Comments on: Patent reform--or else
But just what sort of reform? Author Dave Mock says treat the cause, not the symptoms.
But just what sort of reform? Author Dave Mock says treat the cause, not the symptoms.
January 2, 2010 6:26 PM PST
January 2, 2010 4:56 PM PST
January 2, 2010 4:16 PM PST
Add headlines from CNET News to your homepage or feedreader.
More feeds available in our RSS feed index.
Related quotes
Big companies? The public? The courts? The consumer? Other countries?
My prediction is that the Congress will make matters worse before they make it better. Another prediction is that the protection of large companies like IBM, Intel and Microsoft has become a national security and economic obsession within the U.S. and that Congress will move to make that issue clearer in any legislation.
At the end of the day ... fair play will finish a distant last to economic necessity, security concerns and class-warfare.
The patent system was created centuries ago at a time when the putting together of things in a new way to do something in a different way was quite rare, and only a few talented people did these things. Meanwhile time have passed, and in our times puting things together in new ways is routine. Just putting together things in a new way that is "non-obvious" or was never done before is not enough to grant exclusive rights anymore. There are people who do it several times a day in their jobs. It is not a rare occasion. It is the daily routine of many people to solve difficult problems by puting things together in new innovative ways. But the patent system still grants exclusive rights on these things as if they are rare occasions and not just routine jobs. Just like a retailer at the end of the days goes to the bank to deposit the day's profits, the programmer can go to the patent office at the end of each working day, and file for patents on several new soulutions to some problems that are innovative and nonobvious, and are probably deserving to be patented under the current system's criteria.
It's not that there's an "innovation boom". It's just that in an age when there are tools that enable "routine innovation", the criteria for granting monopoly on ideas should not be the same criteria that were used before these tools were available. It's not about higher or lower quality, and not about shifting balances. It's about an outdated concept. What is routine should not be called innovative, even if new knowledge is created, and even if it is created in "non-obvious" ways.
Maybe the problem all along has been the highly subjective nature of the word "non-obvious." I like your term of "routine innovation"; maybe patent law should be reworded to say that such "routine innovations" are not patentable.
Still, the author of this article is right--if the USPTO doesn't get more qualified patent reviewers, especially in the software arena, changing the law will mean little.
At least Congress seems to be looking at the issues. However, I prefer to expect the worst and hope for the best, so we'll see.
Innovation is not the same as inventing or solving problems.
Innovation involves overcoming SOCIAL pressures, not just twisting a screwdriver in a new way or writing a piece of C++ code in a different way that someobody else.
1) Big Companies with Giant Legal Departments
that just want to keep the status quo going
wherein they patent every obvious idea as
fast as they can.
-or-
2) Script kiddies who think that innovation,
software, music, movies, books, text, images
sounds, and anything else they can download
from an illegal IRC channel should be "free".
Patents are a crucial part of the innovation, and without them many small companies and individual inventors would never bother to share their invention with the world in any way (unlike the Script Kiddies, real people need real jobs and pay real bills).
Big companies (this goes especially for new drugs, which cost a minimum of $100M to create) would often not be able to justify the cost of bringing a new invention to the mass market because their product would be cloned quickly thus eliminating any upside potential. (And yes, those companies need "astronomical" returns in order to justify the astronomical risks, or they won't take them, and we'll be left with no new major innovations).
The patent system has a lot of problems and is in a lot of ways very broken right now, but the solution is to fix the problem, not pretend it doesn't exist, and not to solve the problem by creating a bigger one.
something new out of known pieces. The resulting work is
protected using a Copyright - not a patent.
A programmer puts computer instructions together to make
something new out of known pieces. The resulting work should
be adequately protectable using a Copyright - not a patent.
I believe the appropriateness of a patent can be closely related
to the expense of duplicating the patented idea. If you patent a
new type of camera chip, it would take a great deal of money to
reexpress the embodiment of that patent. However, if you
patent a new sorting algorithm, it would take a programmer
about 10 minutes to reexpress it - and therein lies the basic
problem with software patents - because software is so easy to
write and there are numerous ways to do the same thing,
programmers rarely research whether a technique has been
done before or has been patented, and therefore it is almost
inevitable that a programmer infringe on *somebody's* patent,
leading to the proliferation of trolling and litigation. However,
for patented ideas that require real time and money to recreate,
someone is much more likely to research existing patents before
actually building something.
If we absolutely MUST have software patents, lets make the term
of the patent reflect the ease with which a programmer could
recreate the idea - say six months or a year - or alternatively,
have a fixed license fee (some ridiculously low $$ value) for all
software patents so if a programmer finds out that his program
is infringing, they can simply pay the license fee and move on.
Craig Landrum, CTO
Mindwrap, Inc.
- Simple Solution
- by May 26, 2005 12:01 AM PDT
- Patents are there to protect the interests of the inventor. This is good.
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
(7 Comments)The thing that offends people is companies and people getting filthy rich over 2 minutes of thinking and 2 hours of applying for a patent.
Just adapt the period of validity of a patent to the cost made to develop the technology.
Amazon's one-click shopping patent: validity one month.
Viagra; validity 10 years.
And make it impossible to patent an algorithm or idea. Accept only one implementation of the idea as patentable, so others can implement the same idea by other means.