Japan Approves ePostal Email Patents
New York, NY (PRWEB) July 23, 2013 -- ePostal Services, Inc. (ePS®) today announced the approval of its second patent in Japan. (http://www.ePostalServices.com)
"In 2012, Japan approved the first ePostal® patent – obviously a major milestone,” said Jon Gardner, President of ePostal Services. “Approval of our second patent by Japan continues the expansion of ePS global intellectual property rights – and further validates our aggressive and comprehensive worldwide patent strategy.”
The second ePS patent reinforces and details the claims of the first by citing technical alternatives and preferences for the ePostal communication system which provides superior private, secure, tracked, and differentiated internet messaging services. Very significantly, it also patents a fully-autonomous direct communications system, operating internal to ePostal, for the automated management of secure communications directly between user devices/servers via the ePostal servers.
This highly-scalable technology gives ePostal the capabilities to create autonomous, private and secure, virtual intranet communications between senders, recipients, and ePS servers -- but which are separate from and independent of regular email channels. In addition, the ePostal technology is interoperable between email platforms, eventually allowing email users everywhere to access the ePS services.
The first ePostal patent was issued in March 2009 as U.S. Patent #7,502,828: "Messaging and Document Management System and Method" – with U.S. approval for the second patent (#7,627,640) received in December 2009. Applications were also filed in Europe and Japan as well as in other countries, together comprising 80% of the world's GNP. To date, approvals have been received in the U.S., Europe, Japan, India, Russia, and Mexico, with reviews proceeding in China, Canada, and Brazil.
ePostal Services offers a new, on-demand, and competitively superior email service (two-way-encrypted and secure) which supplements and works with a user’s regular email application and setup, with or without a network. It employs conventional email/internet components in a novel way to enable a broad range of on-demand premium services -- easily and inexpensively.
“Our patents anticipated the evolving commercial and technical needs of global electronic communications,” Gardner continued. "With the growing use of ‘cloud’ services and mobile devices, those rights have increasing relevance, well beyond the ePostal system, to a wide range of telecommunication situations and applications.”
About ePostal Services (ePS):
A Delaware corporation, ePS -- via its unique technology -- puts on-demand premium email services within the technical and economic reach of all businesses and individuals, worldwide.
Jon Gardner, ePostal Services, Inc., http://www.epostalservices.com, +1 585-596-1282, [email protected]
Share this article