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Patents Government The Courts United States News

Supreme Court to Rule On 'Obvious' Patents 239

vocaro writes "The U.S. Supreme Court appears ready to rewrite the standard of what makes a patent 'obvious.' In a case before the court, brake manufacturer Teleflex is accusing a rival, KSR International, of violating its patent on a brake assembly. Large patent holders, including Microsoft, IBM, and Cisco, have submitted briefs supporting KSR, saying that true innovators can have a patent held up against them that reflects nothing more than an obvious combination of preexisting elements, then be told they have to leave the market or pay royalties. The court appears to be on KSR's side, saying that Teleflex's invention would have been obvious to an individual of reasonable skill. During oral arguments, Justice Breyer observed, 'It looks to me at about the same level as I have a sensor on my garage door at the lower hinge ... and the raccoons are eating it. So I think of the brainstorm of putting it on the upper hinge.'"
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Supreme Court To Rule On "Obvious" Patents

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  • by Pharmboy ( 216950 ) on Thursday November 30, 2006 @08:14PM (#17058836) Journal
    Gotta love the analogy with the raccoons. Sounds like a judge finally gets it.
    • by Rodyland ( 947093 ) on Thursday November 30, 2006 @08:27PM (#17058984)
      As with most, inclined to agree, however I like this quote from the article:
      In hindsight everybody says, 'I could've thought of that,'...

      Strikes me as true, and as always when claiming something is obvious, it begs the question "how come you didn't think of it then?"

      I think this exposes a fundamental problem with the system - you have judges and lawyers deciding what is and isn't obvious/patentable. And I think that a swing too far in the opposite direction would be just as harmful as the (current) swing in the direction of extreme patentism (hah, I just made up a word). Of course, it'd be an interesting thing to behold.

      • by Ucklak ( 755284 ) on Thursday November 30, 2006 @08:53PM (#17059268)
        Didn't think of it then because raccoons weren't a problem before.

        Why should I pay someone for an idea I had just because they account for raccoons first?

        There shouldn't be a patent for any specific pattern of 4 screws on a piece of material yet that is what the case is about.

        Microsoft wants us to pay them for double clicking icons. What if a double click is an oops click?

        I'll patent the process of unbuckling your seatbelt as you take the keys out of the ignition at the same time as I thought of it before I heard that it is a procedure that UPS mandates their employees use.

        Who is right then?
        • by dgatwood ( 11270 ) on Thursday November 30, 2006 @09:12PM (#17059492) Homepage Journal

          Indeed, the test of obviousness should be whether someone reasonably skilled at the art would have arrived at a similar solution given the same problem. If the answer is "yes", it is obvious EVEN IF THE PROBLEM ITSELF WAS NOT OBVIOUS OR COMMON. Of course, by this standard, 99% of patents should not be valid. 99% of patents should not be valid.

          As for the question of why someone else didn't think of it first, I can't count how many patented designs I've seen and said "I can't believe they got a patent on that. I had that idea [n] years ago, but A. didn't have any financing to develop it, B. felt that the technology hadn't quite matured to the point that it was practical/usable, or C. didn't think there was a big enough market for it. Half the time, I've had somebody suggest the idea TO ME out of the blue, then said "hey, I thought of pretty much the same thing [n] years ago", THEN two or three years later, found out somebody turned it into a product and patented it.

          Case in point: a music stand with an LCD panel. The reasons I didn't move forward with that were A. no money, B. no time, C. I thought it would be better to wait until digital paper became more readily available because LCDs were non-optimal for the task, and D. I didn't think I could start a company to manufacture such a product and sell enough to make it worth quitting a job that actually pays me money. It was suggested to me by someone out of the blue in 2001 or 2002. I'd thought of the idea in about 1999. It was obvious then, and even more obvious now, in 2006 when somebody finally built such a product, but I'd be surprised if they didn't have at least one or two patents on that breathtakingly obvious idea.

          What they don't have (AFAIK) are the UI ideas I came up with for making it better... which might still be obvious... but... basically use an FFT to try to guess (even in the face of polyphony it should work well enough unless it's some weird 20th century piece with nothing more than a bunch of octave skips on a single tone or something) where you are in the piece and automatically turn pages. Okay, that's been done for solo instruments, but AFAIK, not for piano. Oh, yeah. I want this in a PIANO music rack. Music stands are cute, but a piano music rack would rock.

          Anyway, back to what's cool about my version.... As an option, instead of turning the page, if so desired, the pages would slowly slide so that two pages are on screen at once with a third moving on and a fourth moving off. That way, you never lose track of where you are because the page is always almost exactly where it was before you looked up.

          Another idea was to make this be wirelessly programmable via 802.11 (I'd probably pick Bluetooth if I were designing it now). Either that or cable it up with a FireWire cable so that a single cable provides power and data. Again, you'd need digital paper for that to be practical....

          $10 says that somebody will design one with most or all of these features within five years and will successfully get a patent based on the idea. When it happens, feel free to use this post as proof that the ideas are all obvious (unless I create it, of course...).

          • by Macadamizer ( 194404 ) on Thursday November 30, 2006 @09:29PM (#17059664)
            Indeed, the test of obviousness should be whether someone reasonably skilled at the art would have arrived at a similar solution given the same problem. If the answer is "yes", it is obvious EVEN IF THE PROBLEM ITSELF WAS NOT OBVIOUS OR COMMON. Of course, by this standard, 99% of patents should not be valid. 99% of patents should not be valid.

            Just curious, why do you believe 99% of of patents should not be valid?

            How do you propose to perform your test? If others "skilled in the art" already know that there is a solution, then you are injecting hindsight into the equation, and EVERYTHING is obvious once you have hindsight.

            As for the question of why someone else didn't think of it first, I can't count how many patented designs I've seen and said "I can't believe they got a patent on that. I had that idea [n] years ago, but A. didn't have any financing to develop it, B. felt that the technology hadn't quite matured to the point that it was practical/usable, or C. didn't think there was a big enough market for it. Half the time, I've had somebody suggest the idea TO ME out of the blue, then said "hey, I thought of pretty much the same thing [n] years ago", THEN two or three years later, found out somebody turned it into a product and patented it.

            The purpose of patents, as is oft repeated, is to advance the useful arts (whether it does a good job or not is not really the point here, though!). A patent, for better or worse, at least makes public the invention, so others can see it, benefit from it, and build upon it -- maybe not immediately, but eventually. If you don't bother to tell anyone about your inventions, or don't bother to publish papers or put up a webpage or whatever, then the public is not benefiting from your invention, so you are not entitled to a patent (under current law). Someone else who comes up with the idea, dilligently works to develop it, and then gives the knowledge up to the public IS entitled to a patent.

            But just because you claim to have thought of something first doesn't make another's invention obvious. How do you prove that you came up with it first? Is the patent office or the courts just supposed to take your word for it?

            If you really want to keep others from patenting something you invented "first," put up a webpage, publish a paper, let the world know about your "obvious" invention -- that's how you can do this. Coming back 10 years later when someone else is successful and sitting back and complaining that it was "obvious" because you invented it "first" doesn't do any good at all.
            • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

              by Dun Malg ( 230075 )

              How do you propose to perform your test? If others "skilled in the art" already know that there is a solution, then you are injecting hindsight into the equation, and EVERYTHING is obvious once you have hindsight.

              The test is not as difficult as you seem to think. Stating that "everything is obvious in hindsight" is a largely meaningless handwave that tars all subjects with one brush, as both the obvious AND non-obvious fit the description. In these cases, hindsight actually helps. For example, the Post-It

              • by Macadamizer ( 194404 ) on Thursday November 30, 2006 @10:41PM (#17060358)
                On the other hand, you have patents on portable electronic devices for sending and receiving email--- that's bloody fucking obvious, and not just in hindsight. Portable email was not a solution waiting for an insightful genius to discover it, but a solution waiting for technological progress to make it feasible.

                If this is your test for obviousness, then NOTHING is patentable, because everything is just "a solution waiting for technological progress to make it feasible." Fortunately (or unfortunately, depending on your position in this matter), our patent system doesn't just look at "ideas," it looks at the idea plus a "reduction to practice" -- in other words, the guy that says "I wish I could take my email with me" doesn't get a patent, but the guy that actually figures out HOW to do it does. We give patents based onthe invention of the "technological progress" that makes the solutions feasible.

                As noted in another post, the first NTP patent was filed in 1991 -- was a portable device for email "bloody fucking obvious" in 1991?

                (BTW, just for the sake of disclosure, I have no love for NTP, and actually wrote a brief in support of RIM at the CAFC, and think RIM got fucked -- but not because of NTP's patents being obvious, but for other reasons, specifically the extraterritorial application of U.S. patent laws.)
                • by topham ( 32406 ) on Thursday November 30, 2006 @10:51PM (#17060430) Homepage

                  A method of reliably transfering data using a protocol intended for a radio link should be patentable.

                  Using said radio link to transfer email should not; it should be tied to the original e-mail patent, or not at all.

                  A menuing system, like that on Apple's iPod should not be patentable; anyone designing a device with a screen the size of Apples has a significant chance to stumbling on the same design.

                  The problem as I see it is 'obviousness' is being determined by people who aren't actually familiar with the process of design. Instead they assume that if they haven't read about it in research material it must therefor not be obvious.

                  I wrote a program on the Commodore 64 which implemented Bresenham's line algorithm; I didn't even know about it, I did it based on what I learned in mathematics in grade 5. I don't think I'm brilliant, hence, I don't think software and algorithm should generally be patentable.

                • by Copid ( 137416 ) on Thursday November 30, 2006 @11:10PM (#17060568)
                  If this is your test for obviousness, then NOTHING is patentable, because everything is just "a solution waiting for technological progress to make it feasible." Fortunately (or unfortunately, depending on your position in this matter), our patent system doesn't just look at "ideas," it looks at the idea plus a "reduction to practice" -- in other words, the guy that says "I wish I could take my email with me" doesn't get a patent, but the guy that actually figures out HOW to do it does. We give patents based onthe invention of the "technological progress" that makes the solutions feasible.
                  If everybody has the same obvious idea and you're the first one to figure out how to implement it, you should get a patent. On the implementation. Example: Everybody wants a portable device that can receive email. No portable network hardware is available. Portable network hardware becomes available from a third party and you're the first slob to crank out an email device with the network hardware in it. Should you get a patent on how you hooked together the parts? Maybe, if it's sufficiently clever. Should you be able to patent the general idea that everybody has been chomping at the bit to implement? I certainly don't think so.
                • by Dun Malg ( 230075 ) on Friday December 01, 2006 @01:54AM (#17061804) Homepage
                  If this is your test for obviousness, then NOTHING is patentable, because everything is just "a solution waiting for technological progress to make it feasible."
                  Bullshit. What technology were Post-Its waiting for? Or better yet, the high pressure McCoy automatic oiler, which used tech no more advanced than the steam engines it served? Steam engine parts were oiled by hand with oil cans for 20 years before the automatic oiler was invented.
                  As noted in another post, the first NTP patent was filed in 1991 -- was a portable device for email "bloody fucking obvious" in 1991?
                  Jesus, if anything is bloody fucking obvious, it's the observation of "man, I wish it were possible to make one of these things that was portable." The list is unbelievably long: phones, video cameras, calculators, TVs, radios, DVD players, and yes, even networked computers running a mail reader! Just because it took time for large LCDs, low power CPUs, and high capacity batteries make it possible to finally run that email app on a goddamn 2-way pager does not make it non-obvious before then.
                • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

                  by dgatwood ( 11270 )

                  As noted in another post, the first NTP patent was filed in 1991 -- was a portable device for email "bloody fucking obvious" in 1991?

                  I didn't even have non-portable email in 1991. So from that perspective, it was not at all obvious. On the other hand, it was also something for which a concrete implementation was not technologically feasible at the time.

                  But the patent isn't on the idea of doing email wirelessly anyway. It's on what amounts to UUCP, except sending data to a wireless email reader ins

            • by TheLink ( 130905 )
              Well, if a US Supreme Court Judge finds it obvious after a relatively short time then that's obvious ;).

              There aren't that many US Supreme Court judges available for patent testing, but I figure we can workaround that problem.

            • by shaitand ( 626655 ) on Friday December 01, 2006 @12:36AM (#17061166) Journal
              "Just curious, why do you believe 99% of of patents should not be valid?

              How do you propose to perform your test? If others "skilled in the art" already know that there is a solution, then you are injecting hindsight into the equation, and EVERYTHING is obvious once you have hindsight."

              99% is a made up number that any reasonably thinking individual can assume means "nearly every patent" when used in that context. However, you have established where he got the idea with the second paragraph. I trust that nobody is foolish enough to think that there are no exceptions where something is NOT obvious in hindsight, so you yourself surely must have meant 'almost everything'.

              If something is obvious in hindsight then it is just a progressive step built upon the existing state of invention. Progressive steps are not truely innovative things that are worthy of patents. The reason is that sooner or later someone else would have made that step. Granting patents on things that would be discovered and become available to the industry without patents hinders forward progress rather than helping.

              The standard for a patent should not be whether or not effort went into coming up with a solution. The standard for a patent should be whether or not any other human being would have ever come up with that solution withen the length of the patent. Patents are a government granted monopoly and should not be granted on a daily basis!

              There are probably only a couple dozen patents that should have been granted this century.
            • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

              Someone else who comes up with the idea, dilligently works to develop it, and then gives the knowledge up to the public IS entitled to a patent.

              No, because somebody can patent the idea before that, even if they haven't managed to get it to work. Then when some poor sod does manage to do that, they can't produce the product, and in some cases all working copies get transfered to the patent owner. The patent owner owns the idea lock stock and barrel until the patent runs out.

      • by raehl ( 609729 ) <raehl311@@@yahoo...com> on Thursday November 30, 2006 @08:54PM (#17059274) Homepage
        Strikes me as true, and as always when claiming something is obvious, it begs the question "how come you didn't think of it then?"

        Because they didn't have a reason to think of it?

        Or it uses new technology didn't exist when they last encountered the problem?

        For example, good, free database software has recently become available, making it feasible for many people to apply databases to problems who didn't have that option before.

        So does that mean the first person in any industry to become aware of database software should be able to get a patent on "Using a database to solve this problem"? No. And letting the first person to realize this obvious application of databases to patent it is BAD for EVERYONE.
      • by Pharmboy ( 216950 ) on Thursday November 30, 2006 @08:56PM (#17059296) Journal
        No matter where you "draw the line" in reference to what is obvious and what is not, SOMEONE will always get hurt. Absolute rules, while sometimes necessary, tend to do that.

        I believe the goal is to set a rule that hurts as few as possible, and with the same number of people on both sides of the issue. The goal of any judicial system isn't perfection, just fairness.
        • Agree 100% with your post.

          No test is going to make everyone happy. The current obviousness test is an attempt to avoid the "duh" type of hindsight obviousness (every inventino looks obvious in hindsight) while protecting against "real" obviousness (where all of the pieces were clearly known to those in the art, just nobody had yet bothered to write an article on or patent the combination). No matter where you draw the line, there will be problems. Maybe the test now results in too many obvious patents.
        • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

          by alexjohnc3 ( 915701 )
          What you said is misleading. Hurting the fewest number of people as possible isn't necessarily fairness. If ten people are using my ideas that I've patented (assuming the patents aren't "obvious" ones) in their products and I want compensation for this, then it's fair for me to get this compensation even if more than one person gets hurt, right?
      • by Harmonious Botch ( 921977 ) * on Thursday November 30, 2006 @08:56PM (#17059300) Homepage Journal
        ...it begs the question "how come you didn't think of it then?"

        Because I wasn't being paid to design one.


      • by Qzukk ( 229616 ) on Thursday November 30, 2006 @09:01PM (#17059356) Journal
        when claiming something is obvious, it begs the question "how come you didn't think of it then?"

        Because whether or not I "thought of it" has nothing to do with whether or not it's obvious.

        If I walked up to ten random people and said "When it rains, water floods the ditch where I keep my TV and ruins it, what should I do to keep the TV safe?" How many of them do you think will say "move it somewhere else!" Does the fact that they never had to save a TV that was in the middle of a ditch or had their TV short out in the rain make the answer any less obvious?
      • by JourneyExpertApe ( 906162 ) on Thursday November 30, 2006 @09:02PM (#17059366)
        Strikes me as true, and as always when claiming something is obvious, it begs the question "how come you didn't think of it then?"

        Isn't the whole point here that KSR did think of it, and they just thought it was too obvious to patent?
      • by raehl ( 609729 ) <raehl311@@@yahoo...com> on Thursday November 30, 2006 @09:03PM (#17059396) Homepage
        Strikes me as true, and as always when claiming something is obvious, it begs the question "how come you didn't think of it then?"

        Also, what about cases where the whole problem is someone else DID think of it? Or lots of someone elses thought of it?

        If you patent something that 10 other people independently start doing, doesn't that kind of demonstrate that it was pretty obvious?
      • by vertinox ( 846076 ) on Thursday November 30, 2006 @09:03PM (#17059412)
        Strikes me as true, and as always when claiming something is obvious, it begs the question "how come you didn't think of it then?"

        Well most of these people actually do think of the solution and actually create a working product, but then a Submarine Patent Troll comes out of the woodwork telling them that their actual invention violates their vague patent that they never bothered to bring to market or tell anyone else about.

        That is the key problem here... Not that it is just obvious, but they are going after people who do come up with the idea themselves rather than those who have stolen the idea from them.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by Rodyland ( 947093 )
          I think you have nailed the current problem - the patent trolls who patent things that others have done but didn't think it was patentable/worth patenting. Of course, prior art should invalidate the patent, but that only works if you've got the money to pay for a lawyer, which brings me back to what I said above, and what appears to have been ignored. The problem with the system is the requirement for judges and lawyers to make decisions that they are seemingly not qualified or able to make.
        • by Macadamizer ( 194404 ) on Thursday November 30, 2006 @09:20PM (#17059580)
          Well most of these people actually do think of the solution and actually create a working product, but then a Submarine Patent Troll comes out of the woodwork telling them that their actual invention violates their vague patent that they never bothered to bring to market or tell anyone else about.

          What is a "submarine patent troll?" The 1995 Amendments to the patent laws pretty much ended the endless continuation practice that Lemelson, the original "submarine patent guy" used to his advantage.

          BTW, patents are public record -- they are all publicly available on the USPTO website. Should a patent holder have to go out and notify any potential infringers before they begin developing a product?

          That is the key problem here... Not that it is just obvious, but they are going after people who do come up with the idea themselves rather than those who have stolen the idea from them.

          How do you propose we sort out the "true" infringers who are "stealing" an idea from those who came up with the idea independently? What test to you propose to determine what independent development is? How far "back" in the development stream do you need to go to show "independence?"
          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            by vertinox ( 846076 )
            What is a "submarine patent troll?"

            http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patent_troll [wikipedia.org]
            http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Submarine_patent [wikipedia.org]

            Yes they both have extensive articles on Wiki. Although I may have taken the liberty to combine the two termns, but if you really don't know... Read the articles.

            The point is that Patent system doesn't require you to actually make an invention, but rather have a description on what these invention does. These things can often be very vague and people have been known to patent the wheel [cnn.com] on
            • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

              by Macadamizer ( 194404 )
              Yes they both have extensive articles on Wiki. Although I may have taken the liberty to combine the two termns, but if you really don't know... Read the articles.

              I know exactly what both are. Submarine trolls may have been an issue at one point (see my earlier post), but are really not an issue any more. Even the wikipedia article is clear on that. My point was basically that submarine patents aren't really an issue any more (if they ever really were), and certainly aren't a reason now to mess with the o
              • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

                by Anonymous Coward
                Oh, shut up. Patents are written by engineering school washouts who couldn't manage to do real innovation but figured they could get through law school. They're reviewed by government pencil pushers that couldn't manage to get a job doing real engineering work, so they sit and read legal gibberish all day. They're overseen by clueless judges, politicians and career bureaucrats who have no clue about anything technical.

                It's a huge, bloated echo chamber of people who one-up each other in arguing just how lo

              • "You do realize that the wheel patent was in Australia, right?"

                It was revenge for stealing our Ugg boots!
      • by vanyel ( 28049 ) *
        as always when claiming something is obvious, it begs the question "how come you didn't think of it then?"

        "because I wasn't trying to solve that problem"

        I think the best course of action is ask "what is the problem this solves", then ask people "knowledgeable in the field" (but unfamiliar with the product in question) ways to solve that problem. If any of them come up with the product's solution, then it's obvious.
      • Strikes me as true, and as always when claiming something is obvious, it begs the question "how come you didn't think of it then?"

        I loved the discussion of how you claim that something is NOT obvious... new sig, as of yesterday. Certainly you can argue in circles about hindsightful obviousness. i.e. "Prove it is obvious! No, you prove that it's not! If no one has invented it already, then how can it be obvious? Yes, but it's the problem that is new, not the solution!" etc etc.

      • by chefmonkey ( 140671 ) on Thursday November 30, 2006 @10:17PM (#17060132)
        I'm way too familiar with patents, and my experience is that the vast, vast majority -- I'm talking two to three sigmas here -- are issued not because someone thought up a novel solution to a problem, but because someone thought up a stunningly obvious solution to a newly emerging problem.

        It's too late for those patents that have made it out of the gate already, but I have long held that there should be a small pool of engineers -- you could probably even find people do do it on a non-paid volunteer basis -- who were involved in the patent process in a very specific, blinded fashion. The way it would work is: as part of the review process, the patent reviewer would state the problem the patent was trying to solve as an unsolved problem. This problem would then be sent to one or more of these engineers. The engineers would consider the problem, and have a short period of time to submit one or more potential solutions that solve the problem. If any of the potential solutions substantially replicates the claims of the patent under review, it would be rejected as obvious.

        Sadly, this makes *way* too much sense, so I doubt it would ever be seriously considered by the USPTO.
        • I'm way too familiar with patents, and my experience is that the vast, vast majority -- I'm talking two to three sigmas here -- are issued not because someone thought up a novel solution to a problem, but because someone thought up a stunningly obvious solution to a newly emerging problem.

          In my reply immediately preceding yours I was thinking along the same lines. If the patent application for a solution to a new problem is comprised of claims that disclose no newly invented method or concept, but simp

          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            by chefmonkey ( 140671 )
            That's why I proposed a short period of time: if even 0.1% of the engineers out there can immediately think of the same solution, then it's obvious for the purposes of the patent system.

            Patents theoretically promote innovation by encouraging people and companies to invest significant resources into solving problems. At 0.1% of the engineering population, you're pretty much guaranteed that, once the problem comes to light, the fact that tens of thousands of people would be able to solve the problem means t
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by shawb ( 16347 )
          Honestly, guessing what solutions to a problem exist wouldn't be a good use of engineers. It WOULD be a good use of engineering students, though. This exact task would make an extremely appropriate internship. The difficult part would be in phrasing the problem such that it isn't too vague, yet it isn't steering the students directly towards the patent.
      • And I think that a swing too far in the opposite direction would be just as harmful as the (current) swing in the direction of extreme patentism (hah, I just made up a word).

        I doubt it. I wonder how many research dollars are spent chasing "easy in hindsight" ideas that would fail to be discovered if patents wouldn't cover them. I suspect that most of the research money that is spent with the expectation of future patent revenue goes toward chasing ideas that are too complicated to look easy even in retr

      • by Surt ( 22457 )
        "how come you didn't think of it then?"

        I think this case is about companies who did think of it. They weren't ripping off anybodies patent. They reinvented the same thing, and tripped over the patent.
      • by balthan ( 130165 )
        And I think that a swing too far in the opposite direction would be just as harmful as the (current) swing in the direction of extreme patentism (hah, I just made up a word).

        Would there really be much of a downside if patents dissapeared altogether? I'm sure we would probably lose some obscure and rarely used devices that are never licensed anyway, but companies could then focus on using technologies that fit their needs, rather than just what they can license. I'm not convinced that there would be a lar
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by Kadin2048 ( 468275 )
          The problem that I can see is that if you eliminated patents altogether, it might lead companies to be very, very aggressive about preventing the disclosure of trade secrets. Working for an electronics firm would be like joining the Manhattan Project, and every device you bought would have all of its circuit boards potted in epoxy, mixed with iron filings to mess up X-rays and PET scanners. They'd probably also self-destruct if you opened the case. Industrial espionage would be de rigeur.

          In short, a world w
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by gnasher719 ( 869701 )
        '' Strikes me as true, and as always when claiming something is obvious, it begs the question "how come you didn't think of it then?" ''

        Who says nobody has ever thought of it? I have a question: Have you ever thought of painting your shoes yellow? Probably not. On the other hand, if you went to a fancy dress party and needed yellow shoes to match your costume, then you would do exactly that. Are you saying that painting your shoes yellow could be patented because nobody thought of it before? That's nonsense
    • by eric76 ( 679787 ) on Thursday November 30, 2006 @08:29PM (#17059010)
      I'm wondering just what the hinge is made of if raccoons can eat it.
      • by RajivSLK ( 398494 ) on Thursday November 30, 2006 @09:06PM (#17059432)
        Umm, I think raccoons ate your reading comprehension.
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by eric76 ( 679787 )

          Actually, it is a somewhat ambiguous sentence:

          'It looks to me at about the same level as I have a sensor on my garage door at the lower hinge ... and the raccoons are eating it. So I think of the brainstorm of putting it on the upper hinge.'"

          So you can interpret it to mean that the raccoons are eating the sensor. You can interpret it to mean that the raccoons are eating the lower hinge. Or you can even interpret that to mean that the raccoons are eating the garage door.

          Since it is ambiguous, we can int

    • by flyingsquid ( 813711 ) on Thursday November 30, 2006 @08:32PM (#17059056)
      Gotta love the analogy with the raccoons. Sounds like a judge finally gets it.

      In related news, a Supreme Court Justice is being sued for patent infringement by DoorCo, a manufacturer of garage doors and door sensors...

    • by Harmonious Botch ( 921977 ) * on Thursday November 30, 2006 @08:38PM (#17059132) Homepage Journal
      "Gotta love the analogy with the raccoons. Sounds like a judge finally gets it"

      We finally got a judge that was smarter than a racoon.
    • not quite... (Score:2, Offtopic)

      by coolgeek ( 140561 )
      "So I think of the brainstorm of putting it on the upper hinge."

      Except in her example, her design choices would no doubt result in tons of product liability for her company, when the sensors fail to stop the garage door from closing on a child.
    • Sounds to me like Justice Breyer never had a 'coon in his garage; they're cute as hell but smart, manipulative, curious and have a mischievous streak a mile wide. Move the sensor wouldn't even be an inconvenience to them.
    • There is nothing new under the sun but there are lots of old things we don't know - Ambrose Bierce

      Just because someone patents a "non-obvious" idea, doesn't mean that it is new. It may have been thought of before, but not thought important enough to patent.

      I think geeks in particular like to cry "That's obvious", because it is... but since geeks aren't "sleezy marketers", they don't rush out and patent things. (Hey, don't knock marketers, we need them to sell crap. I don't want to sell crap. I want to m

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday November 30, 2006 @08:15PM (#17058848)
    Uh no.. Will Slashdot lose its patent on dupes [slashdot.org]?
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      Uh no.. Will Slashdot lose its patent on dupes?

      It's not really a dupe. You see, last time the "news" was that news.com was running a story about the case. This time, the "news" is that embedded.com is running a story about the case. The case itself is hardly news -- it's been around since April of 2005. Well, the real case is still older, but that's when they appealed to the Supreme Court.

      Next week, it'll be news again -- and with a lot of luck they might find a link that's actually informative [typepad.com]. The

  • by IWannaBeAnAC ( 653701 ) on Thursday November 30, 2006 @08:21PM (#17058906)

    'It looks to me at about the same level as I have a sensor on my garage door at the lower hinge ... and the raccoons are eating it. So I think of the brainstorm of putting it on the upper hinge.'

    Too late dude, I already patented that.

    • by Tackhead ( 54550 )
      > > 'It looks to me at about the same level as I have a sensor on my garage door at the lower hinge ... and the raccoons are eating it. So I think of the brainstorm of putting it on the upper hinge.'
      >
      > Too late dude, I already patented that.

      And to add insult to injury, Raccoon Mario flew up, ate the hinge, and sued both of you for patent infringement.

  • obvious (Score:5, Funny)

    by Rudisaurus ( 675580 ) on Thursday November 30, 2006 @08:21PM (#17058916)
    During oral arguments, Justice Breyer observed, 'It looks to me at about the same level as I have a sensor on my garage door at the lower hinge ... and the raccoons are eating it. So I think of the brainstorm of putting it on the upper hinge.'"
    Ah -- the old "raccoons eating the hinges" analogy.
  • Obligatory Bitch (Score:2, Insightful)

    by overshoot ( 39700 )
    I wonder how many people posted this one before it got accepted? After all, it only happened two freaking days ago with months of notice. It's so old the stories were in print papers yesterday, and the GrokLaw newspick that announces the official transcript [1] scrolled off the main page yesterday.

    I used to read /. for breaking news. Now it's just windy.

    [1] Courts are not known for haste in posting official transcripts. /. is, apparently, quite a bit slower.

    • by geekoid ( 135745 )
      "I used to read /. for breaking news. "

      hahahaha..... /. has NEVER been the place for breaking news.
    • Wrong complaint (Score:3, Insightful)

      by dereference ( 875531 )
      I'm no apologist, but indeed it was covered [slashdot.org] two days ago, and even before it started [slashdot.org] six months ago. If you're going to complain, you might want to focus on the fact that--if anything--it's a dupe, and in no way is it a piece of ignored old news as you suggest.
    • by Durrok ( 912509 )
      Also /. does not generate it's own content... users do. So unless someone submits the article it's never going to get posted. You want /. to be on the bleeding edge of the headlines? Submit fresh news stories when you find them.
    • Courts are not known for haste in posting official transcripts.

      Except for the Supreme Court, which posts its transcripts the same day. [supremecourtus.gov]

  • I'm confused... (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward
    The article says:

    Most major technology vendors would like to see the test done away with as they believe it would make it easier for them to fend off lawsuits from claimants accusing them of patent violations. Microsoft, IBM, and Cisco Systems are among the tech companies that have submitted briefs to the Supreme Court supporting KSR.

    Here I believe "the test" refers to the one mentioned earlier: "accepted test for showing that the plaintiff [patenter?]'s invention would have been obvious to an individual

    • Re:I'm confused... (Score:5, Informative)

      by Macadamizer ( 194404 ) on Thursday November 30, 2006 @08:50PM (#17059240)
      Perceptive post.

      Making it no longer necessary for patents to be non-obvious?

      Since there is already a statute that requires patents to be nonobvious -- 35 U.S.C. 103 -- it's unlikey that the courts are going to go in this direction.

      Shifting the burden of proof so that the patenter (not the alleged infringer) has to prove that the patent is non-obvious? I thought this was legally the status quo, though the quality of some patents would suggest practice differs for software...

      Once a patent is issued, it is presumed valid -- which means, it is presumed to be patentable subject matter (35 U.S.C. 101), novel (35 U.S.C. 102), nonobvious (35 U.S.C. 103), and enabled (35 U.S.C. 112). It is up to the person challenging the validity to show why a patent isn't patentable, isn't novel, is obvious, or is not enabled.

      I guess they could be trying to move away from the presumption of validity, in which case a patent owner would need to prove that the patent WAS valid in order to assert the patent (the opposite of what we have now). Maybe that's the way we want to go, to a European-style patent system. Personally I don't think it's the right way to go, but what do I know.

      Replacing the test with one that better accomplishes the same goal? (Somewhere there must be details of how this is tested, and they're not good?) I guess this seems most likely, given this quote: "I would say its [the lower court's?] test is meaningless," said Scalia. "It doesn't add anything to the question, 'Would a person of ordinary skill in this field have conceived of this idea?' "

      To show that an invention is "obvious," you need essentially need to show one or more pieces of prior art that, in combination, "anticipate" or disclose the invention seeking to be patented, and you must show some "motivation to combine" the art into a single invention. The criticisms typically focus either on the fact that the art must meet the standards for prior art -- which usually means a written record -- or that the motivation to combine factor is too nebulous.

      It is a tricky test; however, the test is an attempt to balance "hindsight" against wha is truely obvious. The problem is, almost every invention is "obvious" in hindsight -- the current obviousness test is an attempt to weed out hindsight.
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        Once a patent is issued, it is presumed valid -- which means, it is presumed to be patentable subject matter (35 U.S.C. 101), novel (35 U.S.C. 102), nonobvious (35 U.S.C. 103), and enabled (35 U.S.C. 112). It is up to the person challenging the validity to show why a patent isn't patentable, isn't novel, is obvious, or is not enabled.

        IMO, this is one of the real sticking points: right now, when somebody applies for a patent, they have to declare that they think it's novel. The patent examiner then loo

        • IMO, this is one of the real sticking points: right now, when somebody applies for a patent, they have to declare that they think it's novel. The patent examiner then looks to see if it look obvious (to them). The standard, at this point, however is only that the patent applicant has to show that the "preponderance of the evidence" is in their favor. Oh, and patent examiners virtually never look at anything except older patents and applications.

          Well, there is the affirmative duty for the patentee to disclos
          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            Well, there is the affirmative duty for the patentee to disclose anything that might be material to patentability.

            Not quite. They're obliged to disclose anything of which they're aware -- but they're not required to do any searching to find anything of which they weren't already aware. At least from what I've seen, most cite things they can't reasonably avoid (e.g. their own earlier patents, papers they've written, etc.) but darned little else. I've seen an "inventor" claim that he'd never read the da

    • The actual arguments presented in court were a bit cumbersome to understand without reading the briefs and such, but what I got from the arguments was that the Circuit Courts have (in the absence of guidance from the SCOTUS) devised their own test for figuring out whether or not something is obvious: in particular, they rely on there being a teaching, suggestion, or motivation to combine prior art in a particular way before they consider a new invention to be an "obvious" extension of the old one.

      This is,
  • by gravesb ( 967413 ) on Thursday November 30, 2006 @08:39PM (#17059142) Homepage
    Hopefully, the court won't go so far as to create a new standard, just rule that the current one is not Constitutional. That would force Congress to write a new patent standard, which is who should be deciding the issue. Patents haven't become high viz enough to be a campaign issue, but I'd love to see an advisory panel of both industry and academic representatives formed to create a better system, and then have Congress vote on that.
    • Our newly welcomed new law making overlords of course.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Macadamizer ( 194404 )
      Hopefully, the court won't go so far as to create a new standard, just rule that the current one is not Constitutional. That would force Congress to write a new patent standard, which is who should be deciding the issue. Patents haven't become high viz enough to be a campaign issue, but I'd love to see an advisory panel of both industry and academic representatives formed to create a better system, and then have Congress vote on that.

      I'm not convinced that our congresscritters would be able to come up with
      • by Dunbal ( 464142 )
        'm not convinced that our congresscritters would be able to come up with any more competant test for obviousness than the one we already have!

              The current system:

              Oooh look, you've given me a LOT of money. OBVIOUSLY you must be right, and I should do what you say...
    • Patents haven't become high viz enough to be a campaign issue, but I'd love to see an advisory panel of both industry and academic representatives formed to create a better system, and then have Congress vote on that.

      One of the important lessons we learned from the european fight over software patents [no-lobbyists-as-such.com] is that there are companies and patent lawyers that are willing to "invest" heavily in lobbying for extending patentable subject matter.

      If this issue is decided by Congress, I am sure that the many lobbyi

  • I am the lawyer representing Procyon Lotor and instruct you to cease any and all mention of his "Top Hinge Detectomatic Mechanism" in your case. My client is the sole innovator of this device and trust that you will respect his pending patent.

    Yes we have prior art in the form of a maple limb which you will see was chewed in precisely the same manner as said invention.

    Sincerely,
    Miguel Sanchez
  • by darkonc ( 47285 ) <stephen_samuel@b ... m ['n.c' in gap]> on Thursday November 30, 2006 @09:41PM (#17059792) Homepage Journal
    In the arguments, it was pointed out that there are already SCOTUS decisions that indicate that there is more to sustaining a patent than just proving that it is novel*. The problem is that the federal (patent) circuit hasn't been paying attention to these rulings -- part of the fight is whether or not it would be distruptive to simply force the courts and patent examiners to pay attention to the existing SCOTUS authorities that they've been studiously ignoring for the last 20 years.

    * (( in my mind, the current test, is really just a reformulation of the 'novel' test, because if you can prove that it isn't novel (new), then it won't pass the current 'obvious' test, and if you can prove it doesn't pass the 'obvious' test, then you've just proved that it's not 'novel'.))

  • by stinerman ( 812158 ) on Thursday November 30, 2006 @09:53PM (#17059918)
    It looks to me at about the same level as I have a sensor on my garage door at the lower hinge ... and the raccoons are eating it. So I think of the brainstorm of putting it on the upper hinge.


    Ahh, this is quite obvious, but what about putting it on the upper hinge USING A COMPUTER? Doing any mundane thing is magically nonobvious when you're using a computer or doing it on the Internet.
  • Justice Breyer observed, 'It looks to me at about the same level as I have a sensor on my garage door at the lower hinge ... and the raccoons are eating it. So I think of the brainstorm of putting it on the upper hinge.'"

    Justice Thomas: "What's a hinge?"

  • by mavenguy ( 126559 ) on Thursday November 30, 2006 @11:15PM (#17060604)
    Standard disclaimer: I'm not a lawyer, less a Supreme Court expert, but I am a former patent examiner.

    The the definitive previous case by the SCOTUS on the interpretation of obviousness [cornell.edu] is GRAHAM v. JOHN DEERE CO. [findlaw.com] in which the Court basically concluded that the 1952 enactment of section 103 of the patent statute was basically a codification of a line of judicial opinions going back into the 19th century (with the exception of a 1941 Supreme Court opinion that appeared to introduce a "flash of genius" test that the new law seemed to overrule in the last sentence of section 103). The "test" that this article mentions is the "suggestion" and "motivation" showings that the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (CAFC) and its predecessor, the Court of Customs and Patent Appeals (CCPA) developed since the Graham decision was handed down in 1969.

    The CCPA only controlled appeals from the PTO, which, of course, affected what claims would be allowed. When the issued patents were challenged by accused infringers, the appeals were decided by the regular Federal Circuit courts, which didn't follow the CCPA. In 1982, responding to complaints from patentees that the law was not uniformly applied the CAFC was formed by merging the CCPA with another court and was given exclusive appellate jurisdiction for all patent appeals, and they took their view of obviousness with them.

    Now, usually the SCOTUS is pursuaded to review areas of law where there is a diversion of opinions on the law among the various federal circuits; here, there is, by the exclusive CAFC jurisdiction only one, yet the case was selected for review. I haven't seen a transcript of the hearing; it is still possible that the CAFC's "suggestion/motivation" test will survive and this case will be decided narrowly on the facts of the case, but it looks like, even if they do survive it will be in a less severe form than has been.

    However, even if they strike down the CAFC's standard I don't think there will be a big impact on the quality of patents being issued, other factors being equal, since the main problem is the often that the prior art made of record is inadequate. Nevertheless, it would be easier to make sustainable rejections, since more prior art references will be available.
  • Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday November 30, 2006 @11:38PM (#17060768)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • The issue at hand. (Score:3, Informative)

    by StikyPad ( 445176 ) on Friday December 01, 2006 @12:20AM (#17061070) Homepage
    Since I've seen plenty of articles on this, but none describing exactly what's at issue in this case, I did some searching and found this link [harrispatents.com] to the Petitioner's Brief. [PDF Warning]

    Apparently, an old patent existed for adjustible gas pedals, such that the pedal could be moved to suit the size of the driver. Additionally a second patent existed for a gas pedal which was linked to an Electronically Controlled Throttle (ECT). Teleflex then apparently patented a brake pedal which used a combination of the two technologies, which is, I think, about as obvious as it gets, and then sued KSR Int'l for infringement.

    I also found this NYT article [nytimes.com] on the subject, which explains the case, and how such idiotic patents are allowed to stand.
  • by bmo ( 77928 ) on Friday December 01, 2006 @01:20AM (#17061548)
    I for one welcome our lower hinge sensor eating raccoon overlords.

    --
    BMO

I tell them to turn to the study of mathematics, for it is only there that they might escape the lusts of the flesh. -- Thomas Mann, "The Magic Mountain"

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