September 4, 2009 6:00 AM PDT

Microsoft's premature patent proposal

by Peter Glaskowsky
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In a corporate blog post this week, Microsoft Vice President Horacio Gutierrez promoted the idea of a "harmonized, global patent system," in which all the nations adopt common standards for processing and approving patent applications.

Properly done, patents approved in one country could become enforceable in other countries, as is the case with copyrights under the terms of the Berne Convention.

Logo of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office

I really have no problem with harmonization if it is properly done, but I think it would be tremendously difficult to achieve good results. The reality of patent protection is radically different from that of copyrights because patents are allowed based on the merits of the application; someone has to make a judgment call.

Would nations be able to compete for patenting fees on the basis of their approval rate? After all, who could say whether I invented a new audio calibration standard here in Cupertino--or Costa Rica, if I just happened to visit a patent agent while on holiday there? Even if this wasn't allowed, I expect all nations would begin to relax their standards in order to give their local inventors an edge in the global marketplace--a classic "race to the bottom."

Or would there be just one international patent bureau, perhaps run as an agency of the United Nations? I shudder to think how that would turn out, with the General Assembly dominated by smaller nations with little vested interest in patent protection.

Unfortunately, Gutierrez takes the latter position:

In today's world of universal connectivity, global business and collaborative innovation, it is time for a world patent that is derived from a single patent application, examined and prosecuted by a single examining authority and litigated before a single judicial body.

Not only does he want an international patent bureau, he wants to create a new international court system with global enforcement powers. The potential for abuse here is truly staggering.

But as objectionable as I find that proposal, my real issue with Gutierrez's post is that it's completely irrelevant to the real problems with the worldwide patent system.

Gutierrez summarizes:

Big challenges certainly confront the global patent system: Escalating patent application backlogs; lengthening pendency periods; increasing costs of patent prosecution; dubious patent quality due to the global explosion of prior art and the time allowed to examine applications; and examination inefficiency due to duplication of work by multiple offices.

Removing the duplication would help a little. About half of U.S. patents go to non-resident inventors. That fraction is increasing, and it's already larger in most other countries because of the stronger emphasis on innovation in U.S. companies. Letting inventors go through the process just once, in their own countries, would eliminate the duplication. But again, I think this approach would create more problems than it solves.

In any event, a factor of two here or there is not going to solve the fundamental problem of patent quality. The high percentage of bad patents in the system--and believe me, I can personally testify to how many bad patents are out there--undermines the whole system.

I've been thinking about this problem for over 20 years now, and I have some suggestions:

Problem statements. All patent applications should include a statement of the specific problem(s) the claimed invention is intended to solve. These problem statements should be published immediately and anonymously, along with whatever prior-art references have been disclosed--but no details of the invention itself. The problem statements and prior-art references would be taken as narrowing the scope of the invention. The public would then be free to point to known solutions, or even submit new ones, which would create a presumption of obviousness if they happen to coincide with the filed claims.

Claim standardization. One social benefit of the patent system is to publish inventions so that others may use them, either immediately if a license is made available, or after the patent expires. A published patent may also serve as the foundation of further inventive work. But patents are difficult for humans to understand and are practically immune to reliable machine analysis and searching. I think patent claims should use a standardized grammar and vocabulary that eliminates ambiguity and precisely identifies the scope of the invention. Although defining these new standards would be a difficult and lengthy process, the rewards would be tremendous.

Examination fees. As an inventor myself it pains me to say this, but examination fees must cover the actual costs of examination. That means charging enough to let the patent office hire enough qualified examiners to handle applications as quickly as they come in, rather than letting a backlog develop. Published problem statements and standardized claims will help a lot, higher fees may cut down on bogus patent filings, and we'd all like to see the patent office managed better. But ultimately, the system has to support itself.

No triple damages. U.S. law provides for triple damages when someone "knowingly, deliberately, intentionally, willfully, or wantonly" infringes a patent. But these damages are routinely awarded whenever there is evidence that an infringer was aware of a patent, even if the knowledge played no role in product development or there was truly some reasonable disagreement as to whether the patent was relevant. As a result, this law discourages study of existing patents, which is directly contrary to the constitutional purpose of the patent system. Knowledge alone is not a bad thing; we shouldn't penalize it.

I'm sure there are many other good ideas out there for improving the U.S. patent system. We need to talk about them, and we need to find solutions to our own problems before we even start thinking about globalization.

Peter N. Glaskowsky is a computer architect in Silicon Valley and a technology analyst for the Envisioneering Group. He has designed chip- and board-level products in the defense and computer industries, managed design teams, and served as editor in chief of the industry newsletter "Microprocessor Report." He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure.
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by sismoc September 4, 2009 7:09 AM PDT
A patent should be difficult to get.
Not because of roadblocks, but because almost everything has prior art.
The goal of the patent office should be to reject as many patent applications as possible.
A patent that was awarded would then be worth something.
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by September 4, 2009 7:51 AM PDT
This just seems like a ploy by Microsoft to avoid future litigation. I would also mention that global patents would open up conversely more avenues for Microsoft to sue other companies for questionable infringments. You don't have to win just drain the competition's cashflow. The enforcement issue & localized favoritism is a given. Which country wouldn't love to be the first to get a new patent & potential revenue from the creation of new industry.
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by jhosteny September 4, 2009 9:19 AM PDT
Mr. Glaskowsky -- Your article is interesting. But the last part -- about treble damages being awarded as a matter of routine is incorrect. In fact, treble damages are rare in patent litigation, even where the infringer has knowledge of the patent. Second, when they are awarded, a judge does not have to triple damages. The increase is within the court's discretion, and is most often well under three times the actual damages.

Joe Hosteny
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by Peter N. Glaskowsky September 4, 2009 10:47 AM PDT
Thanks for your comment. I was under the impression that triple damages are more common, but it sounds like you have experience in this area. In any event, many companies still have policies against studying existing patents because of this concern, and that's what I'd like to eliminate.
by irdac September 4, 2009 9:53 AM PDT
The impression I have is that Microsoft wishes to extend its range of companies to sue. In the race to the bottom I feel it would be difficult to beat the US Patent Office as they seem to give patents to any trivial item presented especially if the patentee is a big company. With the big company bias so evident in the US Justice system I doubt if a UN solution could be much worse.
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by hawkeyeaz1 September 4, 2009 9:56 AM PDT
Just do away with all patents and replace them with laws protecting sales up to reasonable cost of development + some fair profit (say, 10%).
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by Peter N. Glaskowsky September 4, 2009 10:49 AM PDT
That's generous of you, but you might be interested to know that most patents never pay off. If those that do were limited to a 10% net profit, there would be almost no incentive to bother applying, and the social benefit would be lost.
by Hokulea September 4, 2009 10:47 AM PDT
Software patents are murky at best. Do away with them entirely and protect complete works under copyright. Either that, or limit software patents to a one year duration.
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by Peter N. Glaskowsky September 4, 2009 8:31 PM PDT
Programming languages are high-level machine description languages. It follows that software patents are logically equivalent to machine patents. If you want one, you have to take both.

There is some merit to the idea that different kinds of inventions may deserve different kinds of patent protection, but that's not the next problem to solve either.

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by pch4101 September 5, 2009 2:10 AM PDT
> Programming languages are high-level machine description languages.
Ok, sure.

> It follows that software patents are logically equivalent to machine patents.
No, it seems that software patents not expressed in a programming language. If they were then their scope would be very specific (like a copyright) and we wouldn't have half the problems that we have today with them.
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by Peter N. Glaskowsky September 6, 2009 11:31 AM PDT
Hmm. I was trying to point out that a program is a machine. It takes certain steps to transform one thing into another, like a machine. If we can patent machine designs, we ought to be able to patent software.

The problem with this theory isn't with the theory, but with how it's implemented by a patent agency. I think the U.S. patent office, at least, isn't always sensitive enough to the issues of obviousness and novelty when examining patent applications, and especially so when it comes to software applications. Way too many applications get allowed that describe something that another skilled software developer would have come up with if faced with the same problem.

I've also seen really clever software patents that brought something new and useful to the market and so genuinely deserved patent protection.

Publishing the problem statement would let the public help examiners to distinguish between worthy and unworthy applications, and stimulate further creative thinking, thus reinforcing the social benefit of the patent system.

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by Sumatra-Bosch September 6, 2009 9:56 AM PDT
Oh, yes, perfect, one set of bureaucrats to hammer 24/7 with lobbying efforts, bribes, threats, blackmail, whatever it takes to gain control and leverage the system for total control of all IP in the universe. In this scenario, MSFT could actually consolidate the number of fixers and press all its efforts to twist IP regulations and decisions to its favor. Nice. Call home all thousands of grinning thugs from the hinterlands and set them loose on the Patent Plenipotentiary in Geneva or wherever it is set up. The wet dream for MSFT here is to engineer patent court decisions in Sudan and make it enforceable worldwide. Perfect. For MSFT. Citi did this with credit card interest rate regulations in South Dakota in 1994 or so and we ended up with a virtual repeal of usury laws and the current catastrophe in the credit card market. If MSFT got its way, they'd throw thousands of hack attorneys at hundreds of key patents they want to bring under their control in failed states like Sudan and Afghanistan where judges can be bought for a couple of goats. Looks like MSFT attorneys have had way too much time to day dream since the anti-trust case.
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by chilabot September 11, 2009 8:29 AM PDT
Software Patents should not exist! It takes everyone away the right to program.
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About Speeds and Feeds

Silicon Valley-based computer architect and chip analyst Peter N. Glaskowsky attends a variety of industry conferences throughout the year to meet with industry thought leaders and dig into the future of computing technology. In Speeds and Feeds, he analyzes trends in system architecture and interface design, as well as market and political pressures surrounding those trends. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure.

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