CA2192502C - Universal message delivery system - Google Patents

Universal message delivery system

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Publication number
CA2192502C
CA2192502C CA002192502A CA2192502A CA2192502C CA 2192502 C CA2192502 C CA 2192502C CA 002192502 A CA002192502 A CA 002192502A CA 2192502 A CA2192502 A CA 2192502A CA 2192502 C CA2192502 C CA 2192502C
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CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
message
entity
network
sender
handle
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Fee Related
Application number
CA002192502A
Other languages
French (fr)
Other versions
CA2192502A1 (en
Inventor
Mark Alan Jones
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
AT&T Corp
Original Assignee
AT&T Corp
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by AT&T Corp filed Critical AT&T Corp
Publication of CA2192502A1 publication Critical patent/CA2192502A1/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of CA2192502C publication Critical patent/CA2192502C/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Fee Related legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04MTELEPHONIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04M3/00Automatic or semi-automatic exchanges
    • H04M3/42Systems providing special services or facilities to subscribers
    • H04M3/50Centralised arrangements for answering calls; Centralised arrangements for recording messages for absent or busy subscribers ; Centralised arrangements for recording messages
    • H04M3/53Centralised arrangements for recording incoming messages, i.e. mailbox systems
    • H04M3/5307Centralised arrangements for recording incoming messages, i.e. mailbox systems for recording messages comprising any combination of audio and non-audio components
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04MTELEPHONIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04M3/00Automatic or semi-automatic exchanges
    • H04M3/42Systems providing special services or facilities to subscribers
    • H04M3/42136Administration or customisation of services
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04MTELEPHONIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04M3/00Automatic or semi-automatic exchanges
    • H04M3/42Systems providing special services or facilities to subscribers
    • H04M3/42229Personal communication services, i.e. services related to one subscriber independent of his terminal and/or location
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04MTELEPHONIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04M3/00Automatic or semi-automatic exchanges
    • H04M3/42Systems providing special services or facilities to subscribers
    • H04M3/487Arrangements for providing information services, e.g. recorded voice services or time announcements
    • H04M3/493Interactive information services, e.g. directory enquiries ; Arrangements therefor, e.g. interactive voice response [IVR] systems or voice portals
    • H04M3/4931Directory assistance systems
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04MTELEPHONIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04M11/00Telephonic communication systems specially adapted for combination with other electrical systems
    • H04M11/02Telephonic communication systems specially adapted for combination with other electrical systems with bell or annunciator systems
    • H04M11/022Paging systems
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04MTELEPHONIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04M2201/00Electronic components, circuits, software, systems or apparatus used in telephone systems
    • H04M2201/60Medium conversion
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04MTELEPHONIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04M2203/00Aspects of automatic or semi-automatic exchanges
    • H04M2203/45Aspects of automatic or semi-automatic exchanges related to voicemail messaging
    • H04M2203/4509Unified messaging with single point of access to voicemail and other mail or messaging systems
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04MTELEPHONIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04M3/00Automatic or semi-automatic exchanges
    • H04M3/38Graded-service arrangements, i.e. some subscribers prevented from establishing certain connections
    • H04M3/382Graded-service arrangements, i.e. some subscribers prevented from establishing certain connections using authorisation codes or passwords
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04MTELEPHONIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04M3/00Automatic or semi-automatic exchanges
    • H04M3/42Systems providing special services or facilities to subscribers
    • H04M3/42008Systems for anonymous communication between parties, e.g. by use of disposal contact identifiers
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04MTELEPHONIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04M3/00Automatic or semi-automatic exchanges
    • H04M3/42Systems providing special services or facilities to subscribers
    • H04M3/50Centralised arrangements for answering calls; Centralised arrangements for recording messages for absent or busy subscribers ; Centralised arrangements for recording messages
    • H04M3/53Centralised arrangements for recording incoming messages, i.e. mailbox systems
    • H04M3/533Voice mail systems
    • H04M3/53366Message disposing or creating aspects
    • H04M3/53375Message broadcasting

Abstract

A message delivery system, for use with a communication network and in which a network presence is provided for an entity having attributes, delivers a message from a sender to the network presence. In some cases, information identifying the sender is omitted from the message. The delivery system can append non-repudiable sender information to the message. The sender can provide selected attributes as an address, and the delivery system replaces the selected attributes with an address of the network presence without disclosing the address to the sender. A software agent processes the delivered message in accordance with a processing preference included in the entity attributes.

Description

UNIVERSAL MESSAGE DELIVERY SYSTEM

Back~round of the Invention The present invention relates to a computer-based communication network 5 service, and, more particularly, is directed to a system in which entities arerepresented by network presences associated with handle identifiers used as addresses.
Communication by mess:~ging is becoming steadily more popular.
Advantages of mess~ging relative to a personal conversation include more 10 efficient use of communication capacity, that is, text based electronic mail requires far less channel capacity than an equivalent voice message; more time efficient due to less need for time consuming ritual social inquiries; opportunity for more careful composition; and capability of including various types of communication, that is, the message can be in a multimedia format including 15 audio, video and/or text. Furthermore, if the message is broadcast, its composition effort is amortized across the recipients. Also, the message can be buffered when a recipient is unavailable or unwilling to receive the message immediately; the recipient has more time to plan their response; an electronic message is easy to capture and place in long term storage; and software can be 20 used to assist in composing and org~ni7ing messages.
One problem with presently available forms of messaging is that it is necessary to determine and remember addressing information which is substantially unrelated to the identity of the recipient. Voice and facsimile messages require a telephone number. Electronic mail messages require an 25 address usually comprising an assigned user name and electronic domain name, and possibly information indicating a communication service provider. Also, the format of an electronic mail address can differ depending on the communication provlder.
Telephone numbers are difficult to remember, usually change when a 30 person moves or switches jobs, can be obtained through a directory having only a -2- 219250~

very limited number of search fields and may lack privacy as it is fairly easy to associate address information with a telephone number.
Personal telephone numbers, such as the proposed AT&T 500/700 personal number services, assign a telephone number to a subscriber, and 5 associate the assigned telephone number with a destination telephone number and, optionally, a backup telephone number having a voice recording and storage device. Callers call the assigned telephone number, and calls are automatically routed to the destination telephone number. If the destination telephone number does not accept the call, then the call is automatically routed to the backup 10 telephone number. The destination telephone number may be changed frequently by the subscriber. These personal number services mask changes in the subscriber's telephone number, that is, allow a subscriber to have a single telephone number even while travelling or moving frequently, and provide increased privacy. However, the personal numbers are still difficult to remember, 15 can be obtained through a directory having only a very limited number of search fields, are accessible through only one medium, and, due to reliance on a telephone number, are tied into a particular addressing infrastructure which haslimited call management options.
Electronic mail addresses are often difficult to remember, usually change 20 when a person switches jobs or communication carriers, and are difficult to obtain due to lack of universal directory services.
Another problem with presently available forms of mes.s~ging is that if someone is reachable by a variety of message types, e.g., voice mail, facsimile and electronic mail on several networks, a sender is not sure which type of 25 message will be most effective at reaching the intended recipient.
A further problem with presently available forms of mess~ging is that there may be a conversion problem between an available sending device, such as atwelve-key telephone, and a preferred receiving device, such as a facsimile machine. Also, there may be a conversion problem between the form of the 30 origin~ting message, e.g., voice mail, and the preferred form of received message, -3- 2192~02 _ e.g., electronic mail. Products for converting the form of the message, such as the AT&T INTUITY product for a PBX/LAN environment, have been introduced, but have not yet achieved widespread usage. A proposed Multipurpose Internet Multimedia Extension (MIME) specification for Internet electronic mail allows senders to provide content in multiple, alternative formats but conversion issues have not been resolved.

Summ~ry of the Invention A message delivery system, for use with a communication network and in which a network presence is provided for an entity having attributes, delivers amessage from a sender to the network presence.
In an aspect of the invention, inforrnation identifying the sender is omitted from the message. In another aspect of the invention, the delivery system appends non-repudiable sender information to the message.
When the sender provides selected -attributes as an address, the delivery system replaces the selected attributes with an address of the network presence without disclosing the address to the sender. In another aspect of the invention, a software agent processes the delivered message in accordance with a processing pr~re~ ce included in the entity attributes.
It is not intended that the invention be summarized here in its entirety.
Rather, further features, aspects and advantages of the invention are set forth in or are appar~llt from the following description and drawings.

Brief Description of the D~
Fig. 1 is a block diagram of a communications network according to the present invention; and Fig. 2 is a block diagram showing the logical relationship of various services according to the present invention.

~4- 2192502 Detailed Description An entity is represented by at least one handle, described in detail below.
Generally, a handle is a more abstract representation of the entity than is found in the prior art, and avoids the problems of prior art entity representations associated 5 with their insufficiently abstract (i.e., too physical) nature. Each handle provides a distinct cyberpresence identifier for an entity.
Directory services, as described in the present disclosure, provide more flexibility than prior art directory services. When used with handles according to the present disclosure, directory services provide further enhanced flexibility.10 Generally, a network directory service provides information about entities and finds entities based on descriptive queries. Some of the directory information is publicly available, whereas other of the directory information is not publicly available but is usable by the directory service for dereferencing addresses.
Entities specify the desired privacy level(s) of their directory information. The 15 service provides one or more global and specialized network directories, which may be physically distributed across multiple hosts in the network.
Message composition and delivery services, as described in the present disclosure, provide more flexibility than prior art message composition and delivery services. When used with handles according to the present disclosure, 20 message composition and delivery services provide further enhanced flexibility.
Generally, message delivery services provide for specification of policies by entities as to the forwarding of messages to specific endpoints or to a universal message storage facility, notification of message receipt and retrieval of messages.
Message notification and retrieval may be according to entity specified criteria, 25 such as priority to particular senders or to particular subjects.
Message storage services, as described in the present disclosure, provide more flexibility than prior art message storage services. When used with handlesaccording to the present disclosure, message storage services provide further enhanced flexibility.

-5- 21~2502 An important feature of the present disclosure is the application to objects such as messages and cyberpresences of information retrieval techniques, such asvector space models, which have heretofore been applied only to documents.
Generally, flexibility is accomplished by applying information retrieval 5 techniques to objects, rather than by relying primarily on more structured database query techniques.
Network environment Referring now to the drawings, and in particular to Fig. 1, there is illustrated a network which is generally assumed as the environment in the present 10 disclosure. The network shown in Fig. 1 comprises a communication network 100, home host computers 200, service host computers 210, connection host computers 220, gateways to other networks such as a local area network (LAN) 230, software executed on the various computers, and customer premises equipment such as twelve-key telephone sets 300, personal computers 310, 15 terminals, and pager networks 400. Although not specifically shown in Fig. 1,Internet connections and wireless tr~n~mi~.sion may be used in a network contemplated in the present disclosure.
As will be appar~llt to those of ordinary skill in the art, many different communication protocols may be employed in communicating between the 20 various parts of the network, such as TCP/IP, X.25, ISDN, Ethernet, asynchronous line protocols and analog and/or digital voice tr~n~mi~.~ion.
Communication for transactional services are implemented in a secure, flexible remote procedure call (RPC). Also, as ~plop~;ate, authentication and encryption protocols are employed, for example, hypertext transfer protocol (HTTP) or 25 secure socket layer (SSL) protocol.
Various divisions of communications capability between customer equipment and network equipment are encompassed by the network of Fig. 1.
The network is assumed to provide processing capability for customer equipment which lacks sufficient processing capability to provide the functions described -6- 219251~2 below. The specific type of software progr~mming used to provide these functions is not critical.
In one case, the customer equipment comprises only a twelve-button telephone set. A user dials a connection host which is part of the network, such as the nearest connection host or a toll-free number providing access to a connection host. Using one or more of voice input and touch-tone input, the user establishes network access authority, such as by entering an identification code and password.
The connection host verifies access authority with the user's home host, then makes appropriate network resources available to the user by, for example, presenting menus of choices to the user.
In another case, the customer equipment comprises a private host such as a personal computer and a modem. The user instructs the private host to establish a connection to a connection host. In this case, the connection host functions in a more limited manner than in the previously described situation where the l S customer premises equipment is a telephone set.
In yet another case, the customer equipment comprises a receive only pager network. A connection host somewhere in the network executes software on behalf of the pager network.
Handles An entity may be a person, org~ni7~tion, corporation, department within a corporation, use (interest) group, or a set of entities. Alternatively, the entity may be a functional role, such as president of an org~ni7~tion.
An electronic presence is established for every entity which requires a public identity. The electronic presence is also referred to herein as a networkpresence or "cyberpresence". The electronic presence is identified by a handle.
The network presence for an entity serves as a locus of publicly available information about the entity, as a point of connection to the entity, and as a centralized set of resources available to the entity. Physically, a network presence comprises an account on a home host computer, such as the home host computer shown in Fig. 1, the actual network resource usage associated with the account, ~7~ ~!l 9~ O~

the capability of using additional network resources and identification of the account in network directories. Typically, an account resides on a home host, but some accounts may reside on multiple hosts due to their resource usage.
An entity may have multiple network presences each of which is 5 associated with a distinct handle. For example, an entity which is a person may have one network presence for activities related to their job, another network presence for activities related to their primary hobby, and yet another network presence for activities related to their other personal uses.
As used herein and in the claims, "handle" refers to a unique identifier 10 registered with a universal directory network service for use by the entity. A
handle represents an abstract entity, and does not correspond to a physical endpoint although it may be associated with one or more physical endpoints for various purposes, as described below. The handle functions as the network name of the entity, and also functions as the network address of the entity, but is not a 15 physical end point address. An entity may have one or more handles each ~f which is associated with a network presence. Primarily for billing purposes, each handle is associated with a sponsor that is not necessarily the entity using thehandle.
Handles permit decoupling of physical endpoints and delivery systems 20 from the network presence for an entlty. That is, a handle is not merely an address, it is a representation of an entity because it is associated with resource usage and availability for the entity.
Since a handle is unique at any point in time, it can be used as a universal address. Another important feature of a handle is its persistence, that is, its 25 association with one using entity despite changes in the attributes associated with the entity, such as telephone number, address, employment affiliation or sponsor.
If the entity is a group, then members or other attributes of the group may change over time, but the group (entity) still retains the handle. Similarly, if the entity is a person performing certain functions, e.g., the president of XYZ Company, then the person- associated with the handle may change, but the handle persists; in this case, the handle is a lerelclllial expression describing a functional role.
- Examples of handles are: "bigbear", "Jane_Farnsworth", "ATT", "usenet.rec.gardening", "empiricists", "president_XYZ" and so on. A handle is 5 not a telephone number. A telephone number is a physical point which is associated with a varying number of users, whereas a handle is not a physical point, and is associated with only the entity represented by the handle. A handle may include alphabetic information which serves a mnemonic purpose.
Advantages of personally chosen handles, relative to handles assigned by a 10 network authority, include memorability, that is, personally chosen handles have mnemonic value for message senders, individuality, ability to be descriptive or representative of a network persona or attributes of an entity, and ability to mask the identity of an entity.
Handles may eventually be re~ igned, when the possibility of confusion 15 between entities is deemed to be sufficiently low. For example, when an entity expires, such as a person dies or a corporation is dissolved, and a predetermined time has passed since expiration, the handle of the expired entity may become available for use by another entity.
Examples of entity attributes which may be associated with an individual's 20 handle include password(s), name, address, preferred format for message reception, primary telephone number, forwarding telephone number, fax number, family members, employer, profession, hobbies and so on.
Examples of entity attributes which may be associated with an org~ni7~tion's handle include password(s), name, address, p~efe-l~d format for 25 message reception, telephone number, fax number, number of members, industry,products or services, annual sales, ~ffili~ted companies and so on.
As the name of a network presence for an entity, a handle is a logical place for an entity to obtain and/or offer network services. Generally, the network resources available to an entity include a personalized access point, information 30 storage capacity, information access structures such as an "address book", a 9 219250~

._ personalized set of message spaces, and convenient ways to access frequently used on-line services.
An "address book", as used herein and in the claims, is a personalized directory of frequently ~çcesced message destinations for the entity, that is, a set of handles which identify entities. In other words, the objects in an address book are handles. An address book allows the entity to refer to other entities in a more convenient manner, such as by name, photograph, or nickname; thus, the address book hides the actual handles from the entity.
Since the attributes associated with a handle may change over time, it is preferred to locally store only the handles for an address book with respective temporal information such as date/time stamps. At each use of a handle, the address book automatically queries the directory service as to whether any attributes have changed since the timestamp of the handle. The address book locally stores any local information associated with the handle, such as the entity's nickname or relationship definition for the handle. The initial contents of the address book may be determined with reference to the sponsor of the entity.
A query can define a "special" address book of an entity's base (universal) address book, that is, the query restricts the set of handles in the special address book.
The entity can view a subset of the address book by specifying attributes of the objects in the desired subset. For example, a view of an address book mayprovide, for each entity, its name, face (or other) picture and telephone number.
An entity obtains services through its handle generally by subscribing to the service; such services are referred to herein and in the claims as "vendor services". Service providers, which may be third party vendors, the provider of the communication network or the provider of the network presence system, then add the service capabilities to the handle in an appropliate manner, such as by authorization to act on instructions from the handle, by adding choices to menu-driven interfaces accessible to the handle, or by adding functional capabilities to software agents associated with the handle. Examples of software agents are a message handling agent and a message storage agent, described below. Examples of vendor services are a message composition service, a calendar scheduling service and a software agent service. Fig. 1 shows a service host for third-party services in which the vendor offers a service directly from its own handle and 5 other handles must explicitly communicate with the vendor's handle for the service.
An entity offers services through its handle by responding to requests directed to the handle. For example, the entity may add functional capabilities to one of the agents associated with its handle to provide a service to other handles.
10 In some embodiments, for provision of certain services, the entity may make special billing arrangements with the network.
When the entity is accessible to at least one mess~ging service, the attributes of an entity include a physical endpoint to which messages are to be delivered. For example, when the entity is a pager network, the physical endpoint 15 is the pager equipment. When the entity is an individual, the physical endpoint can be non-network equipment, such as a fax machine, or network storage.
When the entity is accessible to at least one mess~ging service, the attributes of an entity include a ~ref~,lcd media format for receiving messages.For example, when the entity is accessible by more than one message media 20 format, such as fax, voice mail, textual electronic mail and multimedia electronic mail, the entity indicates the media format in which it prefers to receive messages in its "pl~f~"ed reception media" attribute.
There are several differences between personal telephone numbers, such as the proposed AT&T 500/700 personal number services, and the handles of the 25 present invention. The personal number services provide a customer with only a telephone number, that is, a completely numeric identifier which lacks mnemonic value, whereas the present handles may comprise alphanumeric information having mnemonic value. The personal number services must be associated with at least one destination telephone number for a customer, whereas the present 30 handles need not be associated with a specific telephone number, instead, an 2192~02 `~_ entity may opt to have the network store its messages, and then the entity retrieves its messages from the network, for example, by a dial-in telephone call.
Directory services The universal network directory service stores attributes associated with 5 handles and responds to queries relating to the stored information to provide a very flexible searching ability. The directory service may be a vendor service.
When a directory user such as a message sender desires to know a handle for an entity, the sender provides sufficient descriptive information to uniquely identify the entity. In some cases, the sender interacts repeatedly with the 10 directory service to uniquely identify the entity. For example, in response to the sender's provision of a person's name, city and state of residence, employer andprofession, the directory service returns the requested handle.
In other situations, a directory user knows a handle and provides a query to the directory service to obtain one or more attributes associated with the handle.
15 For example, a directory user may wish to know a daytime telephone number associated with a handle.
Handle attributes have privacy level information specified by the entity represented by the handle. In its simplest form, privacy level information simply indicates whether the attribute is publicly available or not publicly available, i.e, 20 private. Therefore, entities may m~int~in essentially "unlisted" handles with no attribute information publicly available.
The directory service generally m~int~in~ indices of the attributes in a variety of hierarchical structures, and responds to structure sensitive queries.Each of a directory query and a response thereto generated by the 25 universal network directory service may contain multimedia depending on the kinds of interfaces and applications used. As used herein and in the claims, information in a multimedia format means information in at least two of an internal computer format such as binary format, text format such as ASCII, voiceformat and video format.

.
Entities and/or their respective sponsors have the ability to self-~-lmini~ter certain of the entity's attributes in accordance with preferences, such as password(s), prerelled format for message reception, forwarding telephone number and privacy status of their attributes, using an automated ~tlmini~tration procedure including a software program executed on at least one of the hosts of Fig. l.
Handle attributes have authenticity information associated therewith. In its simplest form, authenticity information simply indicates who provided the attribute information. More complicated authenticity information indicates, for l 0 example, when the attribute information was provided. The authenticity information provides a basis for forming a trustworthiness opinion of the associated attribute information.
When the user of the directory service is a handle, additional flexibility is contemplated. Specifically, the information returned from the directory service l 5 may be automatically transferred to another service, such as a message composition service offered by a third-party vendor. For example, when a handle queries the directory service for all handles having specified attributes, such as:
(type of entity = individual), (family members = at least one child), and (address = NY or NJ) the resulting set of handles may be used as a set of addresses for a message broadcast by a message plepal~lion service used by the handle.
In certain embodiments, an additional privacy designation of "secret" is available for information associated with a handle. This is useful for broadcasts prepared by a message ple~ lion service to entities m~t~hing specified criteria,where the matching entities wish to remain unknown, for example, persons testingpositive for a particular disease. In these cases, the entities may be interested in receiving information related to their attributes, but want their possession of such attributes to be masked from mass marketers and/or probes attempting to guess the information. If secret information is used to resolve a handle, then -13- 219250~

information identifying the receiving entity is withheld in any delivery receipts provided by the network to the sender or querying party.
- Another example of additional flexibility when the user of the directory service is a handle is an updating service for an address book. The updating 5 service may simply add the results of each directory query to the address book.
Alternatively, the results of the directory query may automatically be transferred to the updating service, and then the updating service asks the entity associated with the handle using the directory whether and/or how to retain the results. Asyet another alternative, a software agent associated with the handle may treat the 10 results of the directory query as an information object to be processed in accordance with general policies specified by the entity for information objects, i.e., policies for information which is not limited to directory information.
Message composition and delivery services A message composition service permits a message to be composed and 15 associated with a destination query. That is, a message is sent to a destination query, rather than a specified endpoint. The clestin~tion query is of the form described earlier for the directory service.
A message delivery service provides delivery of the message to the objects satisfying the destination query associated with the message, with the objects 20 typically being handles.
Messages are assumed to include content information and envelope information, such as sender, destination query det~rmining the recipient(s), network transit history, arrival time, subject and priority. Senders are identified by their handles. Recipients are identified by the destination query, unless their 25 identity is masked (see discussion below). Content information may comprise multimedia and interactive programs; notes from family, friends and business associates; electronic correspondence from businesses, governrnent, associationsand so on; electronic postcards; electronic letters; electronic newsletters and m~g~7ines; electronic advertising; electronic solicitations and so on.

-14- 21925~

When the sender knows the preferred media format for the recipient of the message, the sender can instruct the message delivery service to put the message, - composed in one format, into the preferred format when technically feasible. For example, the message may be composed as text, and converted to voice using 5 speech synthesis. As will be appreciated, the plef~lled media format for a message recipient can usually be determined from a query to the network directory service. Certain message plepaldlion services are capable of automabcally querying the directory service and using the query results for format converslon.
The message sender can require that it remain anonymous, for example, by composing a message with the sender explicitly identified as "anonymous" or by omitting sender information.
A message recipient can require that it remain anonymous. For example, if an entity has set all of its attribute information to non-public, it may receive 15 broadcast messages to entities having its attributes, but the message delivery service will not provide an identifying delivery receipt to the message sender.
However, the message sender may be informed that a delivery occurred, and possibly the number of messages that were delivered.
Message non-repudiability is provided when the sender requests that the 20 message delivery service guarantee that the sender of the message is correctly identified. Non-repudiability is particularly useful for messages having financial consequences.
Message handling agents When the recipient of a message is a handle, additional flexibility is 25 contemplated. Specifically, the handle may subscribe to the services of a message h~n~lling agent (a type of software agent) which performs functions on behalf ofthe entity represented by the handle in accordance with attributes associated with the handle.
As used herein and in the claims, "software agent" refers to a software 30 program usually executed by one of the host computers shown in Fig. 1. The 2192~02 -software agent is a type of vendor service to which an entity may subscribe through its handle. The software agent has various capabilities, depending on its specific implementation, and is characterized by independent operation or agencyoperation. The software agent is event-driven. The software agent responds to S events and carries out behavior in accordance with the event and environment, such as time of day. A software agent is capable of creating, transferring and deleting objects, invoking other vendor services, notifying, monitoring and keeping statistics.
Independent operation indicates that the software agent performs its l 0 functions generally independently of how and when its subscribing entity interacts with its network presence.
Agency operation indicates that the software agent operates on behalf of its subscribing entity, typically inheriting access authority and so on of the subscribing entity, in accordance with entity specified preferences usually l S recorded as attributes for the entity.
Examples of services provided by a message h~n-lling agent include notification of a new message, automatic forwarding of messages to endpoints (e.g., a copy to other handles or a message store), summarizing messages, sorting messages according to entity criteria (ex: priority, size, sender and/or subject), deleting messages according to entity criteria, storing messages according to entity criteria, converting the media format of a message, and plepa~ g simple replies to certain forrn~tted messages. That is, message handling agents exhibitcontext dependent behavior based on the sending and receiving equipment, the message's characteristics and the recipient's preferences.
In one case, a handle may have a "preferred message media format = text"
associated therewith. The entity may then communicate a request such as "speak the contents of the most recent message to me" to its message h~ndling agent. Inthis case, the message handling agent converts the media format of the message from text to voice, and forwards the voice message to a destination indicated bythe entity, such as a telephone.

The message handling agent facilitates message enabled behavior. For example, the message h~n-llin~ agent may check the content of a message for a certain type of information, such as schedule related information, and automatically transfer such information to another service associated with the S handle, such as a calendar program.
Message storage services Prior art message storage services typically have a physical association between a mailbox, that is, a physical data file, and a message. A message storage service according to the present disclosure is not so limited. A mailbox is l O considered to be a set of messages which satisfy a query. By varying the attributes specified in the query, an entity can achieve various levels of mailbox granularity, from considering all the messages for which the entity has read permission (which may include messages received by other entities) to considering only a subset of the messages received by one entity such as itself.15 Additionally, a mailbox may have different message dispositions, such as who is notified of the mailbox query results.
A mailbox is defined by a query over a set of messages. An address book is defined by a query over a set of cyberpresences.
Typical prior art systems treat notifying a recipient of the arrival of a 20 message as a procedural, event-driven process. For example, "do (x) when (y)" where "y" is the event of a message arrival.
The present disclosure contemplates a persistent query, that is, a query for which an entity m~int~in.c a continuing interest. The persistent query is a declarative representation depending on at least one property of an object, and is 25 not event-driven. The query originator can assert the query at regular intervals (polling). For example, "if a message has status NEW or UNREAD then it is of interest".
The persistent query defining a set of objects is always consistent with the data against which it is asserted. The persistent query communicates data changes 30 to objects interested in such changes. The persistent query can be implemented, , for example, by having the target of the query notify the originator of the query when the response of the target changes.
- A persistent query is useful when an entity has a need to know something.
A software agent is useful for responding to events in a predetermined manner.
Notifying a recipient of the arrival of a message is a declarative process, that is, an entity is considered as submitting a persistent query, and when the present result of the persistent query invalidates or logically mi~m~tches the previous result of the persistent query, the entity which submitted the query isnotified. For example, if the entity has submitted a persistent query for "all stored l 0 unread messages addressed to my handle", and a new message has been stored since the last query was asserted, then the result of the previous query (no unread messages) is invalidated, so the a notification message (one unread message) is generated.
Message processing abilities are dependent upon the handle of the entity.
l 5 For example, as a default, the handle for an entity has full read, write and modify ability for messages addressed to the handle. For particular types of messages addressed to an entity's handle, the entity may specify read, write and/or modify ability for other handles.
A mailbox according to the present disclosure can be considered a one time object when it is the result of a one time query, or can be considered a persistent object when it is the result of a persistent query. A mailbox which is the result of a persistent query is effectively continously updated. It will be appreciated that an entity can create multiple persistent mailboxes by communicating multiple persistent queries to the message storage service. Such an abstraction is stored as a convenience to an entity.
For example, when the entity is a paging system, the set of persistent queries might be "new messages for each of the users associated with the paging system entity".
The message storage service generates a message ID for each message and provides indexing services for message retrieval so that queries can be satisfied -faster. For example, the message storage service may compute message properties such as usage statistics, creation time, message type, message size, - current storage medium and so on. Practically and where possible, the message storage service simply extracts certain information from the message envelope asmessage properties (e.g., sender). If the message object is modified, such as byannotation, or deleted, the message storage service detects this or is notified by the modifier and updates the storage related properties.
The message storage service detçrmines the storage policy for a message according to a general policy (not message specific) specified by a message recipient, including the current storage medium (one of the message properties),and the message persistence, that is, when the message should be moved to archival storage. Finally, the message storage service actually stores the message.
In some embo-liment~, the message storage service responds to requests for message IDs for messages whose storage is not directly controlled by the service. Such messages, also referred to as "proxy objects", have message IDs and computed properties, and can be queried and retrieved through an interface with the direct controller of the storage of the proxy object. The software which directly controls storage of a proxy object is responsible for notifying the message storage service of message creation, modification and deletion events.
An example of usage of a proxy object is a message shared by several entities. The properties of the proxy object may differ by entity, such as whether the message has been read, or annotations appended thereto. The proxy object may be automatically assigned different priorities for different entities.
Message storage agents When the user of the message store is a handle, additional flexibility is contemplated. Specifically, the handle may subscribe to the services of a message storage agent (a type of software agent) which performs functions on behalf of the entity represented by the handle in accordance with attributes associated with the handle.

- --19- 219250~

Examples of services provided by a message storage agent include notifying an entity of a new message, deleting messages according to message specific entity criteria, archiving messages according to message specific entity criteria, and converting the media format of a message. The summary may 5 include category, thread (relationship to other messages such as topic), content type, content and so on. Activities particularly suited to a message storage agent include archiving messages, aging messages, compressing message and placing messages in different virtual folders.
A message storage agent can assert a persistent query against a message 10 store on behalf of an entity. This function is particularly useful when the entity is a paging system which otherwise expects to be in "receive only" type operation.
For example, a message storage agent might monitor a directory and provide notification of changes in the employer for a particular entity.
As another example, if a vendor service is providing a physical location, 15 such as from a global positioning service, then the message storage agent could notify an entity of the location of another entity, such as a child of the first entity.
Fig. 2 shows the logical relationship of the above-described services. The network directory service 700, message composition service 710, message delivery service 720, message storage service 730, message h~n(lling agent 750 20 and message storage agent 760 each comprise software programs for execution by at least one of the host computers 200, 210, 220 shown in Fig. 1. The message storage media 740 shown in Fig. 2 comprises storage media, such as RAM or disk, associated with at least one of the host computers shown in Fig. 1.
A sending entity 500 communicates with the message composition service 25 710 to compose a message. Message composition may include interaction with the directory service 700. The sending entity 500 then instructs the message composition service 710 to transfer the composed message to the message delivery service 720, which delivers the message to its specified destination and provides various forms of reports on delivered messages to the sending entity 500.

-20- 2192~02 Messages may be delivered in real time to a receiving entity 600, or may be delivered to the message storage service 730 logically associated with the message storage media 740. The message handling agent 750 generally operates on messages received from the message delivery service 720. The message 5 storage agent 760 generally operates on messages placed on the message storagemedia 740 by the message storage service 730. The message h~n~lling agent 750 and message storage agent 760 operate on behalf of the receiving entity 600.

Claims (6)

1. A message delivery system for use with a communication network and means for providing a network presence for an entity, said message delivery system comprising:
delivery means for delivering a message from a sender to said network presence, and means for omitting identifying information for said sender from said message.
2. A message delivery system for use with a communication network and means for providing a network presence for an entity, said message delivery system comprising:
delivery means for delivering a message from a sender to said network presence, and means for appending non-repudiable sender information to said message.
3. A message delivery system for use with a communication network and means for providing a network presence for an entity having attributes, said message delivery system comprising:
delivery means for delivering a message from a sender to said network presence, means for accepting selected attributes from said sender as an address, and means for replacing the selected attributes with an address of said network presence without disclosing the address to said sender.
4. A message delivery system for use with a communication network and means for providing a network presence for an entity having attributes, said attributes including a processing preference for messages delivered to said network presence, said message delivery system comprising:
delivery means for delivering a message from a sender to said network presence, and a software agent for processing the delivered message in accordance with said processing preference.
5. The system of claim 4, wherein said processing preference is a preferred media format, and said software agent is operative to convert a media format of the delivered message to the preferred media format.
6. The system of claim 4, wherein said processing preference specifies one of a notifying action, a forwarding action, a deleting action and a storing action, and said software agent is operative to perform the action specified by said processing preference when said message is delivered to said network presence.
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US08/581,141 US5742763A (en) 1995-12-29 1995-12-29 Universal message delivery system for handles identifying network presences

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US5742763A (en) 1998-04-21
DE69637221D1 (en) 2007-10-04
EP1549034A1 (en) 2005-06-29
CA2192502A1 (en) 1997-06-30
EP0782316B1 (en) 2005-03-16
DE69634473T2 (en) 2006-01-05
EP1549034B1 (en) 2007-08-22
DE69634473D1 (en) 2005-04-21
JPH09219724A (en) 1997-08-19
DE69637221T2 (en) 2008-05-21
EP0782316A3 (en) 2000-05-24

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