Patent Reform Bill Unable To Clean Up Patent Mess 92
First to submit writes "Ars Technica analyzes the Patent Reform Act that has passed the House and is being debated in the Senate. Unfortunately for those longing for real, meaningful patent reform, the bill comes up short in some significant ways. 'Despite the heated rhetoric on both sides, it is unclear if the legislation will do much to fix the most serious flaws in the patent system. A series of appeals court rulings in the 1990s greatly expanded patentable subject matter, making patents on software, business methods, and other abstract concepts unambiguously legal for the first time.'"
To be fair... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:To be fair... (Score:5, Insightful)
A patented method to fix the patent system (Score:1)
seems to be the only way then... (AI applied to business)
Presentation Oct 2005 http://www.cwi.nl/pr/CWIiB/2005/ [www.cwi.nl]
Abstracts (doc format) [www.cwi.nl]
A.I.Re: (Score:1)
Many people with many years in the software industry still see software patentability as valid, so please stop being condescending.
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Because the software industry doesn't just employ programmers. There are also lawyers, many of whom depend on the existence of software patents to run their mansions and pay people to scrape the barnacles off the bottoms of their yachts. Think of all the poor servants who'd lose their jobs if software patents became illegal, and those lawyers were reduced to living in houses without proper servant quarters, garag
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Now, you could make an argument that it still shouldn't be patentable (but do you really think copyright is preferable? 20 years vs. effectively indefinite, that's a great choice) or even be protected IP at all. But in that world, software would
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Translation: we will never see useful patent reform because it is not in the best interests of the entrenched powers. You're probably right, unfortunately. That's why representative democracy doesn't work. If you really want to remove the tyranny of the aristocracy, there's only one way to do it: a direct democracy. Of course, then you get the tyranny of the majority. Not sure which is worse. Either way, a signifi
Re:Its just about control. (Score:4, Funny)
By the way, I have a patent on this form of government. :-D Just kidding.
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People who know what they're doing seems to be the prerequisite to doing anything right. I'm not so sure even a tyranny would work, because if the tyrant knew what he was doing, he'd know that absolute power corrupts absolutely and would divest himself of it immediately.
Good, honest peo
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What does it matter if the "people who vote" know what they're doing if their votes aren't going to have any impact on who gets "elected"?
And how will the people who vote "know what they're doing" if the information they get is tailored by a team of marketing professionals who work for those in power?
The Internet is the only thing preventing complete control of all media, and there are still people here who don't think Net Neutrality is important.
Pe
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You honestly don't want observant Jews (or people who work on Saturday, and can't spare the time to sit in front of a computer for hours for the entire process, or the specific ten minutes for a single issue) to vote? That doesn't sound encouraging.
Ultimately, I don't care for it. IMO, governments draw their legitimate autho
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Those problems are trivially solved, though. Just rerun the debates on C-Span throughout the week. Let people vote on the issues at any time during that week. The purpose for leaving ten minutes for voting is not to force the vote into ten minutes. The purp
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That's right, you can't, because it's not easy.
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The 'something' will of course mean 'make things worse'.
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Heat - burns
Water - drowns
Rocks - are hard
Here's your common sense, and you won't be seeing any lawsuits with title "I was burnt by my HOT coffee, someone else is liable!".
ie (Score:5, Funny)
Humpty Dumpty Patent Reform (Score:2)
Patent Reform had a great fall
All the King's horses
And all the King's men
Couldn't put Patent Reform together again.
So let's start over.
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It's a step in the right direction rather than a complete fix.
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It is also somewhat unclear how long those court rulings are going
CAN-SPAM II (Score:1)
Constituents don't pay the bills (Score:5, Insightful)
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only good thing (Score:4, Informative)
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Agreed. The only real reform would be require the following changes:
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Yes, but it would cost more to administer, and the USPTO is arranged as a profit center, not to promote the advancement of science and the useful arts.
Oh, wait...
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Grant "Software" patent just don't enforce them (Score:1, Insightful)
True, and here is the problem.
You can't tell from the claims whether something is a "software" patent or not. Any software patent claim I can engineer to be a piece of hardware. The problem is that there really aren't clear claims that scream software (as from Beugrard claims, which are secondary claims anyhow [never could spell that]) . You can't ban all method claim as that woul
extensions is a fundamental point of the system (Score:2)
While it's true that high-tech patents last too long, technology is also a field where many inventions are easy to implement once you know about them. Without patents, the R&D you do is automatically shared by the whole industry -- which reduces your motivation to do R&D.
Regarding extensions, a major point of the patent system (as opposed to making everything a trade secret) is to encourage everyone to publish their inventions so others can build up on them. Patents (in theory) only cover actual
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The vast majority of R&D in the computer industry happened prior to software patents becoming legal.... Also, in a way, by patenting something, you are required to share everything with the whole industry. They just can't i
ZOMG! ineffective legislation by congresscrittirs (Score:1)
Do we really need patents? (Score:1)
Patents and copyrights are intended to prevent people from free-loading off of the work of others, and I think it is pretty clear when t
Re:Do we really need patents? (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't see why they can't just write a law establishing that you own your ideas
How on earth can someone "own" an idea? Better yet, why would you think it's a good idea to try to pretend that someone owns an idea?
Patents and copyrights are intended to prevent people from free-loading off of the work of others
That fundamental misunderstanding is part of many of the problems we are seeing with the patent system today: patents exist to give you the first stab at exploiting your ideas. The notion that once someone has an idea it's theirs and no one can ever use it again is just plain ridiculous.
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Unless, of course, I arrive at the same idea independently.
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That's what you said, not what I said. All I said was that there is no need for patents. You read "infinitely broad" into my comment, and that wasn't what I meant. Obviously any law would include exemptions, limitations, and other applicable criteria.
"How on earth can someone "own" an idea?"
How can someone own anything? Ownership is a legal construction. Owning ideas is no different from owning land
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Again, why? Why do you want to pretend that ideas are physical objects? Ideas have no limited lifespan, thousands of people will routinely come up with the same idea, why would the first person to do so have any sort of absolute claim to it?
Copyright is currently granted without governmental approval, and it works better than the patent system does.
There most certainly is government approval, it's just automatic. From what I c
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Nor does land. .
"why would the first person to do so have any sort of absolute claim to it?"
Again, you said that they should have an absoulte claim to it, not me. I just said they should have a claim to it.
"The concepts of "fairness" or "justice" have nothing to do with this - lots of things are unfair, we don't pass laws to correct them all."
We certinally try to! That's the whole reason we have laws! Why do you think we have them?
"If I'm remembering this correctly, the
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Yes they can. If Alice and Bob each independently create the exact same thing, then each one of them can get a copyright on it, and each can do whatever they like without infringing on the other. This is because copyrights do not require novelty, like patents do. It's unlikely, the more complex a work is, but the law does permit it. The main thing with copyrig
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Which is what I was saying, except I would say that they created two distinct copyrightable works, which happen to be identical. My point was that one of the main problems with the patent system - granting of obvious, broad patents that prevent others from doing common things they arrive at independently of the
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Automatically granted copyrights do not make any sense at all; it's a terrible idea.
Copyrights are meant to serve the public good by encouraging the c
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Compaq used the cleanroom design [wikipedia.org] technique to determine the operating parameters and logic, and then re-implemented those specs with an original package.
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Re:Do we really need patents? (Score:4, Informative)
This statement is factually false. Go and read the US Constitution if you want to know what patents and copyrights are actually intended to accomplish.
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I don't see why they can't just write a law establishing that pi is 3.
But seriously, you own your ideas as long as you keep them a secret. Once you reveal your idea (copying it into other peoples' brains) you can't own it. I don't mean it's not just or not desirable; I mean that it's not possible. You just transmitted it to someone, so you don't exclusively have it anymore, unless you're going to cut open other peoples' sk
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Well, they did [wikipedia.org], more or less, but those pesky mathematicians shot it down. Damn them and their irregular ways!
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That's just a weird statement, right there. "Intellectual property" is a terrible phrase, which is deliberately meant to confuse people. But basically, if anything, it would refer to a patent (or copyright, etc.) itself, and not the invention the patent pertains to, nor anything which embodies that patent, such as a tangible machine. So you seem to be saying that your gripe with patents is that there are federal
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I would like to point out the following message listed on the comment page:
"The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way."
Why would Slashdot claim that I own the comment I've posted here? There's certainly no scarcity of comments. That's an important question, and I encourage you to think about it.
"So you seem to be saying that you
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You've got me. They're often wrong. For example, my comments are in the public domain, and people frequently post works that they don't have rights to.
I suspect that they were trying to say that they don't make any claim on what people post here. If so, they could have worded it much better.
No, my gripe is federal regulation. I don't like the way that people have to submit an application to the patent office in order to have their intellectual
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Well, it's the courts who hear the patent law cases, not the patent office. If they are bad at it, t
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No, the PTO is staffed with patent law specialists. Even the examiners have to be well-versed in it. And the PTO does have administrative courts with ALJs; they hear some patent law cases. The Article III courts, OTOH, have to be more general, as they hear civil and criminal cases of every kind. Even the Federal Circuit isn't all that great at these things.
In fact, I don't believe that the patent system even produces fewer lawsuits
Campaign Finance Reform is the Key (Score:2, Insightful)
Tax Patents (Score:4, Insightful)
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Amen brother. Preach on!
Just as a "maintenance fee," a tax would encourage businesses to drop patents that are no longer immediately relevant to them.
I just wish it was "citizens" and not "businesses" that had the control of the patents, like the original writers of the laws intended.
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http://www.straightdope.com/columns/030919.html [straightdope.com]
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One has force of law, the other one doesnt. Can you guess which one?
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One has force of law, the other one doesnt.
While this is true, judicial interpretation is intended to interpret the original intent into a force of law.
And as much as it may sound otherwise, I am not trying to be funny by that statement.
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Instead, we got what should have been expected: the current crop of politicos embed their judges for their interpretations. Personally, making judgments against the Constitution should be an impeachable offense, but none of the congress wants to touch that one.
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Well, there is hope: The Change Congress Movement [change-congress.org]
Here's hoping it's not a false hope.
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=Smidge=
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Never happens (Score:2)
Technoliberation (Score:4, Insightful)
with the erasure of the last invidious border
when it remains for us to chart the attractors of thunder
and delineate the arrhythmias of drought
to reveal the molecular dialects of forest and savanna
as rich as a thousand human tongues
and to comprehend the deepest history of our passions
ancient beyond mythology's reach
So I declare that no corporation holds a monopoly on numbers
no patent can encompass zero and one
no nation has sovereignty over adenine and guanine
no empire rules the quantum waves
And there must be room for all at the celebration of understanding
for there is a truth which cannot be bought or sold
imposed by force, resisted
or escaped.
Greg Egan as Muteba Kazadi
Who has the biggest stick? (Score:5, Insightful)
Some real consideration should be given to getting rid of patents altogether. Really, do they serve any real usefulness other than the stuff of Big Corporate Sticks? It's way too expensive for the little guy to get a patent; still even more expensive for the little guy to defend his patent against VBCs that have deep pockets.
But, seriously, what would happen to the marketplace if patents were to be thrown out tomorrow? Would innovation cease? I don't think so. It would change for sure, but it may actually change for the better, giving the Little Guy an edge, a leg up, since he would not fear being crushed out of financial existence by VBCs.
Really, I don't know how the patent examiners could possibly be knowledgeable about all the various areas of mathematics, science, and technology that has grown exponentially since patents were created.
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While I admire and once subscribed to the opinion, "Do away with patents entirely," and for the same reasons as you present, you are neglecting one major drawback.
What precious little protection the little guy had from VBCs has evaporated when you remove patents. Corporate espionage is much easier to leverage when you are a VBC and much harder to defend against when you are a little guy. Without patents, little guys cannot protect their trade secrets effectively because they no longer have the government
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The classic argument is that without patent protection drug companies would not make the huge investments needed to create new drugs since they could be cloned the day after they went to market.
The answer IMO is not so much what should be allowed to be patented but rather for how long. The length of time needs to be tied to the cost of the invention so that this cost c
"Leverage" (Score:1)
Can we... (Score:1)
Patent threat to national security (Score:1)