A Day in the Life of a Patent Examiner 225
ahdkd writes "Forbes has an older article which describes the world of patent examining: Search 500,000 Documents, Review 160,000 Pages In 20 Hours, And Then Do It All Over Again. Might help people understand the USPTO and patents in general a little better."
yeah right... (Score:4, Insightful)
Filing a patent... (Score:4, Informative)
Given the increase in complexity for these filings, doing your own research appears to be even more important that ever. I've gone through the process with mixed success. Even when proper research is done by the person filing and the patent office, you can still miss something.
Re:Filing a patent... (Score:3, Informative)
Perhaps this depends on your definition of "proper research". You have to disclose the truth, and the best way to do whatever you're inventing. But you aren't legally obliged to find out if it's the best way, AFAIK.
Several years ago when I started filing patents, I thought a full prior art search was an abligation of the filer. But my impression in more recent years that the filer is obliged to disclose relevant prior art but not to find all possible pr
Re:Filing a patent... (Score:2)
Re:Filing a patent... (Score:2)
I know you were joking, but you actually might be on to something here.
One way to better weed out bogus patents or patents for which prior art exists is to involve the public more in the process. Perhaps, making all of the applications available on-line with a Slashdot type message board for a period of weeks or months before patent examiners get involved might allow the public to do some of the resea
Evidence that the system is a failure (Score:5, Insightful)
Patents offer a authoritarian power to destroy competition [lewrockwell.com], increase prices, and skew the relationship between research and creation by scaring off new ideas developed on old ones.
Re:Evidence that the system is a failure (Score:3, Insightful)
I guess we know where our priorities are.
But patents aren't only for corporations... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:But patents aren't only for corporations... (Score:4, Insightful)
An individual with an idea can't go very far unless they have entrepreneurship as well. If they don't have the drive to promote an idea, what good is the idea? A patent may offer them something to sell to a bigger corporation, much more can be done just by getting together with people who want to promote the idea for their own mutual gain.
If I invented a new idea, and I couldn't distribute it, I would still have the ability to find someone else who can. Entering into a binding contract, we could create a partnership (or corporation). Until that contract is issued, I wouldn't have to explain the idea or the secrets of the idea. A non-disclosure agreement and a binding contract are really all you need to protect the idea (as is obvious from one of the links I posted in my original message).
Re:But patents aren't only for corporations... (Score:2)
This is a good point. There's really no reason we should reward people for good ideas. It's not like people would stop having them if they weren't rewarded. Just because mr Jones invented an ingenius new bird-feeding device, doesn't mean he should be entitled to profit from his invention if somebody else decides to manufacture it. At least, it's har
Re:But patents aren't only for corporations... (Score:2)
I hadn't thought of that. But now that I do think about it, I can see many ways that the binding contract would work.
When I want to rent a new commercial property, I enter into a binding contract with the landlord, showing my intent. I allow many "exit clauses" from this contract, but it is binding for all other circumstances. There is no federal law protecting the landlord or myself, other than t
Re:But patents aren't only for corporations... (Score:2)
Re:But patents aren't only for corporations... (Score:2)
I'd love to continue this "debate/sharing" session -- here on slashdot, in private e-mail, or on a forum like anti-state.com to try to get further through this topic. It isn't one I've spent much time researching, but it is definitely an important one.
If you're interested in continuing it, drop me an e-m
Alternative is PERPETUAL trade secrets (Score:3, Informative)
At least, it's hard to see what the society at large can gain from [a monopoly].
The goal of the U.S. patent system, stated in the Constitution, is "to promote the progress of science and useful arts." The rents earned from selling a patented product provides an alternative to NDAs, which may be enough of an incentive not to make the NDAs perpetual. In addition, public safety considerations demand the disclosure of the contents of some products such as drugs, and other than through monopoly rents, how ca
Re:Alternative is PERPETUAL trade secrets (Score:2)
Will your doctor prescribe you unsafe medication? Not if he might get sued (although tort law has destroyed a lot of this). Will your insurance company pay for medication that is unsafe? Not if they might get sued (again, tort law used to cover this). Will Walgreens or CVS sell you bad drugs? Not if they might get sued. Will ABC run a drug ad during Friends if its a bad drug?
Now, explain to me why government needs
Re:But patents aren't only for corporations... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:But patents aren't only for corporations... (Score:2)
Why would you go to a corporation you don't have familiarity with? Why wouldn't you go out and reseach past inventors' experiences with a corporation before going and making contact with them about your idea?
Corporations are not bad. People who go into dealings
Re:But patents aren't only for corporations... (Score:5, Insightful)
This is precisely what happened before patents, and exactly why the entire patent system was invented in the first place. People would get good ideas, and try to sell them. But they can't disclose the idea, because then they don't get rewarded. They also can't find a buyer, because they can't explain the idea well enough to prospective buyers without giving the idea away. Thus, the good idea dies with the person who came up with it.
Lots and lots of inventions were lost in exactly this way. Many people would rather die with their invention a secret than have somebody else make a fortune out of it. The key component to a patent is that it is required to publish a full specification of the invention, enough so that a knowledgeable person could build it, in return for the patent. This way, even if the inventor has a heart attack or is hit by a bus or every city where his multinational conglomerate has offices is hit by gigantic rocks from outer space, the invention is not lost.
The simple fact of the matter is that, like copyrights, patents are fundamentally good ideas; it's the implementations that are broken. Both were originally conceived not as a way to let people make money, but as an aid to society, to promote invention and creativity. The problem now is that it's gone too far towards giving people money. Scale back the terms of copyrights and patents, examine them more thoroughly, make people pay (more) for them, etc., and you can fix the system. It's not necessary to destroy it.
Re:But patents aren't only for corporations... (Score:2)
If you have no way of p
and stop patent inflation today. (Score:3, Interesting)
Hopefully, but that is somewhere far off in the future. Right now we have to stop expansion of the patent system [compsoc.com], like the way the EU is considering expanding it to cover all ideas implementable through software. How would patent examiners possibly get better by increasing their workload?
Plus it will be a lot harder to revise the patent system if it is embedded in every industry.
Re:Evidence that the system is a failure (Score:5, Interesting)
Products which are high in intellectual content or up-front cost/risk and low in reproduction cost often need protection or they will not be developed.
There is no doubt in my mind that the patent system, applied to software, is extremely wrong and has the potential to destroy the industry or put it into the hands of gigantic corporations who can use cross-licensing to avoid patent problems.
But not every industry is software.
As to an economist "proving" something... well, give me a break. An economist can throw light on things, and come up with good ideas, but the idea of them proving things is, in most cases, absurd.
Re:Evidence that the system is a failure (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Evidence that the system is a failure (Score:3, Interesting)
I spend $10 bn to develop a new drug and plan to sell 100 mln packages for $200 each. If you want to join the fun and sell your own improved version, pay me about $50-100 for each package you sell. Let's also limit the total amount of royalty payment and time period.
Re:Evidence that the system is a failure (Score:2)
James
Re:Evidence that the system is a failure (Score:2)
Re:Evidence that the system is a failure (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Evidence that the system is a failure (Score:3, Interesting)
As for the pharmaceutical industry, it should be known at part of the high up-front cost is FDA regulation. I believe the FDA is unconstitutional, and could be better created as a free market Underwriter's Laboratory type corporation. Target won't sell a lamp unless its UL tested. Why would drugs be any different?
If a company creates a drug, tests
Re:Evidence that the system is a failure (Score:2)
You're crazy if you think drugs are like lamps.People go into hock buying the latest snake-oil-cure-all for any one of a number of ailments. Do you really want drug companies to even be able to market drugs whose safety and efficacy has not been ascertained ?
Re:Evidence that the system is a failure (Score:2)
As much as I hate to agree with this point, I sort of agree with it. People have become far too complacent and dependent on others to do their thinking for them. It may make some people feel better to say "let all the stupid people die", but this
Re:Evidence that the system is a failure (Score:2)
However, even without the FDA, you want extensive clinical testing. A UL or an FDA with merely advisory powers (I like the idea of having both) would still demand that testing before giving a blessing to the product. Thus there is still a massive upfront cost and
Re:FDA unconstitutional? Please explain. (Score:2)
The "interstate commerce" clause had nothing to do with Congress or the federal government controlling how commerce is to be regulated or mandated or taxed. It strictly allowed Congress powers over any state or individual to make sure that commerce between the states went un-hindered. The founding fathers had realized that in order to promote competition within a state, there had to be th
Re:Evidence that the system is a failure (Score:2)
And do you think they would continue this policy if the patent system was abandoned?
Re:Evidence that the system is a failure (Score:3, Interesting)
The policy is a simple business decision involving weighing the costs against the profits, the latter being dramatically reduced by competition which does not have the same upfront costs.
In other words, someone has to do the testing. Without the testing, the drug cannot (or should not) be sold. Whoever
Re:Evidence that the system is a failure (Score:2)
Re:Evidence that the system is a failure (Score:2)
Removing patent protection and forcing the research opens means that your are removing all intellectual property protection.
How are you going to pay for the testing? NSF, etc do not do the development and mass clinical testing needed to determine safety, efficacy and cilnical characteristics of medications. They do more basic research, and the private firms (who also do basic research, BTW) then assume all of the risk.
I have seen no proposals that solve this problem ot
Re:Evidence that the system is a failure (Score:2)
Re:Evidence that the system is a failure (Score:2)
But the problem that you miss, and that is crucial, is that it takes a huge expense to develop the drugs for market, AFTER the NIH funded research. This is because of the costs of research borne by the companies (on top of publicly fu
That old chestnut again (Score:3, Insightful)
I might have more sympathy for this view were it not for the fact that pharmcos spend twice as much on advertising as they do on R&D
Re:That old chestnut again (Score:2)
Re:That old chestnut again (Score:4, Informative)
Nicely dodging my point that it's specious to argue that pharmcos need special protection because of the R&D costs, when in fact they are not risking huge amounts of money upfront. In fact they are trifling amounts, compared to other spending. See, for example, the figures in the report produced by Families USA [familiesusa.org] which shows that Merck spent 6% of revenues on R&D, but spent 15% on marketing. The figures for Pfizer are 15% and 39%. The fact is that the pharmcos are one of the most powerful lobby groups in Washington and get lots of, ahem, "special consideration" that I don't think they deserve.
Are you for real?!? I guess, given your comments, you or your dad must work for a pharmco, but even so, pretending that dtca benefits consumers is simply risible.
Re:Evidence that the system is a failure (Score:2, Interesting)
I remember a conference in which a guy from a lab told us that they did not look for certain efficient molecules because they were partly based on mecanisms patented by other labs. Thus, there are good molecules out there that could cure serious disease, but because they involve several mecanisms patented by differ
Re:Evidence that the system is a failure (Score:2)
In those cases, perhaps there should be other governmental mechanisms to encourage the investment (like there is with orphan drugs), but too often the government screws these things up and people (like pharmcos) game them.
Re:Evidence that the system is a failure (Score:3, Informative)
They are an industry. It costs real money to do research. Huge amounts of it. I suppose you think they should just spend on good things until they are bankrupt, at which point there would be no more drugs for anyone.
Re:Evidence that the system is a failure (Score:5, Interesting)
E.g. pharmaceutical companies need to do a lot of research before creating new useful medicine. Research costs money and they can't make it back within just a couple of months of being first-to-market. They get a few years to control the market, make a profit, and move on. Another example, if you invent a better shovel, it'll be copied within a month easy, and there is no way you can make a profit from being first-to-market because people don't buy shovels every month. You need a patent of a few years to let you make some decent profit.
Patents work well for some industries but not others. There is also the way patents are used. Dolby Labs made a great use of their invention in noise reduction system. Nobody boycotts Dolby Labs, in fact everybody welcomes them, even though their patent and licensing increased the price of audio-visual equipment.
Dolby invented something, made it available to the public while making an honest profit and everybody's happy. Contrast that to the company who pops up with some vague patent and issues C&Ds or ridiculous invoices to the world, years after the public adoption of the patented system. We need to address and fix the latter stunts, not drop the entire patent system.
The Danger of Big Ideas (Score:2)
Now, there's a danger with Big Ideas -- they make it hard to deal with the practical reality. You can argue all you want that the patent system, and other IP concepts, have outlived their usefulness. You might even convince a lot of people that you're right. (I, for one, am half-convinced already, and I haven't even looked at your links.) But that's not very useful. Big Ideas do nothi
Do It Right (Score:5, Insightful)
If the government can't create a system that approves patents corrently then there should be no approval process at all, and thus, no patents at all. It would be better to let the market protect innovators, however weak the protection, than to let a flawed patent office allow innovators to be harmed by those that would exploit the flaws.
Re: (Score:2)
Difficulty is no excuse for incompetence (Score:2)
Very true. Another way of saying the same thing is that difficulty is no excuse for incompetence. If something is hard then it can take a long time to do it properly, and if that results in collosal patent processing times then either get more staff or accept the long waiting lists for approval, which might even be a good thing.
In any event, the current state of patents is nothing short of a catastrophe in the world of ideas, and the bl
Re:Difficulty is no excuse for incompetence (Score:2)
For perfectionists, sometimes doing it right means not doing it at all. :)
"Perfection is the enemy of progress", and "A good plan today is better than a perfect plan tomorrow."
--
Re:Do It Right (Score:2)
And exactly why isn't that desireable?
Sure, I'd like the inventor to profit some, but if I have to choose between (1) progress and free exchange and use of ideas, or (2) getting the inventor richer, I'd choose (1), thank you!
Chances are, if the inventor wasn't paid
Re:Do It Right (Score:2)
*Really* poor analogy. Most things that are patented are material objects. How would the internet distribute, say, those 3D printers? Maybe if you had a 3D printer...
Sure, you could distribute plans for the 3D printer, but people still need to go out and by materials and assemble it. Even if you had a 3D printer and were talking about other objects, they are only useful for making a relatively small range of
Re:Do It Right (Score:2)
Can't wait for it myself.
First generation 3D printer + "liquid plastic cartridges" == never having to waste money or time buying stupid little knick nacks, figurines, replacement parts, etc. Of course, this printer will kill a few traditional businesses that made a living selling "che
If they are overworked (Score:4, Insightful)
I mean, Ok. They get fired for saying that they can't do their jobs. They would be able to go to almost ANY news outlet and get their story printed . Patent Office fires worker for complaining about unfair practices . That would not look good for the USPTO.
I also find the article "lacking" in explaining HOW they search let alone WHERE they search.
If the internet isn't used , Why don't they mention it - We don't bother to check google if the idea exists already. We only look if it is already patented, not if it already exists in the public domain.
Re:If they are overworked (Score:2)
IANAL (so what else is new...) but,
They cannot use the internet. Simply put, the definition of a "published idea" is quite murky. If I do a search on Google, then the search text is transmitted across the internet. Google then returns the results in the form of a Web page, which includes the search text. I am now looking at my idea in a Web page.
You can also get a service which displays ongoing search requests (I can't find it right now). So there is your search request display
Re:If they are overworked (Score:2)
Its called Referer and is a variable transfered from the http client to the server. They could of course change, say Mozilla, to not upload the uri to the refering site when conducting these searches.
Re:If they are overworked (Score:2)
Re:If they are overworked (Score:4, Insightful)
> understand that it is difficult but if they don't bitch all the way up the line, then who will ?
You have no idea how government entities function, do you?
10% of the people (maybe even less) working at a site will actually be good workers who give a fig about their job and how well things are run. The issue is that this segment is never in a position to institute change. These people don't stick around long, they become cynical quite fast and generally quit and return to jobs in the private sector (which often have just as fucked up management systems, but in completely different ways).
Another 10% of the people are the ones who can make decisions, but have absolutely no background to make effective decisions (they got where they are mostly via seniority). They instead opt to spend their days in endless meetings hoping someone else makes a decision so they can go back to "fine tuning" the organization chart.
The remaining 80% is dead wood. Completely lazy, useless fatasses who know it's damn near impossible to fire a government employee and only show up to ensure they keep getting a paycheck. Their sole desire is to avoid rocking the boat, in effort to avoid losing their gravy train. Most of them have held government jobs for so long no one even notices how bloody useless they are, except for the original 10% who are powerless to do anything about it.
Point being, a majority of the people working for the USPTO plain out doesn't give a shit. They will NEVER "strike" or "take it to the press", soley because it means they would actually have to scrape their butts out of their chair and rub some of their brain cells together.
Re:If they are overworked (Score:2)
wow you totally dont have a clue (Score:2, Informative)
That worked well for the air traffic controllers.. (Score:2)
PATCO had a union in place and had some legitimate grievances that included potential public safety hazards. When their contract talks with the FAA broke down, they tried to strike (illegally, it must be added). The Government swooped down on them and basically fired them all.
The parallel to USPTO is clearer in accounts like this one [virginia.edu], which makes the po
Shades of 'Yes Minister' (Score:5, Insightful)
It strikes me that when a patent is 160,000 pages long, someone is trying the same tactic. Perhaps there ought to be a limit on the size of patent applications. After all, if it is sufficiently revolutionary to be awarded protection from its possible competition, it ought to be easily stated and understood. Let anything else just compete.
I suspect some would lose out, but I also think the patent system overall would win. The original patent applications were on a single sheet of paper....
Simon.
Re:Shades of 'Yes Minister' (Score:2)
Ugh.
troc
Re:Shades of 'Yes Minister' (Score:2)
The largest constructs used in genetic engineering are usually no more than a few megabases in length; large bits of DNA tend to be rather awkward to manipulate. At, say, two thousand bases (each one of A, C, G, or T) per page, one megabase spans five hundred pages.
I suppose if one were to try to patent the genome of an entire organism, including all o
Prior Art (Score:4, Funny)
The essence of how patents are used (Score:3, Insightful)
This is exactly what is wrong with the (current) patent system. It is supposed to promote innovation but instead it is used as a tool to put sticks in the wheels of the competitors.
Re:The essence of how patents are used (Score:3, Interesting)
It's not a bug - it's a feature. Businesses want monopolies, so we set up this type of deal called a "patent" that lets them have one in return for financing and disclosing an invention.
The problem is that we're in many cases showing really poor tradesmanship: We give away monopolies for inventions that we would have had for free anyway. (Or we give excessively broad monopolies for barely non-trivial i
Rich and powerful interests want bad patents. (Score:5, Interesting)
Rich and powerful interests don't want good patent examinations. They want the control that comes from having spurious patent approvals, which must be contested in expensive court proceedings. Those interests make sure that the U.S. patent and trademark office is under-funded. Twenty years ago there was better funding.
This is just one more example of the rapidly widening corruption in the U.S. government. Another example: Vice-president Dick Cheney, when he worked in the defense department, had the rules changed about procuring services during times of war. Then, as Vice-president, he pushed for a war with Iraq, and made sure the services went to his former company, Halliburton.
As David Letterman said, when you write a check for your part of the $87 billion that will be used to "rebuild" Iraq (after bombing it), remember that there are two Ls in Halliburton.
Now tell me why... (Score:2)
A day in the life of a patent examiner (Score:4, Funny)
09:30: Read newspaper, lick a poisonous toad
10:30: Arrive at work, get high on cough syrup
10:31: Review patents
17:30: Go home, yell at imaginairy wife, pass out on a skittle frenzy
Re:A day in the life of a patent examiner (Score:2)
get coffee and read paper:
1 hour
read and understand ONE application:
1/2 hour (skim submitter's corporation marks, lookup stock ticker on the NASDAQ)
yak with fellow examiner about last night's ballgame or movie:
1 hour
search for prior art:
0 (they applied for it, so it must be an innovation, duh)
evaluate patentability:
0 (they applied for it, so it must be patentable, duh)
communicate with the applicant:
0 (application+fee = all the USPTO needs)
work o
They don't like it? (Score:4, Insightful)
If doing a good job's impossible, why bother? (Score:4, Insightful)
Acacia and streaming video/audio patent (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Acacia and streaming video/audio patent (Score:4, Funny)
All the porn industry has to do is threaten to withold any porn from ever being seen by the patent threatening company's employees. "You will never see another naked woman besides your wife again if you press this patent on us."
A threat like that has to work.
Well, it can't work this way. (Score:2)
I don't remember what is the cost of filling the patent, but I think that it was somewhere around $20k. So let the examiner check ten aplications a year and earn half the money from application fee.
If constant costs are bigger, let him earn a quarter of this money.
Sure, you would have to hire lots of people, but USPTO would still be on black and the patent system would work better -- win-win situation.
Apparently some
Re:Well, it can't work this way. (Score:3, Insightful)
Also, the USPTO actually looses mo
200 Ph.D.s in the biochemical and pharma section (Score:2)
Re:200 Ph.D.s in the biochemical and pharma sectio (Score:2)
And I would not really feel much pity if all big pharmas go under tomorrow. They are worse then useless, because they waste their (our) resources on goals of secondary importance, while humanity's primary
Pretty straightforward (Score:3, Funny)
8:05 Begin daily caffeine overdose
8:10 Check email
8:20 Check todays work schedule
8:30 Retrieve documentation for todays application
9:00 Begin carefully reading application, constantly referring to extensive memory of patents already extant that may cover this application
9:05 God this is boring
9:06 Begin fantasizing about a combination of Halle Berry and strawberry icecream
9:09 Mental decision: Approve patent
9:09:03 Resume Halle fantasy
4:55 Inform supervisisor by email patent is accepted as there is no evidence that Halle Berry has ever been used in this manner before.
4:56 Send additional mail to supervisor, correcting self by replacing Halle with object of patent
Hype job? (Score:5, Insightful)
Here's a quote:
When a patent is first filed, the key hurdles are novelty and obviousness; i.e., does this idea really represent something new, and is it informed by a particular creativity? Eighty percent of patent applications are rejected for failing to meet those first hurdles.
Someone please tell the writer about some [corante.com] of the "novel" [164.195.100.11] patents issued by the USPTO.
Distributed patent processing (Score:3, Interesting)
Excellent (Score:2)
One question, though: we know it's old, but was it also posted here too ? If so, it sounds like this article is perfect for Slashdot.
Maybe someone should... (Score:4, Funny)
Using Patents (Score:4, Interesting)
Is it legit, ie: won't have me tied up with lawsuits for the next several years, to use patented technology for personal applications?
Think, perhaps, of a power-generation system that would be suitable for a small hobby farm. If I took the patent, built it, and used it on my own land, but did not sell it, am I violating the patent?
Re:Using Patents (Score:3, Informative)
From my interpretation of the below, I'd say definitely yes, you're violating the patent. Especially if you used the patent application itself to develop it.
From http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/pac/doc/general/ i ndex.html#infringement
Morals Provide Instant Answers! {tm} (Score:2)
But there's a much more complicated, long answer of "no" to your question, dealing with the sheer reality of Human needs.
You didn't mention if the power-generation system was NOT for sale if you wanted one. If it's a patented system, and is NOT available, then go ahead and make one
You didn't mention if the power
Maybe we should make challenges cheaper (Score:3, Insightful)
Considering this, it would make more sense if it were cheaper for external entities to challenge patents after they were created. As things stand, it takes thousands, or sometimes tens of thousands of dollars to challenge even the most obviously flawed patent.
We could, for instance, create a standard reveiw process where an individual presents evidence of patent conflict or prior art. Since the claimant is doing much of the research in advance, the cost should be considerably less.
Re:Maybe we should make challenges cheaper (Score:2)
In a perfect world, the patent office would have a million examiners and they would all have the time and resources to examine every application in infinitesimal detail to insure no bad patents are issued. But this is not a perfect world and we do not have the resources to hire a million patent examiners and let them take as long as they want.
So, in our
It's almost too simple... (Score:2, Insightful)
"Esther Kepplinger, deputy commissioner for patent operations and self-described "supervisor of supervisors of supervisors," was one of fewer than ten examiners doing biotech patents 30 years ago; she has overseen a fifty-fold increase in demand and specialization. Still, she says "when you're experienced at this, you can make decisions whether you know the art or not," a process she compares with a court's ruling
190,000 patents granted a year? (Score:3, Insightful)
If the USPTO were more strict with upholding a high standards for patents, the vast majority of applications that are submitted today would get thrown out even before commencing a prior art search. Eventually, the flood of applications would be reduced to a small number of worthy contenders, which would be a much more manageable load.
Unfortunately, the policies of the USPTO put the burden of proof on the patent examiner. They have to grant the patent unless they can find prior art or make a strong case why the creation is obvious. But the burden should be on the applicant to impress the examiners with the device's originality and utility, because a patent granted in error places a very high burden on the rest of society. The benefit of the doubt should be given to the public at large, not the patent applicant. Until that policy is changed they will be flooded with frivolous applications, and be pressured to grant patents for most of them, because it is so much more difficult to deny them.
"It was never the object of those laws to grant a monopoly for every trifling device, every shadow of a shade of an idea, which would naturally and spontaneously occur to any skilled mechanic or operator in the ordinary progress of manufactures. Such an indiscriminate creation of exclusive privileges tends rater to obstruct than to stimulate invention. It creates a class of speculative schemers who make it their business to watch the advancing wave of improvement, and gather its foam in the form of patented monopolies, which enable them to lay a heavy tax upon the industry of the country, without contributing anything to the real advancement of the arts. It embarrasses the honest pursuit of business with fears and apprehensions of concealed liens and unknown liabilities lawsuits and vexatious accountings for profits made in good faith."
-- US Supreme Court (Atlantic Works v. Brady, 1017 U.S. 192, 200 (1882)).
Patent Examination (Score:2, Interesting)
Just do it my way (Score:2)
I know that if I were t
This doesn't justify software patents (Score:2)
Considering the social costs of poorly done patents, and actually of even properly done patents...though that's less significant (there's a genuine up side), I don't see the justification for doing them at all. Of course, if I look and see who generally benefits, I see why they are kept in place. Patent pools allow companies that currently dominate in an area to maintain d
Re:A day (Score:2)
Re:A day (Score:3, Funny)
ACCEPTED
11:45am Amazon company: Internet-based referral system
Hmmm...there is prior art in referral systems... but the guy used a hyphen between Internet and based and Google doesn't give results...
ACCEPTED
01:00pm lunch break
03:00pm proudly recheck the glorious list of the top innovative patents I've granted. [oreillynet.com]
Re:A day (Score:2)
11:15am - lunch, drinks, hookers
4:45pm - return from lunch, rubber stamp another patent
5:00pm - pat self on back for hard day's work, head home
Re:Google (Score:2)
Hey dude, thanks for the link. That site is very much to the point and does wonderful search. May be we should feature a Slashdot article about them, what do u think ?
Re:Google (Score:3, Informative)
The USPTO has a search engine. The front page is at http://www.uspto.gov/patft/index.html [uspto.gov]. It has a full-text search going back to 1976, and you can (apparently) see scanned images of documents all the way back to 1790.
Re:Open Patents (Score:3, Informative)
Many patent offices around the world, including the European Patent Office, do the same thing.
Re:Oh well (Score:2)