Method and apparatus for preventing the unauthorized use of...

Incremental printing of symbolic information – Ink jet – Fluid or fluid source handling means

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C347S085000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06325495

ABSTRACT:

FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates generally to a device for preventing the unauthorized use and later refill of a cartridge for supplying a consumable commodity. Specifically, this invention relates to preventing the unauthorized use of a toner cartridge and later refill of the toner contained therein.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Manufacturers and distributors of printers and other devices, which use consumable supplies, are presented with the problem of having unauthorized third parties, refill empty cartridges with unapproved, often-inferior supplies. Replacement and reuse of these unauthorized cartridges often causes problems with the proper operation of the machines. Unauthorized retainer cartridge refill and use typically occurs in systems such as, printers, facsimiles, photocopiers, photographic film processors, and machines supplying or using a consumable. Typically, these products are refilled with inferior goods, which during use may cause machine malfunctions such as, uneven application of toner on a drum, clogged print nozzles and/or the printing of unintended lines or blotches. If left untreated, this problem may even persist until the machine ceases operation.
A result of these malfunctions, the machine vendor is typically called upon to service the machine. During the response to the service call, the service technician may determine that the malfunction was a result of inferior supplies. Based upon this finding the user is then charged with the cost associated with the services call. However, the immediate link between the malfunction and the inferior supplies may by difficult for the service technician to prove. For this reason, and in an effort to ensure customer satisfaction, the first service call is usually covered by the vendor. In either case, each party is inconvenienced and/or economically impacted.
Preventing the unauthorized refill of retaining cartridges ensures that the machines requiring such containers will operate using approved supplies, within an approved retaining cartridge. The vendor's ability to control the quality of the consumable, as well as, the number of times the cartridge is used, enables vendor control over the effect the cartridge may have on the performance of the machine. In addition, the cost of operating and servicing the machine may be reduced.
Tracking the history of the retaining cartridges allows the vendor to know how many times the cartridge was used, to what extent is was used, and if there were any problems related to the use of that cartridge. Tracking the history, requires maintaining a record of information such as, the number of times the cartridge was refilled; the number of cycles the cartridge has been through; the average temperature of the machine; the average consumable dispensed per cycle, the weight of the cartridge; and, the total period of time the machine has been operation.
One solution to the problem is to always require the use of new cartridges. An example of one such system is described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,940,103 issued to Hetzer et al. on Aug. 17, 1999 for a Device for Preventing Re-use of a Container for Supplying Ink. This apparatus provides a device wherein a hollow needle is inserted into a rubber elastic closure of an ink supply. A hermetically closing cover device is provided inside the container, defining an insertion region for the hollow needle, and can be tripped irreversibly by the initial insertion of the hollow needle. Once the hollow needle has been removed, ink can no longer flow, even if the needle is reinserted.
Preventing the reuse of a liquid container requires that new containers must always be used and that the old containers be discarded, regardless of whether the container is mechanically capable of performing as, or like, new. This practice significantly raises the operation cost of the machine and is environmentally unconscious. In today's business atmosphere, where the consumer is continually requiring environmentally safe reductions in operating expense, this solution is no longer viable.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
According to the present invention, the unauthorized refill of a retaining cartridge is prevented by providing a smart button cell affixed to the retaining cartridge. The invention can be best described in three stages: manufacture, use and refill. The first stage, manufacture, requires vendor specific and cartridge specific information stored to a smart button cell. The vendor specific information may be a vendor identification number, or some other vendor unique designation. The cartridge information must include a manufacturer predetermined number, N, equal to the number of times the cartridge may be refilled and not be impacted by mechanical degradation. This may be tracked within the smart button cell in an ascending register. Thus, a new cartridge in the ascending register has the designation N
o=
0. The cartridge specific information may also include temperature, total number of pages printed, total operating hours, total cycles of operation, and weight. This information is then stored and cryptographically signed by a computer system as part of the manufacturing process. This cryptographic signature is also stored in the smart button cell. The smart button cell is then affixed to the retaining cartridge in a manner ready for interlocking operability.
Turning now to the use stage, the retaining cartridge is operatively inserted to a host machine in a manner where information can transfer from the smart button cell to host machine. The host machine has memory for retaining information transferred from the smart button cell, a processor for gathering and manipulating the information as well as verifying the cryptographic signature, and a human interface for communicating certain information between the host machine and the user. The host machine detects the presence of the retaining cartridge upon contact, reads the button cell and verifies the signature of the stored information with a public key stored in the host machine. If, based upon the signature verifying that was stored previously in the smart button cell, the host machine determines that the retaining cartridge is authorized for use, then the host machine enables normal operation. If, however, the host machine determines that the retaining cartridge is not authorized, then use of the cartridge is not permitted. Essentially simultaneously to this determination, a message is sent, through the human interface to the user, indicating the presence of an invalid cartridge.
During use, the host machine and/or smart button cell collect the requested information. Frequently during operation, the information collected by the host machine is updated to the smart button cell. Usage information is recorded in the write once memory which is not alterable. Usage information includes for example, page counts, pixel counts per color plane, dispenser cleaning cycles, idle time, power cycles and dispenser cycles, such as, drum revolutions or ink jet head passes across a page. The usage information can also be transferred from the smart button cell to a database.
Once the consumable has been consumed the cartridge has been removed from the host machine, and it is physically moved to a refill location. Here, the smart button cell of the retaining cartridge is read in order to determine the number of refills presently recorded. If the number of previous refills is greater than a predetermined number then the cartridge is not refilled. However, if the number of refills is less than a predetermined number then the cartridge is refilled. The predetermined number of refills is determined by the manufacture based upon maximum refill and usage constraints. During the refill process a computer system will store new information into the smart button cell that will indicate to the host machine that the cartridge has been refilled. The same computer system cryptographically signs this new information and also stores the cryptographic signature into the smart button cell. Without the infor

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