How Browsers Automatically Choose Your Start Page Based on History
An IBM patent from 1998 that describes how a web browser can automatically pick which website to load first based on your past browsing habits.
Patent Number
US 6266060
Status
Active
Filing Date
July 23, 1998
Grant Date
July 24, 2001
Expiration
~July 2018 (estimated)
Claims
8
Assignee
International Business Machines Corp
Inventors
Steven William Roth
Citations
95 forward · 15 backward
What it covers
This patent describes a method for a web browser to automatically select and display an 'initial' web page as soon as the browser finishes starting up. It uses a list of historical web page selections to determine which page should be shown first. The system uses 'ranking control' to decide this order, which can be either automatic (based on factors like frequency or recency of visits) or manual (user-defined). Essentially, it turns your browser's homepage into a dynamic list that updates itself based on where you spend your time.
What it doesn't cover
- —Does not cover general search engine result ranking algorithms.
- —Does not cover browser extensions that manually set a static homepage URL.
- —Does not cover the underlying network protocols used to fetch the web page.
- —Does not cover tabbed browsing or session restoration features.
The clever bit
The patent treats the browser's startup page not as a fixed setting, but as the top-ranked item in a dynamic, history-based list that the browser manages automatically.
Why it matters
This patent represents an early attempt to make web browsers 'smarter' by personalizing the startup experience. It moved the browser away from a static, user-defined homepage toward a system that actively learns from user behavior, a concept now standard in modern browser 'new tab' pages.
Real-world examples
- 1.Modern browser 'New Tab' pages that show frequently visited sites
- 2.Browser features that restore previous session tabs upon startup
Generated by PatentBrief · Not legal advice · patentbrief.org
US 6266060 · 2026