Inventor · Austin, TX, US

Mark Obrecht

15Patents
7h-index
20Co-inventors
62Inventor score

Filing activity: Aug 30, 2002 → Aug 22, 2020

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US9098333B1 Monitoring computer process resource usage Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 92 Active
US7818800B1 Method, system, and computer program product for blocking malicious program behaviors Physics 47 Active
US7509679B2 Method, system and computer program product for security in a global computer network transaction Physics 39 Expired
US7331062B2 Method, computer software, and system for providing end to end security protection of an online transaction Physics 36 Expired
US8341744B1 Real-time behavioral blocking of overlay-type identity stealers Electricity 14 Active
US7748039B2 Method and apparatus for detecting malicious code in an information handling system Physics 12 Expired
US7832011B2 Method and apparatus for detecting malicious code in an information handling system Physics 7 Expired
US8156552B2 Method, computer software, and system for providing end to end security protection of an online transaction Physics 6 Active
US8205217B2 Methods and systems for configuring a specific-use computing system limited to executing predetermined and pre-approved application programs Physics 5 Active
US7930751B2 Method and apparatus for detecting malicious code in an information handling system Physics 4 Active
US8205260B2 Detection of window replacement by a malicious software program Physics 4 Active
US8615805B1 Systems and methods for determining if a process is a malicious process Physics 3 Active
US10003547B2 Monitoring computer process resource usage Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active
US8931097B2 Method, computer software, and system for providing end to end security protection of an online transaction Physics 0 Active
US11683332B2 Method and apparatus for measuring information system device integrity and evaluating endpoint posture Electricity 0 Active

Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Inventor disambiguation is heuristic; counts are objective bibliographic measures.