Normally in my work as a patent attorney, when I see a hugely long and specific claim 1 like this I will immediately wonder what idiot wrote that. In some cases, however, claiming an invention in such specific terms is absolutely what is required. In this case, claim 1 of US patent 6,829,355 defines what became known as SHA256, which will be well know to many here at least. There is only really one way of doing it, and that way became a widespread standard, so that's what the claim specified. The patent remained valid and in force up until the point it finally expired on 5 June 2023. The general principle of claiming the invention as broadly as possible, while mostly correct, does therefore have exceptions.
https://m.primal.net/Kfbi.png https://m.primal.net/Kfbj.png
By the way, I still find it quite astonishing that the little device sat next to my computer here is doing this calculation many billions of times every second.
GM, replying to your note on wss://nostr.oxtr.dev