Patents by Inventor John O. Ryan

John O. Ryan has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 7298962
    Abstract: A method and apparatus is disclosed which reduces or removes the effectiveness of commercial skip systems such as presently found in VCRs, PVRs, etc. which are designed to delete commercials from signal material upon playback of a previously recorded version of the signal material. In an embodiment, the effectiveness of the commercial skip system is reduced or removed by adding a flat field of selected signal level to active line portions of video lines of the signal material. Other embodiments modify the normal fade to black signal indicative of a commercial to provide a fade to non-black signal. In further embodiments, a fade to non-black signal is inserted in an overscan area of the signal picture. Still further embodiments modify audio signals or selected signals in the horizontal blanking interval which may be used in commercial skip systems to detect the presence of commercials.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 12, 2003
    Date of Patent: November 20, 2007
    Assignee: Macrovision Corporation
    Inventors: Ronald Quan, John O Ryan, Peter Wonfor
  • Patent number: 7274790
    Abstract: Method and apparatus for scrambling a high definition television signal to discourage unauthorized recording of same. While recording per se is not prevented, the resulting recorded signal is rendered unusable due to an induced “wobble” between the active video and the associated sync pulses. The scrambled television signal is readily viewable on a compliant high definition television set which descrambles the HDTV signal using an encoded indication of the amount of wobble accompanying the HDTV signal. Also provided is a special interface to prevent unauthorized persons from using the indication of the amount of wobble so as to defeat the scrambling. Also provided are method and apparatus for defeating the scrambling method and hence allowing recording of the scrambled video signal.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 31, 2003
    Date of Patent: September 25, 2007
    Assignee: Macrovision Corporation
    Inventors: John O. Ryan, James R. Holzgrafe, Mark A. Hollar
  • Patent number: 6950520
    Abstract: A method and apparatus for modifying a video signal to allow it to carry encoded data which is detectable at a suitably compliant receiver but is not recorded by a conventional video recorder. One application is to carry a descrambling key to prevent useful recording (but not viewing) of a scrambled television signal since the key will not be recorded. This encoded “hidden” data is not recorded by the conventional video recorders because, for instance, it is located in the vertical or horizontal blanking intervals of the video signal, or is carried by a high frequency carrier signal, or is expressed by phase modulation of the video signal's synchronization pulses.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 25, 2000
    Date of Patent: September 27, 2005
    Assignee: Macrovision Corporation
    Inventors: John O. Ryan, James R. Holzgrafe, Mark A. Hollar
  • Publication number: 20040228605
    Abstract: A method and apparatus is disclosed which reduces or removes the effectiveness of commercial skip systems such as presently found in VCRs, PVRs, etc. which are designed to delete commercials from signal material upon playback of a previously recorded version of the signal material. In an embodiment, the effectiveness of the commercial skip system is reduced or removed by adding a flat field of selected signal level to active line portions of video lines of the signal material. Other embodiments modify the normal fade to black signal indicative of a commercial to provide a fade to non-black signal. In further embodiments, a fade to non-black signal is inserted in an overscan area of the signal picture. Still further embodiments modify audio signals or selected signals in the horizontal blanking interval which may be used in commercial skip systems to detect the presence of commercials.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 12, 2003
    Publication date: November 18, 2004
    Inventors: Ronald Quan, John O. Ryan, Peter Wonfor
  • Publication number: 20040103293
    Abstract: A robust technique to prevent illicit copying of video information notwithstanding the use of image scaling. A watermark is embedded into the video signal (e.g., DVD's content or other video sources) at different scales (i.e., sizes). The watermark is maintained at each scale for a predetermined time duration that is sufficient to allow the detector circuit in a DVD-recorder, DVHS recorder, DVCR, or any other digital format recorder to detect, extract, and process information contained in the watermark. At the end of the predetermined time duration, the watermark is changed to a different scale preferably on a pseudo-random basis to ensure that each one of all the scales in a predetermined scaling range is achieved a predetermined number of times.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 7, 2003
    Publication date: May 27, 2004
    Inventor: John O. Ryan
  • Publication number: 20040047469
    Abstract: Method and apparatus for scrambling a high definition television signal to discourage unauthorized recording of same. While recording per se is not prevented, the resulting recorded signal is rendered unusable due to an induced “wobble” between the active video and the associated sync pulses. The scrambled television signal is readily viewable on a compliant high definition television set which descrambles the HDTV signal using an encoded indication of the amount of wobble accompanying the HDTV signal. Also provided is a special interface to prevent unauthorized persons from using the indication of the amount of wobble so as to defeat the scrambling. Also provided are method and apparatus for defeating the scrambling method and hence allowing recording of the scrambled video signal.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 31, 2003
    Publication date: March 11, 2004
    Inventors: John O. Ryan, James R. Holzgrafe, Mark A. Hollar
  • Patent number: 6701062
    Abstract: Method and apparatus for providing generational copy control of a video signal. A digital video signal contains content information, first supplemental information and second supplemental information. The first supplemental information is represented by a watermark pattern, the second by a control pattern. Copying of the content information is only permitted if a predetermined combination of the first and second supplemental information is present. Pseudo-sync pulses are added to a blanking interval of an analog video signal converted from a digital video signal, the pulses representing the second supplemental information.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 8, 1999
    Date of Patent: March 2, 2004
    Assignee: Macrovision Corporation
    Inventors: Johan Cornelis Talstra, Mark Hollar, Kordian Kurowski, David Collier, William Wrobleski, James Holzgrafe, Antonius Adrianus Cornelis Maria Kalker, Derek Nelson, Patrice Capitant, John O. Ryan
  • Patent number: 6600873
    Abstract: A video signal is modified so that a television receiver will provide a normal color picture but a video tape recorder will detect the modification and prohibit the video signal from being recorded. The color burst phase of the video signal is modified so as to make inferior quality pictures in the event that the resulting modified video signal is recorded. A disabling circuit (22) associated with the recorder (20) detects the presence of the modified video signal. This detection is done by determining the presence of modified color burst phase signals in even a single television line of the video signal. A control signal (26) is produced when the modified color burst phase signal is detected, which disables the recorder (20). If no modified color burst phase signal is detected, the recorder (20) is enabled to allow an acceptable recording of the video signal.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 13, 1999
    Date of Patent: July 29, 2003
    Assignee: Macrovision Corporation
    Inventors: Gerow D. Brill, John O. Ryan
  • Patent number: 6590979
    Abstract: Scrambling and descrambling techniques are described which, unlike many typical scrambling systems, are compatible with all conceivable forms of signal compression systems. The scrambling technique is based on the principle of applying local spatial distortion to the pixels in a video image, and the like, to locally displace the pixels from their normal locations. Most compression systems rely on the condition that good correlation exists in the image and that any small portion, i.e., pixel, in an image is very similar to the portions, or pixels, nearby. Since the present technique provides local spatial distortion which does not de-correlate the image and does not re-arrange the pixels in the image, the pixels near other pixels prior to application of the scrambling technique, have the same positional relationship after scrambling. The complementary descrambling technique restores the locally displaced pixels to their normal locations to restore the video image to its original unscrambled state.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 23, 1998
    Date of Patent: July 8, 2003
    Assignee: Macrovision Corporation
    Inventor: John O. Ryan
  • Patent number: 6542609
    Abstract: Method and apparatus for scrambling a high definition television signal to discourage unauthorized recording of same. While recording per se is not prevented, the resulting recorded signal is rendered unusable due to an induced “wobble” between the active video and the associated sync pulses. The scrambled television signal is readily viewable on a compliant high definition television set which descrambles the HDTV signal using an encoded indication of the amount of wobble accompanying the HDTV signal. Also provided is a special interface to prevent unauthorized persons from using the indication of the amount of wobble so as to defeat the scrambling. Also provided are method and apparatus for defeating the scrambling method and hence allowing recording of the scrambled video signal.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 14, 2000
    Date of Patent: April 1, 2003
    Assignee: Macrovision Corporation
    Inventors: John O. Ryan, James R. Holzgrafe, Mark A. Hollar
  • Patent number: 6411713
    Abstract: A method and apparatus for adaptively controlling the presence of copy protection signals in a video signal depends upon the scene content of the video signal during an upper portion of a display of the video signal. Thus, in the upper portion of the scenes, wherein picture information would be noticeably altered by a hooking process the copy protection process is deactivated or effectively reduced to eliminate or reduce the hooking or tearing effects. The adaptive control of the copy protection improves the playability performance of copy protected video signals on a very small minority of television receivers which display a small hooking or tearing characteristic in the upper portion of the display of the copy protected video signal.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 9, 1998
    Date of Patent: June 25, 2002
    Assignee: Macrovision Corporation
    Inventor: John O. Ryan
  • Patent number: 6404889
    Abstract: A VGA (or other component video signal) output, e.g. from a computer or DVD player, is protected so it is viewable on a VGA monitor. However, if the component video signal is converted to composite video (e.g. television) the resulting television picture is of substantially degraded quality, thereby inhibiting viewing and/or copying. This protects for instance copyrighted material in the VGA format from unauthorized use. The protection involves modifying the horizontal or vertical synchronization signals in the VGA video in such a way that there is no adverse affect on a typical VGA monitor. However, most or all VGA to television converters and/or television sets and VCR's suffer from loss of synchronization, resulting in an unviewable picture. Also, methods and circuits for defeating the copy protection are provided.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 13, 1997
    Date of Patent: June 11, 2002
    Assignee: Macrovision Corporation
    Inventors: John O. Ryan, Kordian J. Kurowski, Ronald Quan
  • Publication number: 20020054749
    Abstract: In the known color stripe process for preventing recording of video signals, the color burst present on each line of active video is modified so that any subsequent video tape recording of the video signal shows variations in the color fidelity that appear as undesirable bands or stripes of color error. This color stripe process is defeated first by determining the location of the video lines including the color stripe process, either by prior experimentation or by on-line detection. Then some or all of the lines including the modified color bursts are modified so as to render the overall video signal recordable. The modification is accomplished in a number of ways, including phase shifting the color stripe burst into the correct phase, replacing some of the color stripe bursts or a portion of particular color stripe bursts so that they are no longer effective, and mixing the color stripe burst with color stripe signals of the correct phase so as to eliminate most or all of the phase error present.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 2, 2001
    Publication date: May 9, 2002
    Inventors: Ronald Quan, John O. Ryan
  • Patent number: 6381367
    Abstract: Fingerprinting and fingerprint detection, techniques are described which, unlike typical fingerprint systems used to conceal video signals, are compatible with all conceivable forms of signal compression systems while still allowing viewing of the video signal. The fingerprint technique is based on the principle of applying very slight local spatial distortion to the pixels in a video image, and the like, by means of selected warp patterns. Thus the technique provides means for conveying, within the video signal, selected information in the form of the fingerprint which is detectable electronically but which is not noticeable to a critical viewer who is watching the video signal. That is, the resultant fingerprinted video signal will appear to be identical to the undistorted video signal.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 23, 1998
    Date of Patent: April 30, 2002
    Assignee: Macrovision Corp.
    Inventor: John O. Ryan
  • Patent number: 6374036
    Abstract: Method and apparatus for “copy-once” of a digital video signal uses a watermark in the video signal. The embedded watermark has two versions: one indicates copy-never and a second indicates copy-once, the difference being a single watermark bit. The watermark carries additional bits representing a digitized attribute (image characteristic) of a particular video frame of the video signal, for instance an average value of the amplitude of a video field. The frame whose attribute is carried in the watermark has a field (or frame) marker, which is a special signal located in the overscan portion of the frame. A compliant video recorder verifies the watermark and the copy-once bit, extracts the associated attribute from the watermark, and compares it to the measured attribute of the marked video frame. Only if the extracted attribute value and the measured attribute value match is recording enabled.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 1, 1998
    Date of Patent: April 16, 2002
    Assignees: Macrovsion Corporation, Digimarc Corporation
    Inventors: John O. Ryan, Patrice Capitant, Clayton L. Davidson, James Holzgrafe, Kordian J Kurowski, Andrew Mellows, Tony Forrest Rodriquez
  • Publication number: 20020018564
    Abstract: Enhancements to a video anticopying process that causes an abnormally low amplitude video signal to be recorded on an illegal copy. The enhancements in one version introduce into the overscan portion of the television picture, just prior to the horizontal or vertical sync signals but in active video, a negative going waveform that appears to the television receiver or videotape recorder to be a sync signal, thereby causing an early horizontal or vertical retrace. One version provides (in the right overscan portion of the picture), a checker pattern of alternating gray and black areas which causes the TV set on which the illegal copy is played to horizontally retrace earlier than normal in selected lines with a consequential horizontal shift of the picture information on those lines. This substantially degrades picture viewability. In another version a gray pattern at the bottom overscan portion of the picture causes vertical picture instability.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 26, 2001
    Publication date: February 14, 2002
    Inventors: Peter J. Wonfor, Alistair J. Knox, Jeremy J. Corcoran, John O. Ryan, Ronald Quan
  • Patent number: 6330334
    Abstract: A system and method of information dissemination that permits the user to listen to the specific content of information when and where he or she wants to. A radio or television receiver system receives information from an FM subcarrier, a television vertical blanking interval transmission, a television separate audio program transmission or a dedicated channel and stores the transmitted information in a memory. A user interface allows selection from the memory of the stored information via a set of menus controlling a hierarchical database, so as to access particular items of information. Typically the system includes RAM and/or a storage medium such as a digital audio tape,a magneto-optical mini-disk, a magnetic disk or optical disk, sufficient to store information for 10 hours of audio. A decompression device, accepts the accessed compressed digital audio information items which may have been encrypted and transforms them into spoken speech.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 26, 2000
    Date of Patent: December 11, 2001
    Assignee: Command Audio Corporation
    Inventor: John O. Ryan
  • Patent number: 6327422
    Abstract: In the known color stripe process for preventing recording of video signals, the color burst present on each line of active video is modified so that any subsequent video tape recording of the video signal shows variations in the color fidelity that appear as undesirable bands or stripes of color error. This color stripe process is defeated first by determining the location of the video lines including the color stripe process, either by prior experimentation or by on-line detection. Then some or all of the lines including the modified color bursts are modified so as to render the overall video signal recordable. The modification is accomplished in a number of ways, including phase shifting the color stripe burst into the correct phase, replacing some of the color stripe bursts or a portion of particular color stripe bursts so that they are no longer effective, and mixing the color stripe burst with color stripe signals of the correct phase so as to eliminate most or all of the phase error present.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 12, 1998
    Date of Patent: December 4, 2001
    Assignee: Macrovision Corp
    Inventors: Ronald Quan, John O. Ryan
  • Publication number: 20010026617
    Abstract: Enhancements to a video anticopying process that causes an abnormally low amplitude video signal to be recorded on an illegal copy. The enhancements in one version introduce into the overscan portion of the television picture, just prior to the horizontal or vertical sync signals but in active video, a negative going waveform that appears to the television receiver or videotape recorder to be a sync signal, thereby causing an early horizontal or vertical retrace. One version provides (in the right overscan portion of the picture), a checker pattern of alternating gray and black areas which causes the TV set on which the illegal copy is played to horizontally retrace earlier than normal in selected lines with a consequential horizontal shift of the picture information on those lines. This substantially degrades picture viewability. In another version a gray pattern at the bottom overscan portion of the picture causes vertical picture instability.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 7, 2000
    Publication date: October 4, 2001
    Inventors: Peter J. Wonfor, Alistair J. Knox, Jeremy J. Corcoran, John O. Ryan, Ronald Quan
  • Patent number: 6295360
    Abstract: A VGA (or other component video signal) output, e.g. from a computer or DVD player, is subject to protection so it is viewable on a VGA monitor. If the component video signal is converted to composite video (e.g. television) the resulting television picture is of substantially degraded quality, thereby inhibiting viewing and/or copying. This protects for instance copyrighted material in the VGA format from unauthorized use. The protection modifies the horizontal or vertical synchronization signals in the VGA video in such a way that there is no adverse affect on a typical VGA monitor. Most or all VGA to television converters and/or television sets and VCR's suffer from loss of synchronization, resulting in an unviewable picture. Methods and apparatuses for defeating this copy protection are provided herein.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 18, 1999
    Date of Patent: September 25, 2001
    Assignee: Macrovision Corporation
    Inventors: John O. Ryan, Kordian J. Kurowski, Ronald Quan