Patents by Inventor Marco Martens
Marco Martens 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).
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Patent number: 8200982Abstract: A method of processing semiotic data includes receiving semiotic data including at least one data set P, selecting a function h, and for at least one of each data set P to be collected, computing h(P), destroying data set P, and storing h(P) in a database, wherein data set P cannot be extracted from h(P). The method further includes selecting a private key/public key (K, k) once for all cases, one of destroying the private key K and sending the private key K to a trusted party, and choosing function h as the public encryption function corresponding to k.Type: GrantFiled: March 19, 2010Date of Patent: June 12, 2012Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Andrea Califano, Stephen Carl Kaufman, Marco Martens, William Robert Pulleyblank, Gustavo Alejandro Stolovitzky, Charles Philippe Tresser, Chai Wah Wu
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Patent number: 7761715Abstract: A method (as well as system and signal-bearing medium) of processing biometric data, includes receiving biometric data including a data set P, selecting a secure hash function h, and for each data set P to be collected, computing h(P), destroying the data set P, and storing h(P) in a database, wherein data set P cannot be extracted from h(P).Type: GrantFiled: December 10, 1999Date of Patent: July 20, 2010Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Andrea Califano, Stephen Carl Kaufman, Marco Martens, William Robert Pulleyblank, Gustavo Alejandro Stolovitzky, Charles Philippe Tresser, Chai Wah Wu
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Publication number: 20100172495Abstract: A method of processing semiotic data includes receiving semiotic data including at least one data set P, selecting a function h, and for at least one of each data set P to be collected, computing h(P), destroying data set P, and storing h(P) in a database, wherein data set P cannot be extracted from h(P). The method further includes selecting a private key/public key (K, k) once for all cases, one of destroying the private key K and sending the private key K to a trusted party, and choosing function h as the public encryption function corresponding to k.Type: ApplicationFiled: March 19, 2010Publication date: July 8, 2010Applicant: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Andrea Califano, Stephen Carl Kaufman, Marco Martens, William Robert Pulleyblank, Gustavo Alejandro Stolovitzky, Charles Philippe Tresser, Chai Wah Wu
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Patent number: 7474805Abstract: Methods and systems for efficient scaling in the transform domain are provided when transform coefficient data is provided as an input to a data processing system, comprising generating a first matrix from transform coefficient data; zeroing out a row or column of, or inserting a row or column of zeros into, the first matrix; generating a second matrix by applying a one-dimensional inverse transform to the first matrix with the zeroed-out at least one row, the at least one column, the inserted at least one row of zeros or the at least one column of zeros; generating a third matrix by regrouping the second matrix; generating a combined matrix by applying a forward transform to the third matrix; and the data processing system scaling the data represented by the transform coefficient data by applying the combined matrix to the transform coefficient data.Type: GrantFiled: August 27, 2007Date of Patent: January 6, 2009Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Tomasz J. Nowicki, Marco Martens, Jennifer Q. Trelewicz, Timothy J. Trenary, Joan L. Mitchell, Michael T. Brady
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Publication number: 20080031545Abstract: Methods and systems for efficient scaling in the transform domain are provided when transform coefficient data is provided as an input to a data processing system, comprising generating a first matrix from transform coefficient data; zeroing out a row or column of, or inserting a row or column of zeros into, the first matrix; generating a second matrix by applying a one-dimensional inverse transform to the first matrix with the zeroed-out at least one row, the at least one column, the inserted at least one row of zeros or the at least one column of zeros; generating a third matrix by regrouping the second matrix; generating a combined matrix by applying a forward transform to the third matrix; and the data processing system scaling the data represented by the transform coefficient data by applying the combined matrix to the transform coefficient data.Type: ApplicationFiled: August 27, 2007Publication date: February 7, 2008Applicant: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Tomasz Nowicki, Marco Martens, Jennifer Trelewicz, Timothy Trenary, Joan Mitchell, Michael Brady
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Patent number: 7298925Abstract: A method and system for efficient scaling in the transform domain, wherein transform coefficient data is provided as an input to a data processing system and scaled in the transform domain by application of a combined matrix. Some embodiments utilize discrete cosine transform data. One embodiment of the invention generates a combined matrix for one-dimensional scaling by selecting a rational scaling factor and matrix dimension value, generating a matrix with some zero values, applying a one-dimensional inverse transform, regrouping, and applying a one-dimensional forward transform. One application of the invention performs up-scaling operations, and another performs down-scaling operations. The invention also provides for two-dimensional scaling by selecting horizontal and vertical scaling parameters and generating first and second combined matrices responsive to the parameters and combining them into a single combined matrix. The invention may also incorporate a predetermined cost function.Type: GrantFiled: September 30, 2003Date of Patent: November 20, 2007Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Tomasz J. Nowicki, Marco Martens, Jennifer Q. Trelewicz, Timothy J. Trenary, Joan L. Mitchell, Michael T. Brady
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Patent number: 7215445Abstract: Pages of books are copied without distortion due to curvature of the page near the book binding or the distortion in a copied page is corrected using the spacing of equidistant bars on tape strips applied to the top and bottom edges of a page before copying. The tape is preferably transparent and rather narrow and easily attached to a page to be copied. The first step in the distortion correction procedure is to locate the bars at the top and bottom of the page. The distortion of the spacing between the imaged bars is computed based on the known distance between the equidistant bars. The computed distortion of the spacing is then input to a distortion correction algorithm. The output of the distortion correction algorithm generates a corrected image. This image may also optionally delete the bars so that they are not printed in the copy. The corrected image is then copied.Type: GrantFiled: June 7, 2005Date of Patent: May 8, 2007Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Gordon W. Braudaway, Frank P. Giordano, Marco Martens, Charles P. Tresser, Chai Wah Wu, Charles A. Micchelli
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Patent number: 7188258Abstract: A method (and system) for guaranteeing authenticity of an object, includes providing a sample of material obtainable only by at least one of chemical and physical processes such that the sample is random and not reproducible, associating a number reproducibly to the sample by using a specific reader, and forming at least one coded version of the number, the at least one coded version being obtained by a key signature, and the version being recorded into an area of the object.Type: GrantFiled: September 17, 1999Date of Patent: March 6, 2007Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Gaurav Aggarwal, Nabil Mahmoud Amer, Vernon Ralph Austel, Pradeep Kumar Dubey, Ashutosh Kulshreshtha, Marco Martens, Bruce Albert Scott, Sean William Smith, Charles Philippe Tresser, Robert Jacob von Gutfeld, Steve Harris Weingart, Chai Wah Wu
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Patent number: 7171565Abstract: A method (and system) for preventing counterfeiting and cloning of smart cards, includes providing a smart card with a cryptographic structure for authorizing the smart card which can not be accessed completely by a predetermined small number of readings. The cryptographic structure can be built only by whoever emits the card or an agent thereof.Type: GrantFiled: October 10, 2000Date of Patent: January 30, 2007Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Marco Martens, Charles Philippe Tresser
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Patent number: 7099523Abstract: A method for scaling a signal sample rate includes interpolating between at least two scaling ratios to calculate an arbitrary scaling ratio, using a predetermined interpolation algorithm, and scaling a sample rate for a first portion of the signal using a first scaling ratio, and scaling a sample rate for a second portion of the signal using a second scaling ratio, to form a scaled signal having an average scaling ratio equal to the arbitrary scaling ratio.Type: GrantFiled: July 19, 2002Date of Patent: August 29, 2006Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Marco Martens, Tomasz J Nowicki, Jennifer Q. Trelewicz, Timothy James Trenary
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Patent number: 6957337Abstract: A method and apparatus for authenticating (or identifying) a subject, includes using one or a plurality of biometric measurements for authentication (or identification) without any sharing of the subject's biometric data with a party requesting authentication.Type: GrantFiled: August 11, 1999Date of Patent: October 18, 2005Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Timothy Joseph Chainer, Bruce P. Kitchens, Stephane Herman Maes, Marco Martens, Joseph Dela Rutledge, Charles Philippe Tresser
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Publication number: 20050225808Abstract: Pages of books are copied without distortion due to curvature of the page near the book binding or the distortion in a copied page is corrected using the spacing of equidistant bars on tape strips applied to the top and bottom edges of a page before copying. The tape is preferably transparent and rather narrow and easily attached to a page to be copied. The first step in the distortion correction procedure is to locate the bars at the top and bottom of the page. The distortion of the spacing between the imaged bars is computed based on the known distance between the equidistant bars. The computed distortion of the spacing is then input to a distortion correction algorithm. The output of the distortion correction algorithm generates a corrected image. This image may also optionally delete the bars so that they are not printed in the copy. The corrected image is then copied.Type: ApplicationFiled: June 7, 2005Publication date: October 13, 2005Inventors: Gordon Braudaway, Frank Giordano, Marco Martens, Charles Tresser, Chai Wu, Charles Micchelli
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Patent number: 6954290Abstract: Pages of books are copied without distortion due to curvature of the page near the book binding or the distortion in a copied page is corrected using the spacing of equidistant bars on tape strips applied to the top and bottom edges of a page before copying. The tape is preferably transparent and rather narrow and easily attached to a page to be copied. The first step in the distortion correction procedure is to locate the bars at the top and bottom of the page. The distortion of the spacing between the imaged bars is computed based on the known distance between the equidistant bars. The computed distortion of the spacing is then input to a distortion correction algorithm. The output of the distortion correction algorithm generates a corrected image. This image may also optionally delete the bars so that they are not printed in the copy. The corrected image is then copied.Type: GrantFiled: November 9, 2000Date of Patent: October 11, 2005Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Gordon W. Braudaway, Frank P. Giordano, Marco Martens, Charles P. Tresser, Chai Wah Wu, Charles A. Micchelli
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Publication number: 20050069224Abstract: A method and system for efficient scaling in the transform domain, wherein transform coefficient data is provided as an input to a data processing system and scaled in the transform domain by application of a combined matrix. Some embodiments utilize discrete cosine transform data. One embodiment of the invention generates a combined matrix for one-dimensional scaling by selecting a rational scaling factor and matrix dimension value, generating a matrix with some zero values, applying a one-dimensional inverse transform, regrouping, and applying a one-dimensional forward transform. One application of the invention performs up-scaling operations, and another performs down-scaling operations. The invention also provides for two-dimensional scaling by selecting horizontal and vertical scaling parameters and generating first and second combined matrices responsive to the parameters and combining them into a single combined matrix. The invention may also incorporate a predetermined cost function.Type: ApplicationFiled: September 30, 2003Publication date: March 31, 2005Applicant: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Tomasz Nowicki, Marco Martens, Jennifer Trelewicz, Timothy Trenary, Joan Mitchell, Michael Brady
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Patent number: 6873977Abstract: A method and system offer confidential purchase of electronic data which can be used without any need of knowledge in cryptography nor mastery of computer use beyond usual usage of the World Wide Web (WWW). The method and system which guarantee confidentiality as long as there is no collusion between agents working for a large number of reputable companies whose references can be easily checked on the Internet before proceeding to the order. In addition, the method and system allow for guaranteed payment and offer recourse in case of improper delivery.Type: GrantFiled: May 11, 2000Date of Patent: March 29, 2005Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Alok Aggarwal, Pradeep K. Dubey, Charanjit Singh Jutla, Vijay Kumar, Marco Martens, Michael Ira Shub, Charles P. Tresser, Chai Wah Wu
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Patent number: 6834344Abstract: A method is presented for marking high-quality digital images with a robust and invisible watermark. It requires the mark to survive and remain detectable and authenticatable through all image manipulations that in themselves do not damage the image beyond useability. These manipulations include JPEG “lossy” compression and, in the extreme, the printing and rescanning of the image. The watermark also has the property that it can detect if the essential contents of the image has changed. The first phase of the method comprises extracting a digest or number N from the image so that N only (or mostly) depends on the essential information content, such that the same number N can be obtained from a scan of a high quality print of the image, from the compressed form of the image, or in general, from the image after minor modifications (introduced inadvertently by processing, noise etc.). The second phase comprises the marking.Type: GrantFiled: September 17, 1999Date of Patent: December 21, 2004Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Gaurav Aggarwal, Pradeep K. Dubey, Ashutosh Kulshreshtha, Marco Martens, Charles P. Tresser, Chai W. Wu
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Patent number: 6817538Abstract: A system and method for detecting parallel marketing of an item, include forming at least one of a coating and a code on the item, interrogating the at least one of the coating and said code, and determining from the interrogating whether the item has been transferred from an authorized merchant to an unauthorized merchant.Type: GrantFiled: May 20, 2002Date of Patent: November 16, 2004Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Ali Afzali-Ardakani, Claudius Feger, Marco Martens, Paul Andrew Moskowitz, Alejandro Gabriel Schrott, Charles P. Tresser, Robert Jacob von Gutfeld
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Patent number: 6807634Abstract: A digital watermarking method encodes different pairs of watermarks into each of a plurality of images offered for use by a vendor. The watermarks in each pair are derived from two separate collections of watermarks and sufficiently different so as to prevent false positives. Because each pair of watermarks is assigned to a different customer relative to a particular image, unauthorized use of a digital image sold to a customer may be determined by locating the associated pair of watermarks assigned to the customer in the image. Collusion detection is also realized by forming each pair of masks from sub-collections of masks which are detectable in an image formed by combining the same images sold to one or more customers.Type: GrantFiled: November 30, 1999Date of Patent: October 19, 2004Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Gordon W. Braudaway, Marco Martens, Frederick C. Mintzer, James B. Shearer, Charles P. Tresser, Chai W. Wu
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Patent number: 6746053Abstract: A system and method for detecting parallel marketing of an item, include forming at least one of a coating and a code on the item, interrogating the at least one of the coating and said code, and determining from the interrogating whether the item has been transferred from an authorized merchant to an unauthorized merchant.Type: GrantFiled: October 29, 1998Date of Patent: June 8, 2004Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Ali Afzali-Ardakani, Claudius Feger, Marco Martens, Paul Andrew Moskowitz, Alejandro Gabriel Schrott, Charles P. Tresser, Robert Jacob von Gutfeld
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Patent number: 6738162Abstract: A semi-digital printer includes a print head assembly that prints an image on a sheet of paper that has been mounted onto a turntable, and a rotating means which rotates the turntable so that the print head assembly ejects ink or toner onto the sheet of paper at one or more predetermined angles. The printing may be halftone or color. If the print head assembly includes more than one print head, the rotating means rotates the turntable to a different angle for each print head. By rotating the turntable in this manner, the printer records an image at any angle (0° to 360°) precisely (i.e., without having to perform the angular approximations required by conventional digital printers). As a result, a printed image of improved quality is produced. Alternatively, the semi-digital printer may be configured so that the print head assembly rotates relative to the paper.Type: GrantFiled: December 9, 1999Date of Patent: May 18, 2004Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Marco Martens, Ravishankar Rao, Gerhard R. Thompson, Charles B. Tresser, Chai W. Wu