New Mobile Messaging Patent

Messaging International Plc 14 September 2006 Messaging International Plc / Market: AIM / Epic: MES / Sector: Technology 14 September 2006 Messaging International Plc ('the Company') New Mobile Messaging Patent Messaging International Plc, the AIM-traded provider of innovative messaging services, has received a US and Canadian patent (patent no. 7,103,348), for its Mobile Station (MS) message selection identification system, which enables users to seamlessly reply to messages across various messaging services. The Company is currently looking at ways to exploit the strengths of the patent, including levying licensing fees on both current and future vendors. A European patent for the method is pending. The method, already widely used, uniquely associates each message with a number, identifies the type of message, and enables the subscriber to reply or receive the message across a variety of messaging services including email, SMS, MMS, voice phone services, or internet URLs. For example, a mobile email service may allow a user to receive emails to his mobile phone as a text message, which he may then reply to via a text. This text message can then be delivered to the original sender as an email. The patent can identify the telephone line number on which the incoming message is received and match the message to the telephone number of the subscriber. The quantity of numbers allocated can be limited and managed, enabling a single number to be reused at any one time by millions of users. This provides considerable ease of use for the end user and cost savings to the operator. Messaging International CEO, Guy Levit, said: 'This huge breakthrough for the Company demonstrates our commitment to the sector and represents a significant step in confirming Messaging International as a leading provider of messaging services worldwide. The patent broadens our range of services, has the potential to provide additional revenue streams and highlights our promise to investors to play an integral role in the rapidly maturing messaging market.' * * ENDS * * For further information visit www.telemessage.com or contact: Guy Levit Messaging International Plc Tel: +972 3 922 5252 Isabel Crossley St Brides Media & Finance Ltd Tel: +44 (0) 20 7242 447 Notes Messaging International Plc Messaging International Plc joined AIM in August 2005 with the objective of becoming a leading provider in the rapidly growing multimedia messaging market. Its 100% owned subsidiary, TeleMessage Ltd (www.telemessage.com), provides cross-platform media messaging management systems and applications. These are designed to enable PC, browser, mobile phone and wireline telephone users to send, receive and manage voice messages, email, text, IM and MMS across various media platforms. It supports multiple languages, text to speech conversion, e-mail notification, unlimited text length, and direct reply to text capabilities, all illustrating the uniqueness of the service. The Company has a number of contracts with major blue chip companies including Rogers Wireless, the largest wireless provider in Canada. Further details to the patent: Mobile communications protocols, such as SMS and paging, allow for the transmission of short text-only messages to a cellular telephone (mobile station or MS). In the SMS protocol a telephone number may be attached to an SMS message that is sent to an MS, allowing the recipient of an SMS message to reply to the message, either by dialling the telephone number indicated, or, in some implementations, simply by pressing the 'SEND' button or otherwise initiating a telephone call from the MS without dialling the telephone number. In those implementations that support it, initiating a telephone call while displaying an SMS message to which a telephone number has been attached will cause the telephone number to be automatically dialled. Some commercial message services employ known computer telephony integration (CTI) techniques to enable a subscriber to receive voice mail, email, and other types of messages at a central computer server which then forwards notifications of the arrival of such messages to the subscriber's MS in the form of SMS messages. The SMS message may simply be a generic notification that a message has been received for the subscriber at the server, or may contain a portion of the message in a text format, aiding the subscriber in identifying the sender and/or determining the message's importance to the subscriber. In order to hear the full message the subscriber may then call the message service by dialling a telephone number known to the subscriber or, where the telephone number of the message service is attached to each SMS message, by pressing the 'SEND' button or otherwise initiating the call as described above. Once the message service has been contacted, the subscriber must identify the message that the subscriber wishes to hear. This may be done by reading the content of the SMS message to an operator or by navigating an automated menu system that is responsive to voice commands or dual tone multi-frequency (DTMF) signals. In the case of an automated menu system, the subscriber generally must listen to a portion of each message received and then provide an indication whether or not the subscriber wishes to hear the complete message. Where tens of SMS message notifications are received at an MS, navigating such a menu system is tedious and time-consuming. Messaging International's invention provides a system for identifying a message selection made at an MS that overcomes the disadvantages described above. A system is provided whereby a unique telephone number is attached to each message sent to an MS from a central server. Each number connects the subscriber to the central server along a different telephone line. When the subscriber presses the 'SEND' button or otherwise initiates the call, the telephone number which is attached to the currently-displayed message is automatically dialled. By identifying the telephone number of the telephone line on which the incoming call is received, and by identifying the telephone number of the subscriber using automatic number identification (ANI) techniques, the server may identify the message that is currently displayed on the subscriber's MS without receiving further input by the subscriber. The full message associated with the identified message may then be provided to the subscriber via audio link. In this manner a subscriber may hear the full message associated with a currently-displayed message simply by pressing the ' SEND' button or otherwise initiating a call. Furthermore, the technology can uniquely associate a different inbound telephone number with each of a plurality of messages destined for the MS. The technology of associating the subscriber's address identifier can be extended to a group consisting of a URL, an e-mail, an instant message, an SMS, an EMS, an MMS and a telephone number specifically associated with said messages.. Full details of the patent can be found at http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/ nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO2&Sect2=HITOFF&p=1&u=%2Fnetahtml%2FPTO%2Fsearch-bool.html&r= 1&f=G&l=50&co1=AND&d=PTXT&s1=7,103,348.PN.&OS=PN/7,103,348&RS=PN/7,103,348 . This information is provided by RNS The company news service from the London Stock Exchange

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