Patent Databases Complicate Life For Inventors 122
karvind writes "New Scientists is running a story about how the move to electronic record-keeping is making it harder to check if a device has already been invented. From the article: '.. even though most online patent archives are incomplete, parts of the paper-based collections that preceded them are being destroyed.' We ran a story earlier on how to fix U.S. patents. Maybe I can patent the wheel again."
Patents... (Score:1)
www.wikilessons.org - the online how-to (just starting, help us out)
Re:Patents... (Score:5, Funny)
And then they'll patent it...
Re:Patents... (Score:1)
Re:Patents... (Score:1)
Re:Patents... (Score:1)
We can talk about something else, as long as it's about google or some MS bashing. So don't complain about the lack of variety
Re:Microfilm . . .and (Score:3, Insightful)
Without such proof, what is to prevent a person or corporation from trying to patent something that has been patented long in the past?
Raises a simple question (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Raises a simple question (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Raises a simple question (Score:2)
Are we talking about the same patent office that makes money on every patent granted? Now suddenly that money is not enough to actually keep a f*cking record of that!?
Look, we don't actually ask much of them. All they need to do now is sit there, rubberstamp incoming applications, and then keep track of them. Apparently even that is too much now.
I guess this means part of the prior art is also lost, and we can go back to recycling old patents
Re:Raises a simple question (Score:1)
Re:Raises a simple question (Score:3, Insightful)
Yeah, because the Board of Directors (read Congress) decided that the patent office is a cost center, and that the money it generates could be much better put to use in something else. Kinda like Google deciding that it should invest most of its money in something rather than Se
Re:Raises a simple question (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Raises a simple question (Score:1)
Re:Raises a simple question (Score:1)
Re:Raises a simple question (Score:2)
Re:Raises a simple question (Score:2)
Think the three-minute hate versus Al Gore's speeches about GWB.
I'm not going to excuse the republican's various problems, but at least the lunatics aren't running the asylum. (See Howard "The Scream" Dean
Re:Raises a simple question (Score:2)
Re:Raises a simple question (Score:2)
It probally won't happen though, because the people who benifit most from the government system we have now are the people who are in charge of it.
Re:Raises a simple question (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Raises a simple question (Score:2)
The right for cheap gas seems to be exclusive for the US (In my country we have always paid 1 US dollar a liter, and it's rising now that the US dollar is cheaper).
From the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (http://www.un.org/Overview/rights.html [un.org]):
Re:Raises a simple question (Score:2)
[...]
(2) Motherhood and childhood are entitled to special care and assistance. All children, whether born in or out of wedlock, shall enjoy the same social protection.
Yes.. because as men we are little more than sperm donors to the entire reproductive process.
Sorry, this makes my blood boil so much I can't think of anything constructive to say.
Re:Raises a simple question (Score:1)
So, since someone is critical of the current Republican government they are suddenly a Democrat? FYI there are other options available.
The things Orwell pointed out in 1984 are extrapolations of what every government and politician do on a regular basis. The name of the government/party is unimportant.
Howard Dean's scream: Democrats vs. Democrats (Score:1)
Yeah, the scream. He was screaming because he was talking to a cheering crowd in a huge room, not to the TV cameras. Dean's problem wasn't that he was mad. It was that he didn't have "camera training". He didn't realize that his shouting would sould stupid on TV since the cameras didn't catch the enormous crown before him or the sound it was making. He learned hi
Re:Raises a simple question (Score:2)
More recent archives aren't a problem if big clients' older patents are generic enough.
Re:Raises a simple question (Score:1)
Re:Raises a simple question (Score:1)
Maybe its something similar to the last US elections, switching over to a computerised system just for the sake of it being computerised? Or rather, "hey, wouldn't it be far more efficient if we do it all on computers? Yeah, lets do that!" Then the people who made the decision move on and leave the small people to make
Re:Raises a simple question (Score:1)
Law Suit (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Law Suit (Score:1)
Re:Law Suit (Score:2)
Brilliant idea. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Brilliant idea. (Score:5, Insightful)
That is what I dislike, the idea of burning the original documents. Why not let some university house the original documents. There is a ton of cheap labor (students). I know my university was a federal depository, we had a whole floor on the library that was filled with federal court cases on paper, along with other legislation.
Re:Brilliant idea. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Brilliant idea. (Score:2)
For nostalgic purposes. :D
I still have the five dollar bill I won from my grade 11 Electrical Engineering teacher because I managed to finish his midterm test in under 10 minutes and he didn't believe that I was going to get perfect on it.
Oh, good times. Although, to be fair, I did get 21/20 on it. Poor guy had
Re:Brilliant idea. (Score:2)
Re:Brilliant idea. (Score:1)
What I mean is it serves no real purpose, except for historical reference.
Re:Brilliant idea. (Score:2)
Where on earth did you go to high school? Electrical Engineering in grade 11? Lots of high schools have electronics, but I've never heard of a high school electrical engineering course.
Re:Brilliant idea. (Score:1)
Wasn't very detailed, basically just allowed us to experiment.
I'm taking a second year computer science university course now and we're basically doing the same thing, but with a bit more theory behind it (just a bit). And more types of circuits.
I went to a public highschool in Ontario, Port Credit.
- shazow
Re:Brilliant idea. (Score:1)
Re:Brilliant idea. (Score:1)
Maybe they should burn the Declaration of Independence while they're at it, after all, I saw a copy online somewhere.
LMAO. Only on Slashdot would this be modded "insightfull". (Not down-grading the humour of this post, of course.)
Re:Brilliant idea. (Score:1)
I don't often catch sarcasm in nonauditory mediums, but I did that time.
Re:Brilliant idea. (Score:2)
idea, especially if done the Japanese way
(by also patenting all conceivable potential
uses for the patent). It is not as if the
USPTO actually bothers with "prior art"
anymore -- just have the cash on hand for
patenting the wheel and all its possible
applications.
All of this business about destroying paper-
based patents prior to their being digitized
and put into their database(s) reminds me
of the months of missing MSFT emails regarding
a lawsuit they were involved in
I am worried (Score:4, Insightful)
It is like a library. If one day we decide to move all our books to electronic formats, who is to say a tyrant one day can't remove or change items, slowly, so that nobody notices. Maybe I am 1984-ish paranoid, but I want it on paper.
Re:I am worried (Score:1)
If one day we decide to move all our books to electronic formats, who is to say a tyrant one day can't remove or change items, slowly, so that nobody notices. Maybe I am 1984-ish paranoid, but I want it on paper.
And paper cannot be changed??
Re:I am worried (Score:5, Insightful)
It would be much harder to change a paper record. First, you would have to get inside the building it is housed in. Second, with some of the older documents, you would have to match the type face. And you would have to match the ink. And you would have to make it look like it aged right. And there are finger prints on the original documents. There are more ways to verify that a paper document is an original than a computer record.
Re:I am worried (Score:2)
There's lots of clever crypto guys who should be able to come up with something for digital data that is as tough to defeat.
Re:I am worried (Score:2, Interesting)
imagine you sign some documents and then you make sure you loose the private key for good, the documents can still be checked using the public key, but nobody will be able to duplicate the signature on another document. Keys can be changed each few months.
I don't trust paper more than algorithms. Although you never know when they manage to break rsa. But that would be a global disaster and maybe patents will be the least concern.
Also note that you can store disk
Re:I am worried (Score:2)
So, now all I need to update a 15year old file is to bribe one of the record keepers and I can update as much as I want and nobody can find out. The advantage to paper is it's a easer to find out if it's been messed and it's both difficult and expensive to make a good fake. I have no problem with adding layers to security but saying using paper is worthless / not needed is a little silly.
Re:I am worried (Score:1)
Re:I am worried (Score:2)
Ok yea I understand the idea, but my point was the people administering the system are the most likely people to try to break into your system. One of the most basic tenents of security is the idea that once a person leaves they should be unable to break back in, but with your system anyone about to be fired could just keep a copy of any key or key's and there would be no way to stop them. (You could make it hard but
Re:I am worried (Score:1)
Re:I am worried (Score:2)
Cryptographic signatures make verification easy (Score:2)
The easy solution to the problem, of course, is a secure crypto signature. If you want to verify, compare signatures with the authors copy, or maintain many registries outside of central control.
Re:Cryptographic signatures make verification easy (Score:2)
Re:I am worried (Score:3)
Yes, but if it the government we are talking about, then it is very likely that the databases will be redundant and spread across several states and subcontractors. And forget millions of dollars, it will be billions of dollars before their done. Oh and by the time it is all finished it will be obsolete and we'll still use it for 30 years. Oh an
Re:I am worried (Score:1)
Paper can be destroyed too, arguably more easily than an electronic file. There was a big fire at the patent office sometime in the 1800s, and many thousand patents were lost. I am not sure paper offers more security. I would prefer a redundant system, as you seem to, but storage is apparently a big part of the problem. It is not cheap to archive literally millions of documents. But digital storage is rather cheap, by comparison
May be (Score:5, Funny)
May be you can al so pa tent inno vative spell ing meth od, who knows?
Re:May be (Score:1)
(*) Misspellings like "allein stehend" and "informatie balie", which you can probably see often enough in Europe, are as wrong as when you write "black bird" when you mean a blackbird.
Re:May be (Score:1)
He was trying to point out how bad the patent sytem is...
Seems like he suceeded!
Some not-so-big drops (Score:1)
Re:Some not-so-big drops (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Some not-so-big drops (Score:2)
Re:Some not-so-big drops (Score:2)
Its a Charlie Foxtrot [urbanup.com]
Online patent databases (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Online patent databases (Score:2)
Then keep the search tool. No reason to move the paper records to databases. I would think it a great idea to have a database that points to paper records. But destroying paper records and using a database to replace them is dangerous.
Re:Online patent databases (Score:2)
Also paper requires more effort to locate any specific record.
Re:Online patent databases (Score:2)
>> could only have been found by a Google search).
> Wow. You are officially Part of the Problem.
Not necessarily. If it wasn't something blatantly obvious, it's quite possible it could have been missed.
OTOH, it could be argued that anyone knowledgeable enough to figure out that it could only have been spotted via Google, would have been smart enough to Google it for themselves before applying, and was thus chancing the
Question: How do they date what they find (Score:1)
How do they know the date of what they find?
How do they know some part of the page hasn't be supplemented later?
If that date doesn't precede yours, the publication shouldn't be detrimental.
Bert
So what happens (Score:5, Insightful)
if a massive sun ejection of magnetic field bathed the earth with a high magnetic dose, we would be ok but would we lose all of mankinds knowledge ?
digital data storage so far has proved itself to be unreliable (cd rot,hard drives failing after 1-3yr etc etc)
yet we want to depend even more on it ?
you have to laugh at the stupidity and short sightedness of humans at times, can you imagine if Da Vinci or Einstein or even the Wright brothers had encrypted their stuff with 4096bit 1 time pad or quantum encryption
or do we always have to put our hands in the fire to find out its hot ?
Re:So what happens (Score:1)
We should just burn them all and (Score:4, Interesting)
Those patent which have some idea can prove with a device, or physical object that they do, those who cannot provide such thing shouldn't be there in the first place.
I wish it would be this easy...
Re:We should just burn them all and (Score:1)
Re:We should just burn them all and (Score:2)
Replying to your post though, it works like this atm. Patenting something is expensive for the common human being.
Re:We should just burn them all and (Score:2)
Ha ha. Like that isn't happening now, even with the records in place.
eBay old Patent Paperwork... (Score:2, Interesting)
If the issue is money, why aren't we eBaying old patent paperwork instead of pulping it?
If the International Star Registry can get $49.99 for "Naming A Star" ... how very likely is it that the Patent Office could get as much that for GENUINE old patent paper? Surely some of the more interesting patents would get big bucks and/or donated to museums.
While this is not as good as professional preservation of historical documents, since preservation is not in the cards, at least eBaying would preserve most of
Computerized database storage means... (Score:5, Funny)
Hard disks. Lots of hard disks.
Want to solve the patent problem right away? Everyone converge on the Patent and Trademark office. Bring magnets.
Big magnets.
Re:Computerized database storage means... (Score:2)
New Scientists? (Score:4, Funny)
Surely no-one here on Slashes' Dot would make such a mistake.
Re:New Scientists? (Score:1)
Re:New Scientists? (Score:2)
(If you don't know already, google for these people and you'll understand.)
Re:As if. . . (Score:1)
I disagree. Isn't one of the requirements of a patent to disclose the invention to the public? I think they even have to disclose "best mode", or the best way to practice the invention. Patents are hard to read, but they can't hide the ball as you suggest. If the Examiner can't figure out what the invention is, he
Uh oh... (Score:2, Funny)
Heh! (Score:4, Insightful)
Think they'll actually read it/research it back?
Remember guys.. 1-click shopping... i patented 'a method for the self-induction of pleasure' and am about to make bank..
Delphion (Score:3, Insightful)
It is good.
There is a function where you can collect lists of patents, and do Set Unions, Intersections, Subtractions and the like.
My latest patent application is in the fields of crowd control, crowd safety. That was 3000 items that matched those terms. I could go through and sort out the misses.
You could have a little thumbnail, as this was invaluable, as you can tell from the diagram often that it is a dissimilar device, or that the patent referrs to some way of joining/constructing such a thing.
Web based Delphion is not perfect though. Nor any large web list checking application without powerful list management functions.
I would dearly have liked a capability to colour the table cells that you had visited. Viewing 25 by 25 of the resultset was too confusing. But if you chose to display 500 at a time, then you tend to also loose track.
But now salvation is at hand. Using Firefox, Greasemonkey [mozdev.org] and some hand written tailored javascript allows me to do exactly this.
I meant to add as well, if the lifetime of a patent is 25 years tops, surely they only really have to be kept for that long? Then prior art and commercialised products could cover the basis for it having been in the Public Domain previously.
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
paper-based makes inventors happy? (Score:2)
The problem with patents (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:The problem with patents (Score:2)
hey... (Score:1)
Re:Firspt Post (Score:3, Funny)