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Peer Review Starts for Software Patents 102

perbert writes "As seen in an interview in IEEE Spectrum: Qualcomm v. Broadcom. Amazon v. IBM. Apple v. seemingly everyone. The number of high-profile patent lawsuits in this country has reached a staggering level. Hoping to curtail the orgy of tech-industry litigation, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) is experimenting with reforming the way patents are applied for and processed. Launched on 18 June 2007 was an Internet-based peer-review program whereby anyone (even you) can help to evaluate a number of software patent applications voluntarily submitted for public evaluation. The one-year pilot Peer-to-Patent program is a collaboration between the USPTO and New York Law School's Institute for Information Law and Policy, in New York City. The program's Web site allows users to weigh in on patent applications by researching, evaluating, submitting, and discussing prior art, which is any existing information, such as articles in technology journals and other patents, relevant to the applicant's claims."
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Peer Review Starts for Software Patents

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  • Looks pretty solid (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Evets ( 629327 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @05:25PM (#19600681) Homepage Journal
    Nice...

    5 applications online [peertopatent.org], 22 instances of prior art submitted.

    While everyone's favorite seems to be Method, apparatus and computer program product for providing status of a process [peertopatent.org], I had to laugh at Database staging area read-through or forced flush with dirty notification [peertopatent.org] - it's pretty much a description of how every memcached/SQL plugin works. I guess somebody should mention that.

    Apparently, if you make the description sound complex enough [peertopatent.org] it will pass initial review.

    It's good to see this kind of a process come to light. Three cheers for Beth Noveck.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday June 21, 2007 @05:40PM (#19600893)
      Apparently, if you make the description sound complex enough it will pass initial review.

      Yes. I once had a conversation with a lawyer who worked in a patent office about this, and this is very correct. In theory the people reviewing patents and determining whether or not a patent should be granted are technically educated and competent. In fact, many of them are technically literate, but as we all know the world of computer technology is huge and what is often required to intelligently review a patent is not just technical literacy, but plenty of domain knowledge in the specific area of the patent (many people who use computers every day, even people who program computers, know very little about how memcached/SQL plugins work).

      So even though some effort at technical literacy is made, the fact is that there simply isn't enough manpower to pull it off. A patent office only has so many people on staff, and so much money that they can spend on expert consultation, and the submitters are always in a hurry. These real-world pressures leave specific clerks holding the bag; they are more-or-less forced to make a decision with too little information, and financially incensed to lean towards approval.

      So, yes, techy-sounding complexity will go a long way towards getting bogus patents approved.
      • by billsoxs ( 637329 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @07:56PM (#19602385) Journal
        I think that it has more to do with the time that the Patent officer has to spend on the patent. I am involved in such an issue and the offending patent has a "Korean" patent referenced on the front. That patent was from "1977". Guess what, the new patent was just a rehash of the "77" patent. (There is prior art to ~"1970".) How can I tell, I've read a translation old patent and the new patent. A laywer has said that because it is listed IN the patent - it is unlikely that a court would over turn the new patent.... The court will assume that the USPTO actually looked at the "Korean" document and thinks that it was different. That same laywer is seeking to find out if a translation of the "Korean" patent was looked at by the USPTO. He thinks it is unlikely. This is because of the time it would take to do so.

        Note dates and names have been changed to protect the guilty.

        • Having done contract work for the USPTO for a number of years, I can assure you they do not lack people who speak Korean. Doesn't mean they looked at the Korean patent though.
      • but as we all know the world of computer technology is huge and what is often required to intelligently review a patent is not just technical literacy

        This is why I think the patent process should be a direct analogue of the peer-reviewed refereed scientific journal process—so that it is a panel of field experts that make the decisions about what is significant and what is not. Patents should be of a quality that would be accepted for publication in such a journal. This would eliminate about 99% of

    • by Bruce Perens ( 3872 ) * <bruce@perens.com> on Thursday June 21, 2007 @06:31PM (#19601433) Homepage Journal
      Don Marti said in his blog a few days ago, and I agree: Why are we giving software patent holders free QA so that they will have more solid patents to use against us? . And some folks are trying to tell us that this won't expose us to the treble damages we would get if we looked at granted patents because these are only applications, but what happens when these get granted? Do we have to somehow insulate ourselves from knowledge that they are ever granted?

      I am not at all sure this would help either Open Source or small and medium sized proprietary software developers, who I imagine are the folks they want to have doing peer review - and also the folks most in danger from Software patents. I do not at this time recommend that you participate in this at all if you are an Open Source developer, the risk of being exposed to treble damages is too high. I don't know if you should participate in this if you're even an Open Source sympathizer. It sounds too much like an effort to save a software patent system that we should be shutting down.

      The only way I think it would help would be if we could entirely kill a patent application. Just fixing one only makes it more powerful.

      Bruce

      • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward
        > Why are we giving software patent holders free QA so that they will have more solid patents to use against us?

        Because the alternative is more patents that nobody QA's that they STILL use against us.
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          But a patent that hasn't been through a QA process is likely to be much easier to defend against.

          The strategy of the patent trolls is to get a whole bunch of patents, none of them very good, but hope that maybe just one of them will stick. Fighting against a bunch of bad patents is much easier (although probably more time consuming) than fighting against a patent that has been through QA. After all, the patent troll is certain to use the fact that it has passed a peer review process to push their case.

          • by Wesley Felter ( 138342 ) <wesley@felter.org> on Thursday June 21, 2007 @09:46PM (#19603353) Homepage
            But a patent that hasn't been through a QA process is likely to be much easier to defend against.

            If you have a legal budget and you're willing to fight the patent in court. Most open source projects will just roll over if they get hit with even the threat of a lawsuit, so the strength of the patent is irrelevant.
            • I'm not sure about that, can you point to some examples of FOSS projects that have been shut down because of patent disputes? Since software patents are only valid in the USA (and maybe some other places, I'm not sure), they are certainly not valid in Europe, Australia, or many other places that are strong centres of FOSS development. So at worst, a patent dispute can lead to moving development of the project outside the USA. Admittedly for some projects, that might amount to killing it off anyway, but I
      • by PitaBred ( 632671 ) <slashdot&pitabred,dyndns,org> on Thursday June 21, 2007 @07:04PM (#19601829) Homepage
        I don't agree with software or business method patents in general (or genetics for that matter), but this is a hell of a lot better than BS patents being passed through and then someone having to pay through every orifice for having transgressed on a bogus patent. It's a stop-gap as far as I'm concerned. We can still fight the good fight against them, but until then, this is the best step we can take. Fixing one may make it more powerful, but it may also marginalize it enough with prior art that it becomes irrelevant instead of the "one click" type crap. If you're in an out of control car, the first step is taking your foot off the gas, not stepping on the brake.
      • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward
        Because most bad software patents you should be able to disprove with prior art. If its so good that it can overcome all prior art, then maybe it does deserve a patent. However, I've yet to see a software program in the last 5 years or so that was that good, so it shouldn't be a worry. There are plenty of affirmative defenses to willful infringement that just looking at a patent doesn't expose you. This is a good program all around. People should participate, and if you don't like software patents, wor
      • The only way I think it would help would be if we could entirely kill a patent application. Just fixing one only makes it more powerful.

        Bruce

        Bruce is absolutely correct. This process is designed to weed out all the "obvious" software inventions that we complain about - the ones that are just a rehash of something old. If you believe that patents are inherently bad or if you believe that software should never be patented - even if it meets all the requirements of a patent (new, non-obvious) - then you should be aware that this process does make the patent stronger. OTOH, it should remove or narrow some software patents, leaving fewer to worry

    • by eggnoglatte ( 1047660 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @10:29PM (#19603663)
      On first sight, the situation may seem positive, but unfortunatly the quality of the "prior art" submissions is dysmal.

      For example, if you read even just the intro of "Method, apparatus and computer program product for providing status of a process", it is immediately clear that the authors use the term "process" in a non-software meaning (i.e. a production process or something similar - they use a power plant as an example). Yet two of the supposed prior art submissions refer to operating system process monitors (one wanker actually uploaded a .exe file). Most of the other "prior art" submission have already been rebuked by other participants.

      I predict a very fast end to this pilot test unless the quality improves drastically. If you are gonna comment, you should at least bother reading the patent, for christ sake.

      • Why should this site encourage more thoughtful posts than Slashdot does?

        The USTPO is asking the public to do their jobs for them. Nice try, but real life doesn't work like that.

        Now they're stuck with moderating the website and sifting though an enormous number of garbage posts.

  • Not peer review (Score:5, Insightful)

    by kmac06 ( 608921 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @05:25PM (#19600683)
    While this is an improvement, it is not peer review. Allowing public comments is different than requesting recommendations from experts in the field.
    • Re:Not peer review (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Evets ( 629327 ) * on Thursday June 21, 2007 @05:30PM (#19600771) Homepage Journal
      While there is a semantic difference, I'd hate to leave "Peer Review" to academics and "career experts" that have taken the time and effort to have their own credentials reviewed.

      There are plenty of people out there who wouldn't pass muster if you reviewed their credentials, but they know more about the inner workings of some things than anybody else in the industry.

      How many key industry players are drop outs that made their money on hard work and ingenuity? More than a few I imagine.
      • Re: (Score:1, Redundant)

        by EvanED ( 569694 )
        Then what does the "peer" mean? If anyone can comment, it's just "review".

        This is just an argument about what "peer review" means, not about whether it's useful, how it compares to peer review, etc., but that term has a pretty specific meaning.

        Wikipedia's entry starts with "Peer review (known as refereeing in some academic fields) is a process of subjecting an author's scholarly work or ideas to the scrutiny of others who are experts in the field."
        • Re:Not peer review (Score:5, Insightful)

          by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Thursday June 21, 2007 @05:57PM (#19601079) Homepage Journal

          Then what does the "peer" mean? If anyone can comment, it's just "review".

          It means every bit as much as a "jury of your peers" does today.

          Once upon a time, a "jury of your peers" was a group of citizens with similar social standing, economic condition, et cetera. Today it's twelve assholes that both lawyers think they can manipulate, who are guaranteed beyond a shadow of a doubt to know nothing about the case they're trying.

          I don't see any reason why corporations shouldn't be judged in the eyes of random jackoffs if you and I are.

          • by AuMatar ( 183847 )
            Yup, so rich southern whites accused of killing/assaulting blacks were tried by other rich southern whites. Brilliant!

            Thats the reason that juries today try for diversity- because certain segments of society are more likely to be harsher or more lenient than society as a whole. Or do you want the next Kenneth Lay to be tried by a jury of CEOs?

            (Not that there isn't plenty of problems with the current method of jury selection, but trying to get socio-economic peers is a step backwards).
          • I did Jury Duty a few months ago.

            Jurors AREN'T supposed to be experts on the case. You are allowed to only use your general knowledge of things (ie, gravity holds things down, the sky is blue, basic physics). Lawyers will bring in 'experts' whos testimony you can ignore or accept. Jurors themselves are supposed to be unbiased, and using your expertise will make you biased. In the trial I participated in (civil, car accident), two different experts came to two different conclusions as to the location of one
            • we can calculate the exact telemetry of an object moving through space 365 million miles from earth, traveling at a velocity around 38,000mph. we can send that object a signal thats 20 billion times less powerful than a digital watch and tell it to turn around and take a picture of Jupiter. Why, oh why, can't we determine who's playing the insurance company for a chump?
            • I did Jury Duty a few months ago. Jurors AREN'T supposed to be experts on the case.

              Now that you've been a juror, you're an expert on what a juror should be?

              Why shouldn't jurors know something about the case? If I'm smarter than the expert witnesses (it's a hypothetical here, bear with me) then isn't it in the interest of justice if I remain on the jury, and don't get booted off just because I know something?

              The so-called justice system is flawed at best, and deliberately designed for game-playing at wo

          • by geekoid ( 135745 )
            if people would stop weaseling out of Jury DUTY, maybe we can get that.
            otoh -
            "Weaseling out of things is important to learn. It's what separates us from the animals... except the weasel." H. Simpson

            • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

              by Belial6 ( 794905 )
              The problem with Jury Duty is that it wasn't supposed to be a financial burden. You can bet the $5 a day they pay was actually worth something when it was first implemented. It's a sad state of affairs when juries are made up entirely of people who can afford to just not get paid for weeks at at time. If we require maternity leave, and disability to be paid by employers, we sure could help our country a lot more by adding jury leave to the list.
            • if people would stop weaseling out of Jury DUTY, maybe we can get that.

              Well, I'm not saying that I've ever weaseled out of jury duty, but if I had it would have been because I couldn't afford it.

              My current employer is the first I've ever had that would pay you for your time spent on the jury. I work for a tribal casino, and they more or less appear to have adopted their holidays and some of their practices directly from federal government practices.

              Now, sometimes I've been salaried, but mostly those jobs

        • "peer" does not mean "expert", it means someone at an equal level http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/peer [wiktionary.org]. Therefore since patents are submitted by the general public, they can be reviewed by the general public, and that is peer review. Whether it is effective peer review or not is up for debate. Academic peer review is generally done by experts because the community in question is unified by its expertise in a certain area, thus reviewers, and authors, are experts and peers. In this case I'd think that pat
    • by EmbeddedJanitor ( 597831 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @05:32PM (#19600781)
      Attaching a bunchof prior art (or supposed prior art) to an application sure helps the peer review process.

      Only problem I see with this is that it can easily become deep pockets vs the rest exercise. No doubt MS and some others will have a few people perminantly assigned to tearing apart applications from others.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by aim2future ( 773846 )
        No doubt MS and some others will have a few people perminantly assigned to tearing apart applications from others. Certainly, but there are plenty of people, like 50% of those I know that would gladly tear MS patent applications apart for free.
      • by LiquidCoooled ( 634315 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @05:53PM (#19601029) Homepage Journal
        There is hope then.
        If one company can do it, then so can others.
        At some point they will realise its a waste of all their time, or we will end up with a server room fist fight broadcast on youtube.

        win-win I say.
        • or we will end up with a server room fist fight broadcast on youtube.

          I'll take Balmer over Jobs in the second round! Jobs will come in the best equipment money can buy but Balmer will change the shape of the court by fiat and then kick Jobs in the balls.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by TheRaven64 ( 641858 )
      Judging by a lot of software patents, I would be highly surprised if experts in the field were the authors' peers...

      Cheap shots aside, aren't you opening yourself up to litigation with this? If you submit prior art on a patent which is then granted anyway then they can prove that you read it, which opens you up to claims of wilful infringement, which carries stiffer penalties than ignorant infringement (which is one of the main reasons patents fail to achieve their aim, since the people who would most ben

    • Three cheers for the USPTO for coming up with the idea.
    • While this is an improvement, it is not peer review. Allowing public comments is different than requesting recommendations from experts in the field.

      Dr. Quinn: I've got five Ph.D.'s and a genius grant. I don't have any peers here.
  • by 1800maxim ( 702377 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @05:27PM (#19600721)
    We could use such tags as "Funny" - aka invention too stupid (remember the diaper pants that inflate if a fall is detected? This supposedly saves your bum from bruising).
    Or how about "Troll" - aka it's a patent troll, and should be ignored.
    "Interesting" means not a bad idea, but let's put it on hold for a while and give it some thought.
    I'm sure we could adapt "Informative" and "Insightful" as "Useful".

    I'm only kidding about this.
  • Cheaper? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by vigmeister ( 1112659 )
    Will this make getting patents cheaper for the applicant?
    • It was a system that displayed ads while you were using the mouse (moving the cursor, clicking).

      Perhaps they could develop a similar system for patent reviewing - get paid for it. And then I could write a script that keeps moving the mouse cursor around and randomly clicks on ACCEPT/REJECT buttons (and let's not forget, moderate the patents - see my post above for more detail).

      I suspect my randomizer would do a better job of filtering bogus patents out.
    • More expensive (Score:4, Interesting)

      by qbzzt ( 11136 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @05:36PM (#19600841)
      No. This will mean that there will be more people finding more prior art, and therefore more documents to wade through and more correspondence with the Patent Office. This means more expenses rather than less. I'm not saying it's a bad idea (I already argued against one application), but it won't make patenting inventions cheaper. The patent examiner will still do a literature search and find things in addition to whatever this process finds.

      On the other hand, it mean that enforcing patents will become a bit easier because the general level of patents will be higher so there'll be less to litigate about.

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward
        > This will mean that there will be more people finding more prior art

        "Given enough eyeballs, all patents are obvious." :)
    • by zCyl ( 14362 )
      In the end it could make things cheaper for the large companies. Right now they are reluctantly filing patents in huge quantities on tiny things just to stay competitive with the other large companies. If most of the irrelevant patents start getting systematically discarded, then none of the large companies will have to file them, and each of them will save money on patent fees.

      It might raise the cost for an individual inventor filing a single patent, particularly if someone challenges it with prior art w
  • Sounds good, as long as it doesnt turn into - Ill approve your patent for breathing, if you approve mine for walking.
  • Anyone? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by niceone ( 992278 ) * on Thursday June 21, 2007 @05:35PM (#19600823) Journal
    ...whereby anyone (even you) can help to evaluate...

    Well, anyone who can read a patent without their head exploding. I can't even read my own. let alone other people's :)

    Hopefully the people that do this will know enough to read the claims properly and not just deluge the system with incorrect prior art based on reading the description.
  • Big flaw: (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday June 21, 2007 @05:44PM (#19600937)
    The people who could most contribute to this have the biggest incentive not to.

    If you read the patent, and it is then granted, and you, or your company, are ruled to infringe, the plaintiff is entitled to treble damage (I think) for "willful infringement".

    The people who could make the most interesting contribution (because it's their domain) are also the most likely to be potentially infringing (because it's their domain).

    And this thing is not anonymous...
  • Patent System 2.0

    I like it.

    as a side note: my captcha image word was "stalling". Somehow applicable.
  • The lobbying system whereby you can support your interests by lobbying our government, which has now been turned into a system by which large corporations now run our government, well now large corporations can lobby the patent system and control that now, good news guys you can have your say! Long live freedom in America! Sorry if I seem a little skeptical, but if anyone can add to this without their background being checked, then I don't think its very good, at the very least a corporation could deliberat
  • What Happen to /. (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Bucc5062 ( 856482 ) <bucc5062@gmai l . c om> on Thursday June 21, 2007 @05:54PM (#19601035)
    Holy Mother Of God!!! After all the whini^H^H^H^H^H commentary about how awefulthe Patent Office is regarding software patents, after all the knashing of teeth over why can't the US Patent Office let the public help....They DO!!! And the first 15-20 comments are complaints about the word Peer, litigation, and Microsoft still fixing the system....oh wait, this still is /. Folks, I would figure a big cheer is in order. Change was made to a bad system. Maybe not the panacea we hope for, but better then do nothing and bitch. How about a hand to the Patent Office for taking a trail run at trusting the public to balance on the side of good. I have to specific gain or loss in this, but if it stops the banal patent whoring, submarining, or patent camping I gladly lend my voice to say three cheers, and make the public win!
    • by bit01 ( 644603 )

      Change was made to a bad system.

      Superficial change was made to a fundamentally broken system. They're hoping the complaints will go away so they won't have to deal with the real issues.

      Well guess what? The complaints are not going to go away until they start addressing the fundamentals. Like how much benefit, if any, patents actually bring rather than the wholesale hand waving they usually engage in.

      ---

      Scientific, evidence based IP law. Now there's a thought.

  • scarry (Score:4, Funny)

    by phrostie ( 121428 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @05:55PM (#19601057)
    for a second i thought they said, Pay Perview for Software Patents.
  • by Weaselmancer ( 533834 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @06:10PM (#19601215)

    U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) is experimenting with reforming the way patents are applied for and processed.

    Ok, ladies and gentlemen, from the home office in Sioux City, Iowa, the Top Ten ways the USPTO is reforming the way patents are processed:

    • 10. Removing the approve-it dartboard from the breakroom
    • 9. Firing Kiki the approval badger
    • 8. Banning Jeff Bezos from the office
    • 7. Doubling the 45 second research phase
    • 6. Free donut if the clerk actually looks for prior art
    • 5. Using one of them there computer thingys to search this "database" whatchamacallit
    • 4. Cut workload by 50% by arranging a death match between Bill Gates and Steve Jobs
    • 3. Halt the "approval by the pound" employee bonus incentive plan
    • 2. Up standards to a sixth grade education for all clerks
    • 1. Actually reading them first!
  • What is really needed to stop the bleeding (short of banning software patents entirely) is requiring patent applications to come with implementations. If you've patented a widget, build one and submit it. If your patented process is too large or complex for that to be practicable, you get a pass--but software should never be in that category! You want to patent 1-click ordering? Submit a runnable program to demonstrate the code you want patented. That would raise the costs of submarine patenting, as yo
  • This is terrible! (Score:3, Interesting)

    by John Sokol ( 109591 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @06:51PM (#19601637) Homepage Journal
    I haven't read this all that closely,
      But the idea of having my Intellectual property / invention read through by peers / possible competitors before my patent goes through is the worst thing that you can do to a small unfunded startup.

      This would kill of the next google before then even get out the starting gate.

      Basically I have some software / algorithms that I have been working on for almost 10+ years, Code is developed and I am ready to build a product and get some funding to launch the company. Investors want and need to see patent protection. I have indeed done all of the hard work, but if this it shared before I get my patent fully filed, then
      some group of students or Microsoft could through a small army of coders at developing a competing product before I even get funded. I will then be unable to raise funding because M$ is doing it already and therefor will be unable to raise the cash to finish my patent filings or defend the patent.

      It is already hard enough as it is, I should know, I have attempted to file about 20 patents of the past 15 years and not one ever made it all the way through because of lack of fund, or someone attempting to take over the company, or M$ putting out press releases and faked demos that were flat out lies.

      At this point my plans were to file patents before taking to investors or releasing products, and do this without professional patent attorneys that have eaten up almost $300K with not 1 completed patent to show for it.
      But if these patent get publicly dispersed before I even get my patent filed, well I am just dead before I even start.

      In the past I had the first and largest content distribution network 1994 and running from (1995 to 1998), Caching servers, Error Correction over IP, QOS, Firewall penetration schemes, Streaming audio over IP 1987, streaming video over IP 1989, the whole concept file sharing P2P 1989 and of live P2P streaming 1994,Dynamic Rate control for video streaming encoders and many more things that all fell apart for one reason or another.

    And some of these attempted patents that fell apart are now the core of several billion dollar companies that I have nothing at all to do with.

    As a small entrepreneur the system is already slanted heavily against me. This would really just kill any aspirations for me.

    And before you criticize, I have shared plenty of this in open source and published papers, usually only after it has lost commercial value for me though.

    John

    • If your patent should be granted, other companies working in the same area after you submit the application will not jeopardize that in any way. In fact, these other companies become a major source of future license fees. Any venture capitalist worth his salt that can be convinced you have valid patents in areas of interest to large companies is going to be very interested. Problems exist only if the process of getting approval takes too long. Time, in this case, becomes very expensive.

      You should be d

      • VC's are very easy to spook. There rational often defy common logic that any technical person would normally use.
        Like with my afterburner(on sourceforge) when I mentioned that the server is heavily optimized and therefor used much less computing power for the same task. VC's reply was why, there is no advantage? Computers are getting faster (Moore's law), there is no advantage in optimization of software!
        After that reply I was just stunned, stupefied and left speechless. Later I realized my comeback shoul
    • by tkohler ( 806572 )
      >I haven't read this all that closely, The new system only posts patent applications after they have published (18 months after filing) and are public anyway.
    • by geekoid ( 135745 )
      Lets see, you event everything important with computer in the las 20 year. Check
      Kept down by 'the man' Check
      Basic facts don't seem to line up with reality? Check.

      BS detectors ringing loudly.
      • I hardly invented everything, but was just in the right place working on the right things.
        You can see links to many of these things on my home page and sites. If you really want proof I can even dig up the original patent fillings on these things.

        Even now, I have work I am doing for electronic cash, electronic voting, Anti SPAM by using Electronic postage stamps,
        earthquake detection and early warning, video streaming on cell phones, several Linux kernel drivers. VIVI currently in linux kernel/
        Oh and
        • Can't your software be used as prior art?

          In effect, can you actually overturn the patents the other companies have gotten by showing you did it first?
          • It has on several occasion done just that.
            In the cast with the First byte patent on Digital audio for PC internal speaker, Activision paid me to help overturn that patent.
            But in that cast I had posted code to CompuServe that kept an unbiased date and time stamp.
            http://www.dnull.com/zebraresearch/ [dnull.com]

            Being able to document the inventions date is very important, even when it is released into the public domain. If you can not produced evidence as to when you released it into public or even came up w
            • Makes perfect sense. I really do feel for you. If half the stuff you said happened to me, I'd be very upset. Good luck with your next venture. Maybe one of these will finally pay off for you. :)

  • I just had a thought... reading a post within this thread.

    Considering the sheer numbers of patent applications alone, of any particular field no less, is it even possible, even one of a million is truelly ground breaking? Or, does it not need to be ground breaking? If not, then what else might we call a unique thought? If it's "useful" as in a utility? But, what of the tangible significance of art such as music and paintings? Anything without prior art, certainly requires a unique thought, and I assert
    • by geekoid ( 135745 )
      even one of a million is truelly ground breaking? Or, does it not need to be ground breaking? If not, then what else might we call a unique thought?

      No, It doesn't, unique in this context doesn't mean totally original, on different then something else, even if it is based on a prior patent.(i.e. slight modification)

      "Anything without prior art, certainly requires a unique thought, "

      no, it require an original presentation of a thought, not unique.

      here :
      "having no like or equal; unparalleled; incomparable:"

      If i
  • Question: How will the USPO control paid web-lobbyist from posting spin-agenda that corrupts discovery?

    Over the last five years, I have noticed a significant increase in what I call lurking-lobbyist presenting very reasonable spin-agenda with pseudo-evidence. Some stuff would test the ability of investigative [AKA: muck-racking] news reporters.

    Paid "lurking-lobbyist" appears to be big business. I have no proof of "lurking-lobbyist" on /., digg, CNN, Yahoo!, Google..., but I have at times noticed that there
  • Prior art won't solve the software patent problem
    (by Richard Stallman)

    The article has been written a year ago:
    http://www.linux.com/articles/57167 [linux.com]

  • Everyone puts in their 2 cents, no one reads past the summary.
  • This is cool because I totally invented this peer review concept in an older /. discussion about patents. I would provide a link but apparently Slashdot has a unique method for "Limiting viewing of Comment History by non-Subscribers" and I can only see my most recent comments.

    I can't wait to threaten the USPTO for their unlicensed usage of my idea. Since it is a good idea, I will allow them to keep using it and only require a small percentage of the benefits they receive from the usage of my idea. And by t

  • Everything significant has already been given away by the USPTO as it is. This is a day late, and a dollar short.
  • Why the hell is anybody even tolerating the concept of software patents? "Peer review" means that people are accepting it, and that is not good. You all know what the real solution is. It's time to apply it...now.
  • Launched on 18 June 2007 was an Internet-based peer-review program whereby anyone (even you) can help to evaluate a number of software patent applications voluntarily submitted for public evaluation.
    On 19th June 2007 it was determined that the Internet-based peer-review program was patented itself.
  • Read this and come back: http://planetlinux.no-ip.org/ [no-ip.org]
  • I'd like to see an impartial peer review of all existing patents to weed out the crap.
  • I tried this new system...

    I chose a Patent and said "Patents are evil."

    They replied -1, Irrelevant.

  • This will probably speed up the approval of some patents, but why would someone setting up a stealth patent for a portfolio have any incentive to take part in this program?
  • What if painters could patent paintings.

    Painter #1 paints a picture of an apple, and patents painting apples. He clearly was the first to paint an apple, and needs the protection of the government from all the other painters who would steal his idea of painting apples.

    Painter #2 cannot paint apples. Poor painter..

    Or can he? If we compare solutions to what a software developer #2 would have to do today to get patent licence to make his software available, what can painter #2 do to paint apples, if painter

For God's sake, stop researching for a while and begin to think!

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