How Apps Automatically Link Multiple User Accounts
A method for logging into multiple separate user accounts with a single set of credentials and managing them through one unified interface.
Patent Number
US 8701014
Status
Active
Filing Date
November 18, 2003
Grant Date
April 15, 2014
Expiration
~November 2023 (estimated)
Claims
29
Assignee
Facebook Inc
Inventors
Pei-Lin Wu, Chris Chih-Shen Chung, Barbara McNally, Russell William Richards, Michael Robert Enloe, Gregory Cypes, Alan Keister, Heather Allison Schlegel, James A. Odell, David McCormick, Andrew L. Wick, Alexis Inch, Barry Appelman, David Cox, Xiaopeng Zhang
Citations
26 forward · 910 backward
What it covers
The patent describes a system where a user provides login information for one primary account, and the system automatically authenticates a second, different account without requiring a second password. Once both are active, the system presents a single graphical user interface that displays buddy lists or contact lists from both accounts simultaneously. The user can then select which account to send a message from, and the recipient sees the message as originating from that specific account. For example, a user could sign into a work account and have their personal account automatically connect, allowing them to toggle between messaging coworkers and friends within the same window.
What it doesn't cover
- —Does not cover systems that require separate passwords for each account.
- —Does not cover account linking that occurs without a shared graphical user interface.
- —Does not cover authentication methods that rely on third-party tokens or OAuth protocols not described in the claims.
- —Does not cover single sign-on (SSO) systems that do not specifically manage multiple buddy lists or contact lists within a single interface.
The clever bit
The innovation lies in using the primary login as a master key to trigger secondary authentications, combined with a UI that dynamically merges distinct contact lists into a single view without losing the identity context of each contact.
Why it matters
This patent reflects the early 2000s transition from siloed messaging services to integrated social platforms. By allowing users to manage multiple identities (like work versus personal) in one place, it paved the way for the unified account management systems now standard in modern social media and messaging apps.
Real-world examples
- 1.Modern multi-account support in messaging apps
- 2.Unified inbox features in email clients
- 3.Switching between personal and professional profiles in social media apps
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US 8701014 · 2026