New news is informative, yes, but sometimes old news can help as well; articles about this popped up in around 2012, suggesting MS had filed for the patent about a year ago. I haven't been able to find any confirmation as to whether or not it was finalized, but still...
http://kotaku.com/5958307/this-kinect-patent-is-terrifying-wants-to-charge-you-for-license-violation
The gist of it was that Microsoft filed for a patent that, though not mentioning the Kinect by name, spoke of using a camera- one capable of separating individuals from the background- to determine how many people were consuming the content, as it were, such as a pay per view fight. You would purchase a license permitting a certain number of people, or certain number of total 'views,' and if something happened to disrupt it- like your long-lost brother barges into the room, filthy and wearing the pelt of a bear- the camera would detect his presence, determine that the maximum number of permitted people has been exceeded, and... well, seek remuneration. Whether it just means automatically adding another charge to your credit card, or shutting off the content UNTIL you pay the extra dough, who knows. There's also talk about judging age by physical size and locking off certain content if the subject is deemed too young, which unfortunately means very short people might never get to use the system to watch porn.
But, hey, companies file patents all the time on tech they don't necessarily intend to use, such as Sony. And it's not like there was anything to worry about at the time, because the odds of the 360 being used in this fashion, ever, were pretty abysmal. For one, the Kinect never really took off on the market, meaning fewer people had it than didn't, and I imagine making it a requirement for pay per view would have lost the providers more revenue than they'd have gained. Besides, even in the event you DID own a Kinect, you could unplug it at any time, which would have made it trickier for MS to find a way to ensure it was actually keeping proper watch. So, between low market penetration and optional use, there's definitely no reason to pan-
...oh wait.
http://kotaku.com/5958307/this-kinect-patent-is-terrifying-wants-to-charge-you-for-license-violation
The gist of it was that Microsoft filed for a patent that, though not mentioning the Kinect by name, spoke of using a camera- one capable of separating individuals from the background- to determine how many people were consuming the content, as it were, such as a pay per view fight. You would purchase a license permitting a certain number of people, or certain number of total 'views,' and if something happened to disrupt it- like your long-lost brother barges into the room, filthy and wearing the pelt of a bear- the camera would detect his presence, determine that the maximum number of permitted people has been exceeded, and... well, seek remuneration. Whether it just means automatically adding another charge to your credit card, or shutting off the content UNTIL you pay the extra dough, who knows. There's also talk about judging age by physical size and locking off certain content if the subject is deemed too young, which unfortunately means very short people might never get to use the system to watch porn.
But, hey, companies file patents all the time on tech they don't necessarily intend to use, such as Sony. And it's not like there was anything to worry about at the time, because the odds of the 360 being used in this fashion, ever, were pretty abysmal. For one, the Kinect never really took off on the market, meaning fewer people had it than didn't, and I imagine making it a requirement for pay per view would have lost the providers more revenue than they'd have gained. Besides, even in the event you DID own a Kinect, you could unplug it at any time, which would have made it trickier for MS to find a way to ensure it was actually keeping proper watch. So, between low market penetration and optional use, there's definitely no reason to pan-
...oh wait.