to the uniquely numbered or coded content or digital product related to the uniquely numbered product or activated PIN or PINs. When completed, and the digital interactive message or greetings, photos, or e-mail have been embedded into the digital product, the consumer selects an individual or group to whom to give the Digital Interactive Entertainment Card or package. Such a gift is useful as a musical recording, a personal message, a personal statement or a more creative method of personal greeting than has been heretofore known.
[0058] The collector card (
[0059] As discussed herein, an important detail of some embodiments of the invention is that the downloaded copy of the digital content may have a unique numeric identification. This unique numeric identity is the feature that enables the card or PIN holder to retain his customized digital content for future downloading and/or permanent storage. The ability to retain custom content can either be provided for a period at no cost, or an account could be created for payment of fees or services required by the customer. Each unique customized downloaded product or content (
[0060] The PIN of the present invention will preferably be obscured from view (as shown, for example, by (
[0061] The gift card of the present invention will now be described, and the gift card preferably includes a PIN. The gift card preferably has an activation strip, such as a magnetic strip or bar code that is used to activate a product associated PIN number. The point-of-sale activated number allows the package and card to be openly displayed in any area within a retail location in a secure manner because the customer cannot use the product without having first purchased the product and by having the related number activated at the point of sale. Once purchased, the Personal Identification Number (“PIN”) or PINs associated with the encoded data are activated at the register. The purchaser then provides the active PIN or PINs and other required information and receives access to goods and/or services, or software programs or other digital or analog content, authorized and delivered after registration. The PIN related to the digital files or product need not be on a card secured to a carrier panel but can be on a card alone or provided with a package and card combination. A bar code on a single piece of paper or magnetic slurry printed on paper and encoded with a related PIN or control number may also be used to activate a PIN related to a digital product. Once received at registration, the data and activated PIN or PINs and other requested information allows the full value or use of the product purchased. This packaged card and related products provide a delivery system that allows inactive product sales, prepaid authorized delivery of licensed software programs, digital information, and/or goods and services provided over the Internet, satellite communications, cable, fiber optics, and other digital communication technologies. The package can include a billboard panel for graphic presentation, a card, and can include one or more packaged components related to the offered goods and services. PIN or PINs are activated at point of purchase by using a magnetic strip, bar code, or such as well-known so-called integrated circuit card (“ICC”) or “smart card” technology (as described, for example, by the well-known international specifications given in ISO/IEC 7816-3, ISO/IEC 7816-4, ISO/IEC 7816-5, etc., for intelligent payment card technology developed by the international consortium of Europay, MasterCard, and VISA (“EMV”)) included on a card attached to the package or card within a package. PINs can also be activated and delivered by a vending device, such as, for example, a kiosk, capable of producing a PIN or PINs at the point of purchase. Such a vending device can be programmed with active PINs or can access such PINs through an online connection, and only printed and delivered and collected after purchase. Such a vending device can be used to create and/or select personalized voice, text or picture messages, or a combination of all or some of the mentioned types of message greetings. As mentioned, prior to purchase, the PIN or PINs are inactive or of little or no value as related to the goods or services provided after purchase. Inactive (“Cold”) inventory prevents unauthorized use of a product until purchased or activated, at which time the product becomes usable (or “Hot”). Such a feature ensures that goods or services offered for sale cannot be used or copied without first being purchased. Additional security measures are not necessary because theft, pirating, copying, or transferring the goods and services is made more difficult. The invention provides a method of validation providing copyright or royalty control of digital goods and services by requiring a secure and authorized PIN and/or other specified codes, PIN or PINs associated with digital content provided at the point of sale. The collector cards or collector PINs or codes need not be point-of-sale activated to be used to deliver the invention to the end user or product purchaser.
[0062] As a variation on these collector cards/gift cards just described, parents could give their children and relatives a stored dollar value gift card, activated for the parents at the point of sale, that also would have a musical or seasonal voice message which could be retrieved, and the gift card value spent for goods/services, using the PIN number provided on the gift card. Such gift cards could also be used as corporate holiday gift cards whereby uniform cards, with PIN numbers and usage instructions and access telephone numbers, could be given to a firm's employees or customers, such that the recipient could retrieve recipient-selected songs or other content such as compact discs, streaming video, etc., for download simply by using the value pre-credited on the gift card. The president of a company could also record a message to the recipient that would be played when the recipient dials an IVR access number (or accesses a content delivery web site over the internet), and the president's message could provide instructions to the recipient on how to select content for delivery. In such a manner by the use of this embodiment of the invention, corporations could maintain a ready inventory of gift cards for personalization and distribution, and, because the donor corporation could control the inventory of such gift cards, it would not be necessary to have those cards be point-of-sale activated, and the cards could simply be stocked as “hot” cards by the corporation, ready for distribution as gifts.
[0063] By using separate industry-standard (“ISO”) tracks on the magnetic stripe (e.g., (
[0064] The present invention preferably can also provide for pre-purchase sampling of content by a prospective purchaser, as will now be described. In most large retail music stores there are listening devices at many locations within the store. The purpose for these listening stations is so that the inventory of CDs or products can be sampled or evaluated prior to purchase. The theory is that, if someone wants to hear the latest song by an artist, they should be provided with the ability to preview that music and that, after hearing the new music, might decide to purchase that music. The present invention requires less time to preview content in its entirety because there could be only a few songs per product initially. The songs or a portion of the songs can be listened to on telephone in a short period of time. A key feature is that certain embodiments of this invention can be personalized to be a digital gift card and package, and the need to preview will be less pertinent to sales of the product. However, as a part of some embodiments of the present invention, a consumer can be provided with a method by which a preview of the product is made available without purchase. A telephone number could be provided on the packaging as well as a specific product code. This information can be titled “Preview Product.” By using a cell phone and by calling the provided number to access an IVR system, a prospective purchaser would be prompted to enter a product code to receive a preview of the product. With such a product preview, a possible problem could be continued previews of a popular song. To solve this problem, when a prospective customer previews product content on a cell phone or land line, only parts of the content might be made available for preview because phone time will be expensive, and including the complete song or songs will dilute the demand for the product. An additional method of limiting the per-person number of times a prospective customer can listen to a preview would be by systematically blocking out a calling telephone number (using well-known “caller ID” technology) so that a calling number accessing the same product code twice will be locked out of further previews of that particular product code. Video and audio content can be previewed over the Internet from home or hand-held computer.
[0065] An interesting attribute, once a unique code or PIN has been verified as active or purchased, is that the IVR or computer system can be used to deliver digital terms and conditions. By using the provided access number provided on the package or within the store a customer can then register and provide the UPC and receive the most current terms and conditions related to the product. As products become more conditions regulated, digital content which can be changed instantly within the delivery device eliminates the need for constant label and packaging changes mandated by the government. This method is used to provide a snappy jingle to advertise the features and benefit of a product or a hazardous material warning or other product dangers. If a unique code is used to verify the purchase, registration can include a value-added coupon or other premium. Either a unique numeric identity is used to provide information critical to metered accounts, or brand-related selected information can be provided video or audio depending on the hand-held device used. Critical information can be provided even to the illiterate in any selected and available language and a voice signature can be required by having the customer provide a special number (e.g., a government-issued social security number), or personal information can be provided by the customer for certification and future reference that, in fact, the digital content has been heard and understood by the customer. For example, a customer buys a box of ant poison. He notices a banner on the ceiling with a toll-free telephone number and instructions stating that information about all the products in the store can be accessed along with their promotional material or product warnings simply by calling the toll-free number. This information is made available by following IVR instructions or visual prompts so that, once it has been set up in the system, a UPC code can be entered by the customer and all or some of the advertising or warning material can then be heard in any selected language. Once the product has been purchased, the customer can use this same system because the telephone number and instructions on how to use the system would be printed on the receipt or on the product's package. A method of registration could optionally have the purchaser's telephone number captured together with other purchaser-provided personal information that is then stored and archived for proof that the customer received critical product information. The advantage to the product manufacturer of product registration also serves the customer by providing easy access to all of the critical information related to the product and, especially useful if litigation results, an archived digital certification can be provided for the manufacturer that shows the consumer's understanding and/or receipt of the product information. This telephonic advertising method can be as broad as a having a huge mall with a common Frequently Asked Questions (“FAQ”) telephone access number prominently displayed. Once accessed, the system prompts the user to say or enter the in-mall store number or name. Once the store is identified and its information accessed, the UPC code or any additional similar, or unique code, once indicated or entered by the customer, would cause the system to provide desired related product advertisement or nutritional information. The largest model, of course, would be the “1-call-digital” and, once accessed, the system asks for voice prompt for the participating retailer, the retailer's location or zip, and the retailer's UPC or other codes, and then provides the related information and also records a digital certification of receipt by the customer of important information for future reference. All this information can be provided in any selected language regardless of the bulk of the information, and such a system allows instant changes without the usual manufacturer's cost to replace obsolete graphics or packages.
[0066]
[0067] The following terms and phrases, when used herein, are defined as follows:
[0068] Branded PIN: Any PIN presented at vendor's or licensee's “brand name” URL will provide the customer with the related digital content, providing all the required information has been included at registration. Example: The vendor's PIN and a unique number on a purchase receipt are used as an identifier to allow delivery of content from that vendor.
[0069] Download: A method of sending digital information or content, either delivered over the Internet, via wireless, or any means of communication known today, or any means for delivery of digital content that may replace these existing technologies.
[0070] Digital Content: Digital content refers to any form of audio or video or audio/video material that is stored in digital format so that it can be downloaded as a file or files via the Internet or other point-to-point connection, or that can be played or viewed by streaming the content over the Internet or other point-to-point connection without requiring that the content be permanently stored on the receiving device or player or viewer.
[0071] DVO—Digital Versatile Object: A DVO is a virtual or electronic “container” for storing audio and/or video content in a highly compressed form, using any compression/decompression (“codec”) technology, such as, for example, the compression/decompression technology disclosed in Coifman et al., U.S. Pat. No. 5,384,725 (issued Jan. 24, 1995) for a Method and Apparatus for Encoding and Decoding Using Wavelet-Packets, fully incorporated by reference herein. The ability to decompress the content “on the fly” allows the digital content to reside on a computer's local storage media (“hard drive”) while retaining a small (compressed) footprint of storage space. As an example, a typical DVO might require 7.7 Megabytes when stored in a DVO (compressed) format, which could include both audio and images, but, when stored in a standard (uncompressed) digital audio format, such as lossless MP3 encoding, the audio portion might requires about 90 megabytes of storage space.
[0072] Digital content includes, but is not limited to, the use of DVOs.
[0073] Elvis Presley: The celebrity name “Elvis Presley” is used herein simply as an example of an artist or celebrity, living or dead, portrayed either by themselves or by a celebrity impersonator, for the purpose of providing interesting or entertaining customizable content for use with the present invention.
[0074] IVR—Interactive Voice Response system: The term “IVR” is used herein to refer to a telephony system that allows a user to enter information or indicate preferences or selections by using audio instructions and menus where the user can respond using the keypad or dial to indicate the number of the selection desired or can respond using voice commands that the system can convert to selections or by including verbal instructions that will be interpreted later by a human being as well as the ability to record messages or audio that can be digitized and included as part of the delivery of a digital content. The term IVR is used herein to describe this method of communication irrespective of whether the implementation is via a standard telephone network or cellular telephone network and compliant telephone device, or whether it is carried out over the Internet (a/k/a “Internet telephony”) using a suitable device for such a connection, or via some other as yet unknown means of providing a point-to-point connection for the express purpose of voice or audio/video communication with an automated response system.
[0075] PIN—Personal Identification Number: The term PIN is used herein to indicate a unique number or code or serial number or combination of these that is associated with or printed on or recorded on a specific unit or license or package in either human or machine readable formats.
[0076] URL—Universal Resource Locator: A URL refers to an addressing method that has been implemented on the Internet that allows the publisher or a WWW (World Wide Web) web site to give each page of the site a unique address that will allow a user of the Internet to find that page or that will allow links to be made that will allow a user to go to that page in an Internet browser. The term URL is used herein to indicate such an Internet address, but also refers to any similar existing or as yet unknown technology that is used to address web pages or similar constructs or alternate or related solutions for addressing such as HTTP or TCP/IP addresses.
[0077] Although the present invention has been described and illustrated with respect to preferred embodiments and preferred uses thereof, it is not to be so limited since modifications and changes can be made therein which are within the full intended scope of the invention.