Patents of Business Destruction 171
SnapShot writes "Over on Slate there's an opinion article on the Blackberry patent case. Here's a quote: 'It's easy to bash trolls as evil extortionists, to do so may be to miss an important lesson: Patent trolls aren't evil, but rational and predictable, akin to the mold that eventually grows on rotten meat. They're useful for understanding how the world of software patent got to where it is and what might be done to fix it.' "
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I wonder how the trolls think, reading this. :) (Score:2, Funny)
Re:I wonder how the trolls think, reading this. :) (Score:2)
Re:I wonder how the trolls think, reading this. :) (Score:4, Funny)
No... They weren't *that* mean. Besides, we could've complained to the JAG about that.
Re:I wonder how the trolls think, reading this. :) (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I wonder how the trolls think, reading this. :) (Score:2)
Re:I wonder how the trolls think, reading this. :) (Score:2)
Re:I wonder how the trolls think, reading this. :) (Score:2)
Re:I wonder how the trolls think, reading this. :) (Score:2)
Writing your own music is no protection. Courts have found that even trivial similarities are sufficient to make you liable.
But that's music copyrights, not patents. Still, the discussion had drifted into ASCAP, etc.
Re:I wonder how the trolls think, reading this. :) (Score:2)
Re:I wonder how the trolls think, reading this. :) (Score:2)
Re:I wonder how the trolls think, reading this. :) (Score:2)
The solution (Score:5, Funny)
Freedom Range Chicken (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Freedom Range Chicken (Score:2)
Ducks.....
Re:The solution (Score:2)
Expect the worst (Score:5, Interesting)
Forget about maximizing the best possible outcome in the best possible world. It's not going to happen anyway, so why worry about it? Instead, focus on the worst possible outcome, and create your system so as to minimize that. Any outcome that turns out better than that pessimistic minimum is then just a happy bonus.
So, make rules for patents that discourages fluff patents and extortion (you need to deposit a substantial sum that is returned upon a successful grant, but witheld if turned down?). Make it reasonably easy to challenge patents when invalid grants have slipped through, but that discourages vapid challenges (loser pays, for example).
Re:Expect the worst (Score:5, Insightful)
This (IMHO) is a downfall of capitalism - businesses no longer compete by making a better product, they compete by leveraging laws and other details against any existing and would-be competitors. If you can manipulate the rules, you do not have to play as hard.
Re:Expect the worst (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Expect the worst (Score:4, Insightful)
patents were a result of trying to protect innovators and exploration of progress
Not exactly. And it's worth understanding the purpose of patents when trying to think about how the system can be fixed.
The purpose of patents was to promote progress by encouraging inventors to publish the details of their inventions. In a world without patents, inventors had a strong motivation to keep the workings of their inventions (which were physical devices) as secret as possible, so that others couldn't duplicate them. The notion of patents was introduced to open up (the word 'patent' derives from the latin 'patere', which means "to be open", and scientific and medical communities still use the term to mean "open", or "free of obstruction") the details of inventions so that others could learn from and build on the ideas. Inventors recieve a temporary monopoly on their idea in exchange for publishing the details. The bottom line, though is that patents are supposed to primarily benefit the public, not patent holders. Any patent regime that fails that test is broken. The ideal patent structure is that which generates the greatest flow of ideas to the public, and it should be obvious that this optimization problem is one that requires constant retuning as the structure of society and the nature of research changes.
The same is true of copyright, by the way. Copyrights should primarily benefit the public, in the form of increased flow of materials into the public domain. Any benefits that accrue to copyright holders are mere byproducts of the primary goal. Like patents, copyrights require constant tuning to ensure that they're providing the maximum benefit to society. Like patents, the current copyright system does nothing of the sort.
Re:Expect the worst -- but promote the best (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Expect the worst (Score:3, Informative)
No, this is an example of monopolism run amok--not capitalism. The whole premise behind patents (and copyright) is that the government grants a limited-term monopoly to encourage development of an idea. After all, once an idea is out there, it is ea
Re:Expect the worst (Score:2)
Unless, of course, that intervention is by the military into the lives of millions of foreigners to secure resources for the economy at home. Then its time to wa
Re:Expect the worst (Score:2)
Monopolies are the enemy of the free market. Funny enough the same people who don't want the government to interfere with business are the same ones lobbying for governement-granted monopolies.
Re:Expect the worst (Score:2)
Any society that insists a) on permitting only ONE organizing principle, and b) on turning a blind eye toward its own worse tendencies, is "cruisin for a bruisin".
Re:Expect the worst (Score:2)
It's the downfall of Western Civilization, the Rule of Law, and the concept of a Constitutional Democratic Republic. As long as the right to spend money to influence the political process is equated with an essential liberty, then human greed can subvert it for it's ends, rather than the ends for which it was intended.
Isn't it ironic? (Score:5, Funny)
Fix it? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Fix it? (Score:2)
Re:Fix it? (Score:2)
No, that's a manipulative political ploy.
They are claiming they want "patent reform" and calling for essentially procedural changes to divert any political attention and control any legislative action. By calling for "reform" themselves they create the illusion that they are on the side of fixing the patent problems. They position themselves as the "reasonable compromise" position for fixing the patent pr
There is nothing wrong with the 'patent troll' (Score:2, Interesting)
if by 'patent troll' the author means people who buy up neglected patents, and then enforce them, how is this bad ? Its no different than some real-estate agents who buy up crappy houses, give them the once over, and flip them for profit. One man's garbage
If the author means 'people who file friviolous patents', thats alread self limiting. Its either a very time intensi
Re:There is nothing wrong with the 'patent troll' (Score:3, Insightful)
There is a reason Microsoft and Ebay didnt license the patents, and then just payed out on them when challenged. Its because this is just the way you have to deal with the patent system with its millions of potential infringements waiting for your lawyers attention.
You cannot build a non-trivial peice of software without falling foul of a load of something obvious - on a computer patents like one-click or the infinite subtle variations on LZ compression. So the only way to actually get anything built at a
Re:There is nothing wrong with the 'patent troll' (Score:2)
The systems isn't the problem here, its the 70+ years of people not having the ability to do proper due dillegence while declaring a patent novel.
*gasp* there are patents out there that were issued by the USPTO that infringe on other patents, simply because the people filing the 2nd patent didn't have the resources to make sure ALL of the other 7 million
Re:There is nothing wrong with the 'patent troll' (Score:2)
Re:RIM deserves this, they infringe (Score:2)
of course, those patents now stand a chance of being invalidated
Stop handing out "business method" patents (Score:4, Insightful)
"For most of U.S. history, patents had traditionally been issued in tangible objects, like monkey wrenches. For years, the courts and the PTO took a hard line against granting patents on intangibles like software or "business methods," based perhaps on the instinct that such inventions are too abstract and might cause economic damage.
All that changed in the 1980s and '90s, when Congress concentrated patent's appellate duties in a single court--the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. Over time, that court changed course on software and other questionable areas of patent, transforming the system from one that was highly conservative to one that's much more liberal."
I sincerely think we must abolish all patents on "ideas" and "methods". The whole notion of a corporation patenting a way to do business seems absurd and completely against the notion of free market competition. At the rate that we're going, pretty soon we'll have a stage where any person wanting to start a new business will need to purchase a set of licenses from corporations, not counties/states!
Another thought would be about how to resolve the multiple patent regimes around the world. As the Internet and globalization break down geographical barriers, we need a patent system(if at all) that will serve the entire world. What happens if a person in China or Brazil originally comes up with an idea for a new business? Will he need to check with the USPTO to see if it has been registered in the US? In Europe? Why? Does the USPTO check patent histories in other countries?
Everything is potentially 'Useful' (Score:4, Insightful)
Just like Viruses, Worms & Malware are useful for Anti-Virus/Spyware companies to analyze how they got to where they are, and what might be done to fix them.
Guns don't kill people... (Score:2, Insightful)
Nope. Blame here isn't mutually exclusive or singularly exhaustive. They're all crap.
Just like ISPs, CAN-SPAM and spammers themselves are all to blame for the 50+ messages I have to clear out of my inbox every morning.
A case study in business, law, and government... (Score:2, Insightful)
Throw into this mix patent squatters (think of it this way: some folks buy inte
Blackberry isn't relevant (Score:4, Interesting)
This still leaves open the question of whether the patents should have ever been issued to begin with. Software patents are asinine. Almost as asinine as being able to patent something that exists in nature.
Oh, oh!!! Great business idea! Invent a new programming language and patent it. Then when people start releasing software written in it you can sue all of them for infringement.
Re:Blackberry isn't relevant (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Blackberry isn't relevant (Score:2)
Which is why the court is hanging them out to dry. RIM was its own worst enemy. It's why the patent can be invalid according to the patent office but still enforceable as far as the court goes.
Re:Blackberry isn't relevant (Score:3, Funny)
Just when I thought C# was becoming popular on Slashdot, you go and ruin it for me.
How to fix patents (Score:3, Interesting)
The patent trolls that run around gobbling up defunct businesses to exploit other peoples work do nothing to help inovation - they mostly stand in the way. Patents are there to protect the inovators not the scavengers.
Re:How to fix patents (Score:2)
Any patents registered by a company (or individual) that goes Chapter 11 or all the way to bankruptcy should automatically become public domain. If the inventor isn't good enough to make money out of it then it should be open for all.
Oops, there goes the Wright Brothers patent for a "flying machine" (http://invention.psychology.msstate.edu/i/Wrights /WrightUSPatent/WrightPatent.html [msstate.edu]). They must have been patent trolls, and not inventors, because they didnt make a lot of money!
Predictable, yes... but like mold? (Score:3, Interesting)
Too many shyster opportunists (Score:5, Insightful)
I know a guy that has made a fortune taking trademarks and copyrights filed locally only in Canada or the US and filing them in his name globally. If that local, Canadian or US company wants to go global, they have to pay this guy royalties for using their own name.
It may be sneaky and underhanded but its totally within the law.
Same goes for patent trolls or squatters. Come up with our buy some idea that today might seem far-fetched, keep the language ambiguous and generalized, and as soon as some other company actually makes a product with similar function or purpose a reality, jump on them and sue the pants off of them.
There are entire companies set up that buy and hold patents. Buying them off individuals and small companies and simply sitting on them, with a large team of shysters paid scouring patent applications and product releases hoping that some company might make a product that infringes on the patents they hold. These companies (contrary to what they might have you believe) are not think tanks nor do any research and development nor have any interest in making the ideas a reality. They simply sit on paper. It's entirely legal for a company to do nothing, let another company do all the work, and expect royalties or licensing fees to sell a product they actually spent time and money developing, or sue the pants off these companies. Its like corporate slavery.
Patents have been twisted and corrupted from something to protect innovators from having their ideas ripped off to one that penalizes innovators for having good ideas and spending the time and money and effort to make an idea a reality.
Patents have become a dirty word.
There needs to be changes imposed, period. Patent law needs to be rewritten, not just for software, but in all cases. This isn't happening fast enough.
Re:Too many shyster opportunists (Score:3, Informative)
Hold on, this isn't a weakness in Capitalism. In a pure free market there would be no patents. While the problems you discussed do exist, they are not a result of the Capitalistic system. On the contrary, they are a result of inept governments monkeying with the system.
Patents have been twisted and corrupted from something to protect innovators from having their ideas ripped off to one that penalizes innovators for having good ideas and spending th
Re:Too many shyster opportunists (Score:2)
Real estate investors often just sit on paper. Stock, bond, futures, etc., traders just sit on paper.
What function do they serve? They increase the efficiency of the market, and many other things as well.
It's much more efficient for a company to license their accidental inventions to others than to sit on them as trade secrets forever, because they don't know what to do with them.... It's much more efficient for them to sell the patents to a small holding company that will license them, for the same reas
Re:Too many shyster opportunists (Score:2)
In particular Adam Smith addresses the standard patents of his time where industries in colonies had to pay 1/5th of their gross to the host country in exchange of unlimited use of
Re:Too many shyster opportunists (Score:2)
As for your point about choosing another mediation agent they are free to choose one and the government specifically allows that. But you are merely displacing the problem. How does the mediating agency enforce its rulings? Without an enforcement mechanism which opperates non consentually you are capable of breaking an agreement at any time.
Missed the point as usual (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:And you missed the point (Score:2)
That's not "making patent" anything worth talking about. So no trade secrets will ever be revealed by these "software patents". They aren't software patents, they're merely the official grants of a temporary monopoly. I.e., the bene
Working in Pharma? (Score:3, Insightful)
Drug companies launch ad campaigns where they try to justify their high prices (that lock people out) by stating that today's profits drive tomorrow's innovations. But if the high drug prices are simply to provide for tomorrow's R&D, then why do they show a $Billion in profit: By definition that money should either be a decrease in drug costs, or should have been spent on r&d
So there remains a very real question: Do patents really work in the drug business? I'm not sure that they don't promote innovation, but I'm sure that they generate monopoly profits. So, while that might be taken to mean that they're working, it can also be taken to mean that some reform might not be a bad idea there either...
Re:Working in Pharma? (Score:2)
What's your point? I think we've agreed that the current system provides a monopoly, and today that monopoly makes monopoly profits. That wasn't the question.
The question is whether or not it's justified. and whether or not we would have more or less medi
Re:Working in Pharma? (Score:2)
I'm not totally certain about the case of drug patents (though I'm dubious), but in the case of software patents no developer ever looks at a patent. In the first place it's potentially quite dangerous legally (triples the cost if you're found to be infringing) and in the second place nothing of any use is ever revealed. Drug patents might be different, but I sure wouldn't bet on
Why the spin? (Score:2)
You really, really need to listen to yourself. This "argument" is wholly devoid of substance, and is so on its face. First of all, wtf is a patent troll, that distinguishes it (assuming he is a faceless corporation rather than a legitimate and independent inventor) from, say, a property owner or landlord? Are you willing to defend the argument with that substitution, and if so, perhaps we need
My point precisely (Score:2)
No, I have been around for quite a while, and am intimately familiar with the patent system to boot. While I am willing to fight for your right to be an anonymous coward, I suggest that it is pretty poor practice to begin a posting with an ad hominem attack, anonymous or otherwise. I might be new here, but also be right. I might also be wrong. My arguments might seem to you like condescension, but they are not intended as such -- rather, they are arguments, arguments that you h
dual perspectives (Score:2, Insightful)
The whol
What if companies stopped filing for patents? (Score:2, Interesting)
I don't understand (Score:3, Interesting)
The patents in questions are likely to be rejected. The whole object of this lawsuit are those patents.
How can the judge dismiss that? What if he awards the injunction, either forces to close or settle. One way or another. What will happen if/when the patents ARE rejected? Because the lawsuit would have been on invalid ground?
Why can't this new evidence taken into account for the lawsuit? I don't understand this law aberation. Why can't the judge either order to wait to know the result of the patent re-examination, or forces the PTO to re-examine faster and be a party in the lawsuit?
I just don't understand why this lawsuit is going on ground (patents) that are likely to be dismissed and deemed invalid. Because if I understand right, patents not valid = lawsuit not founded anymore.
Can someone explain?
Re:I don't understand (Score:2)
Can someone explain?"
No, not really
Re:Funny definition of useful (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah, patent trolls are not evil, they're just greedy, devoid of morals and will do anything to further their ambitions
Oh wait, THAT'S LIKE THE VERY DEFINITION OF EVIL. What kind of idiot writes those articles?
Re:Funny definition of useful (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Funny definition of useful (Score:2)
Re:Funny definition of useful (Score:3, Insightful)
But they are good for that, in the most dramatic and cruel way possible. It's just that society, in general, tends to ignore the education drunk drivers give us. We treat the symptom (drunk folks killing innocents on the highway) but we ignore the causes. (pervasive availability of alcohol, inherent danger of controlling a mass of metal at high velocities.)
And we also tacitly accept the risk and sacrifice...unti
Re:Funny definition of useful (Score:2)
Your correction is incorrect.
The difference is that when someone exploits the flaws we now know how to fix the system, if we're willing and able to do so.
Re:Funny definition of useful (Score:2, Informative)
The point of the author was pointing out that patent trolls illustrate a explotable flaw in the system, and that villifying them does nothing to solve the problem. There will always be plenty of people willing to do lucrative, legal things that others view as evi
Re:Funny definition of useful (Score:2)
The guaranteed very best way to maximize rewards under any system of law is to corrupt the system to your benefit. The patent trolls have done that, by flooding the patent office with patents they know are bogus. Sounds evil to me.
Re:Funny definition of useful (Score:2)
Re:Funny definition of useful (Score:2)
Re:Funny definition of useful (Score:2)
Well, unfortunately, that's not quite the case. They're not doing "anything", they're following the rules.
Which makes it rather obvious that the rules create only an extra incentive for being greedy, devoid of morals and interested in nothing but furthering your ambitions.
Now, unless you'd like to classify greed, lack of morals and ambition as 'progress of science and useful arts', that puts the patent system in clear violation of the constitutional foundation upon which it rests.
Something
Re:Funny definition of useful (Score:2)
Re:Funny definition of useful (Score:4, Funny)
Now a company like SCO just has to be Chaotic Evil. Can you predict what they are going to do next?
Re:Funny definition of useful (Score:2)
Oh, that one's easy ... file another motion to delay things ...
SCO could give most patent trolls a few lessons. Unfortunately, this is what happens when immoral people do things. The legal system didn't envision judges who aren't ready to do a smackdown on lawyers who knowingly abuse the system, and are afraid of having their decision appealed. Where is Judge Roy Bean when you need him?
Re:Funny definition of useful (Score:2)
Re:Funny definition of useful (Score:2)
If Kimball and/or Wells had taken control of their courtrooms after the first sloppiness from SCO, the case would have been over by now, and the appeal half-way done as well. Oh, irght - there wouldn't have been an appeal - SCO would have been (even more) bankrupt than they are now, morally, financially, etc.
Re:Funny definition of useful (Score:2)
Consider it as a strange form of looking on the bright side as in while looking over the smoldering ruins of your car saying "At least I don't have to rotate the tires now".
Re:How to fix it? (Score:5, Insightful)
Almost there (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Almost there (Score:3, Interesting)
Agreed. The hardest part of any patent reform (with good intent) is to differentiate the patent trolls from the small researches.
Re:Almost there (Score:2)
Currently patent filing fees are anywhere form $75 to around $500, depending on the type of patent and the status of the submitting company. I say get rid of the "small entity" category, and the various types of patent applications, and go for a unified pricing structure. Everyone gets one freebie a year. The next one in $100, and the next $200, t
Re:Almost there (Score:2)
The incresing prices seems to be a good idea. Even if the researcher needs more patents, he can have them. And it punishes big companies, who gain much more from current laws that small people. But notice that you are not identifying a troll, you are fighting another problem, that is big companies getting lots of low value patents to monopolize markets.
But I don't think the other two would work. A small reseacher can't know about people violating his patent because the way things work are not public. You c
Re:Almost there (Score:3, Interesting)
There's enough money out there to eliminate this possibility in a very real way. The most you might see is a diminished return to the inventor if those that might pay the most are more willing to sit on the sidelines and let someone else p(l)ay.
The reality though, is that if I come up with some kind of invention that makes another obs
Re:Almost there (Score:2)
I agree - it's also impossible for any specific inventor to know in advance if their 'exploit' will be successful.
Since the odds of more than o
Re:Almost there (Score:2)
See this [wikipedia.org]
Re:Almost there (Score:2)
Nope, don't think so.
Look, suppose you're a small to medium scale venture capitalist, maybe 10 million to invest in the right project. If someone comes to you with a patent and you say "no thanks I'll wait" you're going to be competing with the multinationals, who will use control of channels and superior marketing budgets to freeze
Re:Almost there (Score:2)
Date of filing,not invention (Score:4, Informative)
So yes, I agree with your proposals but they don't go far enough.
Re:Date of filing,not invention (Score:2)
Proof of the date of conception, is a bit more difficult to establish than your giving it credit for. Firstly there are cronological journalized lab books, both hand written and computerized which alows times stamping, if I have what I think is a good Idea, I can type it up on the computer, do a md5sum on the file and publish the checksum in a news paper and save it. This is almost, perfectly unforgable.
Re:How to fix it? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:How to fix it? (Score:2)
I especially like the "unworked patents" issue. While I can see plenty of room for abuse with this idea, I think it's pretty obvious that people who attempt to make a living or run a business simply by owning patents on important technology should be discouraged. There are several good examples of this so I won't go into that. But it's hard to respect the notion of "I bought someone's idea and now I'm making a living from it." The notion that a though
Re:How to fix it? (Score:2, Insightful)
Ok, I'm down with that. Even a mostly funcitonal prototype that implements the core claims of the patent. The prototype should even be kept for the duration of the patent so that subsequent court challenges have something to compare to.
Annul any unworked patents after two years
Doesn't the functional prototype kind of invalidate this? If they must demonstarte a prototype, the patent has therefore been worked? Or is
Re:How to fix it? (Score:2)
Re:How to fix it? (Score:2)
Note that we strongly need a Us campaign against Software Patents as the USPTO tries to export its crappy regulation to other parts of the world, see trade agreements with the Americas, see the swpat in india, australia etc.
http://lists.ffii.org/mailman/listinfo/us-parl [ffii.org]
Re:How to fix it? (Score:4, Insightful)
along with that is the problem that it's not really appropriate any more to enforce one length for all patents. even just in "computers", for example, 5 years sounds about right for new technologies in chip manufacture, but is an eternity in software design.
separate from this but related on several points is the fact that the current patent process is not transparent. that is, i can submit a patent that you have no way of knowing about - and thus knowing you're infringing - for up to a few years. that's plenty of time to build an entire business today. ideally, patents should be visible from date of filing.
i'd also agree with the common complaint on patents on mathematics, on the principle that they are naturally occurring phenomenon, not true inventions. this eliminates a good number of software patents but still leaves room for truly novel activities. having to choose all or none, i'd back the "no software patents" position, because doing real evaluations of that class of patents is hard and costly, and it's worse for innovation - at least today, if not always - to grant too many than too few.
the most important thing people need to remember, and most of the involved government seems to have forgotten, is what the point of patents are. the constitution is often silent on intent; this is one of the few cases where it actually tells us why it's doing what it's doing. patents exist explicitly to "to promote the progress of science and useful arts".
honestly, i think we need somebody with lots of free time and discretionary income to make a big fuss about this. i believe the current PTO policies are unconstitutional and violate existing Supreme Court findings (see, for example, Diamond v. Diehr, 450 U.S. 175, which excluded patents on "laws of nature, physical phenomena, and abstract ideas").
for point of reference, one of my current responsibilities is working on our company's IP portfolio. i'm quite familiar with the current rules. they're stupid, but in order to remain competitive companies are often forced (by the market, not legally) to play by them. it's unrealistic to expect companies (or individual filers) to simply "do the right thing" with regard to what they're filing, or even to have any idea how to evaluate that.
Re:How to fix it? (Score:2, Interesting)
No, the real harm are application patents - these are patents that don't describe new technology, but just the application of technology. The patents in this discussion would be in that category, as would a lot of patents that help
Re:How to fix it? (Score:2)
ah, but that's never been the idea! at least in the US (in many other jurisdictions, too, but i can't provide exact references and wording), patents exist explicitly to "To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts", as per the Constitution of the United States, Article I Section 8. granting monopolies on inventions for a limited time
Re:How to fix it? (Score:2)
http://www.darklock.com/blog?p=55 [darklock.com]
The basics: make the patent holder prove the validity of the patent when challenged, and pay for any challenge they lose. If they win, the challenger pays.
This makes it expensive to lose a patent challenge no matter which side you take, so nobody will want to lose one. A patent will be applied for only when the company feels confident it will not lose a challenge, and challenged only when the challenger feels confident that the p
Re:Don't hate the player, hate the game (Score:2)