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PTO Seeks Public Input on Patent Applications

Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Sat May 20, 2006 08:21 PM
from the changing-the-definition-of-patent-troll dept.
KingAdrock writes to tell us Sciencemag is reporting that the US Patent and Trademark office (PTO) is floating the idea of an online pilot program to gather public input on patent applications. From the article: "Speaking last week at an open forum, officials said that tapping into the expertise of outside scientists, lawyers, and laypeople would improve the quality of patents -- and might also reduce a backlog that this month topped 1 million applications. "Instead of one examiner, what if you have thousands of examiners reading an application?" says Beth Simone Noveck of New York University Law School, who is an independent advocate of the idea."

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[+] USPTO to Use Peer to Patent Program 124 comments
An anonymous reader writes "DailyTech is reporting that the US Patent and Trademark Office is going to start using the Peer to Patent program. From the article:' The US Patent and Trademark Office has been getting praise for officially launching the Peer to Patent program -- the purpose of Peer to Patent is to find patents that have been issued for already made products or items that don't properly qualify for a patent. Because the USPTO usually does not have the manpower and time to thoroughly check every patent that comes into the office, many are unjustly rubber stamped.' The program will utilize a Wiki, among other tools, to get the job done."
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  • Notification of Prior Art (Score:5, Informative)

    by LiquidCoooled (634315) on Saturday May 20 2006, @08:24PM (#15373909)
    http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/05/09/12 28221 [slashdot.org]

    The new article is however a derivative, because the discussion seems further on now and a site has been setup.
  • Well.. one drawback. (Score:2, Interesting)

    Whats going to stop opponents of said technology from sabotauging patents?
    • Re:Well.. one drawback. (Score:4, Insightful)

      by LiquidCoooled (634315) on Saturday May 20 2006, @08:28PM (#15373919)
      Moderation and group communication.

      Just because one troll tries to game the system doesn't mean his voice is heard.
      There should be enough general lurkers around to spot the obvious gaming.
      [ Parent ]
      • Re:Well.. one drawback. (Score:3, Interesting)

        Is that really going to help? Large corporations could easily field thousands of paid moderator trolls working through proxies or what have you. It would be impossible to police the system unless pre-designated online moderators were used for patent revie
        • Re:Well.. one drawback. (Score:4, Interesting)

          by ehrichweiss (706417) on Sunday May 21 2006, @12:02AM (#15374503) Homepage
          What if the public is only allowed to declare if there is possibly prior art, not take part in the actual approval process itself? Are these corps gonna hire people SIMPLY to find prior art to invalidate patents? If so, we'll have a LOT fewer patents and that might not be such a bad thing. I mean that IS the goal, right. And yes, while it would enable the corps to attempt to lock-out private inventors, it is also a two way street.
          [ Parent ]
      • If you'd read Frederick Hayak's "Road to Serfdom", essentially when a government's control overwhelms a society, then gaming the system is the only thing that pays.

        He doesn't use those words, exactly. He puts it into terms of working vs. petitioning, then
    • All the input and discussion will just make everything much slower.
    • Re:Well.. one drawback. (Score:3, Interesting)

      Its only a drawback because you are assuming that competitors will be able to sabotage a patent.

      If you read the article it states that "The peer initiative focuses on so-called prior art, the scientific papers and previous patents that could render claims
    • Re:Well.. one drawback. (Score:4, Insightful)

      by NihilEst (976138) on Sunday May 21 2006, @12:30AM (#15374572)
      If a patent can be sabotaged, it should ... particularly a software patent.
      [ Parent ]
  • Thinking Ahead... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Duncan3 (10537) on Saturday May 20 2006, @08:26PM (#15373916) Homepage
    1. Improve process vastly
    2. Bullshit applications discarded (99%+)
    3. New applications drop 99%
    4. Paychecks at the PTO all disappear
    5. 10,000 lawyers out of work, but still alive to terrorize other parts of the economy
    6. ???
    7. PROFIT

    Yea.. that will happen...

    • Re:Thinking Ahead... (Score:2, Interesting)

      So how many patent applications have you filed? How many applications have you read? How can you be sure '99%' of them are 'bullshit'? I don't disagree that many are rediculous but your comment seems absurd.
    • The answer to 6 is obvious. Kill all the lawyers. The profit is to the rest of the population who no longer have to deal with an overly litigious society.
  • Fixed. (Score:2, Interesting)

    Fixed from the submission:

    Instead of one examiner, what if you have thousands of applications reading the examiners?


    Ok so I anthropomorphized application... But I am just saying, by creating a system more capable of finding the correct examiners for a part
  • Timely? (Score:3, Funny)

    by FyRE666 (263011) on Saturday May 20 2006, @08:34PM (#15373934) Homepage
    Something about barn doors and bolting horses springs to mind...
  • by kcbrown (7426) <slashdot@sysexperts.com> on Saturday May 20 2006, @08:36PM (#15373940)
    ...is how the system should have been set up to begin with.

    There are some who might argue that applications need to remain secret in order to prevent competitors from snatching the idea and using it in their products, because it's possible that the application will be denied, and then the patent submitter will lose his competitive advantage.

    To those people, I say: applying for a 20-year monopoly on a method should carry significant risks. The decision to apply for a patent should not be one that is made lightly. Those who want such a monopoly should have to be exposed to the risk that what could have remained a trade secret is instead exposed to the world without any compensation being made to the originator.

    If the patent is approved then suddenly the patent holder can arrange licensing with those who have already implemented products using the method. If a patent looks like it stands a really good chance of being approved, chances are others will stay away from it anyway. But woe to those who attempt to slide an obvious or previously-known method as a patent through such a system.

    That's how it should be.

    • Even then the risk isn't that high because if the patent application is valid then it will be granted. If it's not, then a similar patent will be rejected so the copycat won't be likley to benefit from it.
      • So you submit a patent for a piece of software (we'll call it a 'widget' for the sake of brevity) and your submission goes into a queue. So a large, well-funded company comes along, decides that your idea is a good one and immediately implements it.

        In due
      • by Ohreally_factor (593551) on Saturday May 20 2006, @11:58PM (#15374488) Journal
        Well, the benefit of not patenting is that you have a trade secret, and until 1) someone creates a similar invention independently, or 2) reverse engineers your invention, you have an effective monopoly on your invention.

        If you can control your secret, you have a competitive advantage.

        Note that not all trade secrets are inventions, nor would it be easy to keep some inventions a secret, especially if you intend to make it into a product and sell it to the public.
        [ Parent ]
    • One problem with measuring obviousness is that most things seem obvious after you've heard the solution.

      Having peers review the actual patent, then asking them to honestly estimate it's obviousness is a tall order. Besides the fact that they now have been
  • Not To Seem Mercenary, But... (Score:3, Interesting)

    by ewhac (5844) on Saturday May 20 2006, @08:37PM (#15373941) Homepage Journal
    Would I be compensated for this work?

    I mean, I could say there was prior art or that the submitted "invention" completely lacks novelty, but such assertions would be more likely to be heeded if I also provided concrete references, and that takes non-trivial work (no, pointing at a Wikipedia article doesn't count).

    So, if I do this, apart from the feel-good karma of smacking down patent trolls, what's in it for me? Maybe a tax credit? Waiver of fees for my own patent/SIR application?

    Schwab

    • That wouldn't be such a bad idea. Many Wikipedia articles actually have a lot of references, which takes a non-trivial amount of work, but it's not so bad when you have a non-trivial amount of people working on the project.
    • There's a massive incentive for your compeditors to review your applications. They don't want you to get that patent that you could use to prevent them from making money. If I was IBM I'd have a team of people reviewing all of Microsoft's patents, it giv
    • Whats in it for you is treble damages if you should ever later happen to implement anything even remotely related to one of the patents you've commented upon earlier -- they're gonna claim it must be willfull infringement since you had read the patent-appl
  • The sooner the competition sees a company's patent application, the sooner they can create further innovations that build-on or work-around the proposed patent. That's one of the cool things about a patent - it forces the applicant to disclose the inventi
    • A "submarine patent" remains unpublished after it is granted. By running silent, running deep, the submarine patent's owners let other people develop and implement inadvertantly infringing products. Then *BLAMMO* the Patent surfaces and holds the inadvert

      • Incorrect. A granted patent is by definition published. A submarine patent is one in which the application is filed in secret and then not granted because of continuations of the original application. This was possible under previous US patent law, but und
        • In-In-correct.

          In the U.S. system, patent applications need not be publicized for a year-and-a-half after filing ... and that time can be extended with the applicant makes certain declarations. That's a vast improvement over our old system (where submarine

          • A secret patent can be extended for six months at a time, but a patent can and will be overturned in court through what is known as prosecutorial laches. Further, the patent holder must satisfactorily show reason for the both the secrecy of the original ap
    • This public good you describe is the raisin deeter (or raison d'être for you purists) for patents. It helps society as a whole avoid reinventing the wheel.
  • in the past, also on previous slashdot posts when patents came up.

    I would also think a bounty for disproving the application (showing prior art, that the application is too vague or obvious or whatnot), coming directly from a percentage of the applicant fe
    • I agree that altruism works faster with a material incentive booster ...

      ... but when it comes to finding prior art, the incentive is simple:

      1. Find hot patent application

      2. Find prior art sure to sink patent

      3. Setup production of competing product u

  • Double or triple the cost of the application and then offer up half of the money to anyone who can conclusively prove that a patent is invalid. Sort of a reverse user fee, someone proves that the government "should not do its job."
  • This is a great step in the right direction, but it won't change the underlying law and it can still be gamed. The biggest problem is not a lack of reviewers, it's what can be granted a patent. If business method patents are valid, more reviewers will o
  • I've recently thought of an idea for how to deal with patents. Something similar to Slashdot should be used. Imagine if there was a website running slashdot software would allow everyone to comment on the validity of patents before making a determination t
    • I've recently thought of an idea for how to deal with patents. Something similar to Slashdot should be used.

      You mean something like PatentDot ??? [slashdot.org] which I suggested on Feb. 12, 2006:

      How about a Slashdot for Patents???? Given the knowledge and inte

  • It's a very good idea in theory, but might not work so well in the real world. There would have to be a way to verify that "outside scientists" really are scientists. Also, how would training (presuming at least some training is needed...) be provided for
  • by layer3switch (783864) on Saturday May 20 2006, @10:44PM (#15374235)
    "The patent office is weighing an online pilot project to solicit public input on patent applications. [...] The idea is for volunteers to be alerted about new patent applications--applications become public after 18 months--and invited to submit prior art."

    If the idea is already patented... Oh the irony!!!
  • Problem: People can't read patents (Score:3, Interesting)

    by edashofy (265252) on Saturday May 20 2006, @11:14PM (#15374328)
    Here's the main problem with this idea: the vast, vast majority of people, even smart Slashdot readers, have no idea how to read a patent. Sure, they read the abstract and that might bring to mind some other invention that's sort-of-like the one described in the patent, and that is helpful to a small extent. However, did you know that the abstract has little to no bearing on what the patent actually covers?

    Patent claim language (the actual property rights granted by the patent) is byzantine and ugly. Besides that, there are all kinds of nuances. Do you know the difference between an apparatus and a method patent? The terms used in the claims may (nay, probably) don't mean what you think they mean. The applicant doesn't even know what they mean, since the legal claim construction process only occurs when the patent is challenged. Then, if the applicant (as many do) uses USC 30 S112P6 "means-plus-function" language, you're in a whole other world of indirection and confusion.

    Patents need reform, but having a million uneducated people looking at the applications is only part of the solution. Reforms to patent law itself, such as:

      - Making applicants provide a binding glossary of terms
      - Making applicants identify corresponding structure for means-plus-function elements
      - Reforming the byzantine nature of claim language

    would go miles and miles to easing the process and squeezing out inefficiency
  • I don't think most people understand how evil patnets really are. While we have all herd the theory of how patents supossedly help small inventors, and how pharma R&D would supposedly never happen without patents, what we never hear are things like ho
    • How is this going to stop patent trolls? Granted, they'll have more trouble finding bogus patents, but that's not all they do. Patent trolls also buy up valid patents that haven't been marketed yet and either sue whoever tries to implement the idea (not