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Patent Law Could Get Huge Overhaul Under New Bill

JIM ABRAMS   02/28/11 08:48 AM ET   AP

Patent Law

WASHINGTON — The patent system hasn't changed much since 1952 when Sony was coming out with its first pocket-size transistor radio, and bar codes and Mr. Potato Head were among the inventions patented. Now, after years of trying, Congress may be about to do something about that.

The Senate is taking up the Patent Reform Act, which would significantly overhaul a 1952 law and, supporters say, bring the patent system in line with 21st century technology of biogenetics and artificial intelligence. Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, hails it as "an important step toward maintaining our global competitive edge."

Congress has been trying for well over a decade to rewrite patent law, only to be thwarted by the many interested parties – multinational corporations and small-scale inventors, pharmaceuticals and Silicon Valley companies – pulling in different directions. Prospects for passing a bill now, however, are promising.

The Senate bill is sponsored by Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., Hatch and another top Republican on the panel, Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa. The committee voted 15-0 in early February to send the legislation to the full Senate.

The overhaul is long overdue. It now takes the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office about three years to process a patent application. There are about 1.2 million applications pending – 700,000 waiting consideration and another 500,000 somewhere in the process. The patent office says it received about 483,000 applications in 2009 and granted about 192,000 patents.

"Hundreds of thousands of patent applications are stalled" at the patent office, Leahy said. "Among those is the application for the next great invention."

The most sweeping, and controversial, change is the transition from a first-to-invent application system to a first-to-file system that is used by every other industrialized nation, but has been opposed by independent inventors. It comes with an enhanced grace period to protect inventors who publicly disclose their inventions before seeking patents.

Companies or individuals seeking patents in multiple countries are confronted by a different set of rules in this country, said Bill Mashek of Coalition for 21st Century Patent Reform, a group that represents big companies like General Electric, Pfizer and 3M. "It puts us at a disadvantage globally."

The bill would create a nine-month "first window" post-grant procedure to allow challenges to patents that should not have been issued and to cut down on litigation and harassment of patent owners by improving the review system for challenges. It provides more certainty to damage calculations.

It also gives the patent office authority to set its own fees at a level that will give it enough funds to reduce its backlog of applications. It requires that smaller businesses continue to get a 50 percent reduction in fees and creates a new "micro-entity" class – with a 75 percent reduction – for independent inventors who have not been named on five or more previously filed applications and have gross incomes not exceeding 2.5 times the average. The standard fee for filing a patent is now $1,090, with additional maintenance fees over the life of the patent.

In a change from current law, tax strategies could not be patented.

Leahy's office lists a diverse group of supporters, including major drug companies, IBM, the AFL-CIO, the Association of American Universities, Caterpillar and USPIRG.

One reason supporters are optimistic about the bill's prospects this year is that courts have dealt with some of the more contentious issues involving lawsuits and damage awards.

"When we started these efforts many years ago, we faced a grim landscape where patent lawsuits threatened to stifle the pace of innovation and shut down our factories," David Simon, associate general counsel for Intel Corp., told the House Judiciary Committee. "Today, the scenario has changed drastically."

Testifying in February on behalf of the Coalition for Patent Fairness, a group of high-tech companies, Simon credited the change to Supreme Court and other federal court rulings dealing with such practices as venue shopping where litigants sued in courts known for handing out large damage awards.

Simon's coalition, however, has not endorsed the Senate bill. In a statement, it said the bill still needs to do more "to lessen the growing burden of abusive and unjustified patent infringement claims."

A group of nine organizations representing small businesses, start-ups and independent inventors was more forthright in its opposition, saying in a letter to senators that the first-to-file system would have "unique adverse effects" on its constituents.

"The bill favors multinational and foreign firms over start-up firms seeking an initial foothold in U.S. domestic markets, and favors market incumbents over new entrants with disruptive new technologies," said the letter signed by groups such as American Innovators for Patent Reform and the U.S. Business and Industry Council.

Louis J. Foreman, publisher of Inventors Digest and chief executive of Enventys, a Charlotte, N.C., product design and engineering firm that has helped develop and file some 400 patents, said the Senate bill will help give independent inventors the two things they need most in applying for a patent: speed and certainty.

Foreman discounted the argument that first-to-file puts the small-scale investor at a disadvantage to the big corporation. "An independent inventor is so much more spontaneous," he said, "I'll outrun a big company any day of the week."

___

Online:

U.S. Patent and Trademark Office: http://www.uspto.gov

Patent Reform Act: http://tinyurl.com/47kf23y

Coalition for 21st Century Patent Reform: http://www.patentsmatter.com/

Coalition for Patent Fairness: http://patentfairness.org

American Innovators for Patent Reform: http://www.aminn.org/

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WASHINGTON — The patent system hasn't changed much since 1952 when Sony was coming out with its first pocket-size transistor radio, and bar codes and Mr. Potato Head were among the inventions pa...
WASHINGTON — The patent system hasn't changed much since 1952 when Sony was coming out with its first pocket-size transistor radio, and bar codes and Mr. Potato Head were among the inventions pa...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
didereaux
The Flying Spaghetti Monster is my Lord & Saviour!
08:31 AM on 03/01/2011
Will this re-write of the patent laws be good for us? Ask yourself to name just one major bill passed in the last 30 years that has been more beneficial to the people of this nation than to special interests(generally BIG special interests). Next read a list of the members on the Senate committee proposing this, and ask yourself if you would trust them to look after a piece of garbage.

This only speeds the process of patents by allowing less detail in the description, less research for priors, and MORE chance that it would land in court where a small company or individual would be unable to sustain the cost of winning. Just another gift for our unbenevolent oligarchy of CEOs.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
studmoose
This Micro-Bio Intentionally Left Blank
08:30 AM on 03/01/2011
What... Fictitious People like "Perez Hilton" won't be able to get a Trademark on the name PEREZ?

What... Folks like Sir Richard Branston won't be able to Trademark 'VIRGIN' and sue prior users?

What kinds of change?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
studmoose
This Micro-Bio Intentionally Left Blank
08:28 AM on 03/01/2011
What... Large Companies won't get a free pass on getting a patent, like Apple?

What... Individuals who invent energy saving devices won't get denied in favor of Big Energy?

What kind of change?
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WoodsideCraig
Author of the blog "The Weiler Psi"
09:21 PM on 02/28/2011
Since this congress and president are basically slaves to the large corporations, I don't think for a moment that this patent law will be good for us.
04:14 PM on 02/28/2011
I'm skeptical about whose interests this rewrite is really going to serve. I have a hard time believing corporate influence hasn't corrupted this process like it has every other piece of well-meaning government legislation recently. Maybe I'm just cynical and paranoid, but they've already demonstrated with copyright law that they value corporate desires over the individual citizen's interests, so how can you trust them to do the right thing with patent law?
04:09 PM on 02/28/2011
They want to change things so that the first person or company to file for a patent beats out the person or company that actually invented what is being patented?

All I can say is that if Orrin Hatch and Chuck Grassley are for this....you know it can't be good for the American people.
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loki
Better to die fighting, than live on knees
02:45 PM on 02/28/2011
If I understand correctly , one reason big companies like IBM, and the Drug companies are happy with the proposed changes, many which are not listed in this article, is because it would allow them to retain patent rights for years past the normal patent term. So drug companies could keep generic companies from making affordable medications, and IBM could keep others from making affordable computer parts. Its a win win for everyone except the consumer. Which is nothing new in our ivy Greed capitalistic country.
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12:38 PM on 02/28/2011
Before we seek to improve the application process, we need to reconsider the entire issue of "what is patentable."

For instance, there is a well-known site for tracking dollar bills ("wheresgeorge.com") which lets you type in the serial-number of a note and find out where other people have previously recorded its presence. The site now says, "US Patent Pending."

Blink.

If there is -anything- about a web-site that is a front-end for a dollar bill database that is actually "new and novel and not obvious to a person skilled in the trade," then it utterly defies me (as "a person who IS skilled in the trade") what such a thing could possibly be. But there it is... "patent pending." And I am sure that, two or three years from now, a patent will be granted. (So, if you are dreaming of starting up a dollar-bills database of your own, "you better watch out, and you better not cry.")

The world of commerce is fouled with useless and pointless patents. I mean, let's face it: imagine you are a patent examiner. Every minute of every day, it's a new application. You don't know what the hell they're talking about. You spend five minutes doing your internal version of "googling it" during your first weeks on the job before you say, "what the hell," grab your rubber stampy and start "stampying." Let the courts sort it all out.
01:25 PM on 02/28/2011
I read recently some company got a patent for associating gps data with business address information. Their bright idea- a data base look-up!
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09:07 AM on 03/01/2011
Exactly so. And IBM once got a patent on a trivial algorithm that I first read about in a college textbook written a full fifteen years before.

The existing patent system places a truly impossible load upon the examiners. "What the hell do they know, and why the hell should they care?" Rubber-stamp them just as quickly as you possibly can and shove them out the door, 'cuz they're still pouring into the other doorway faster. Those letters-patent amount to someone saying (perhaps, quite earnestly... I =don't= mean to demean these people or to make fun of them...) "looks good to me."

There is no realistic procedure (e.g. peer review?) to determine whether an idea is patentable, and even if you do get a patent, it's entirely your job to enforce it. The "innocent infringement" defense is pretty darned easy to make. What's realistically gonna happen is that you're both going to rack up a bunch of legal fees, then you're gonna settle (you have no choice), and the lawyers are gonna take two-thirds of that. In other words, "why bother?" Trade secrets work better.
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Klarsonent
Semi-retired landlady, small business entrepreneur
10:43 AM on 02/28/2011
I have an invention that I never could afford to get off the ground. My son-in-law has several - with the same scenario. I had one company who was interested in my invention - but they wanted a prototype (which I couldn't afford to pursue). I wonder how many people are out there who are in the same predicament.
01:18 PM on 02/28/2011
Your situation is not unique, while the cost of patenting is higher than it should be there are plenty of other stepss in developing a product. However as far as the need to prototype and develop a product...well that is the work of inventing. Too many inventors think their idea is all they need, its just not so..Its a very small part of getting t reality. There really are plenty of inventions floating around so if you want to get somewhere with yours, you have to prove it out. That is a process that includes designing and prototyping and either you know how or you have to pay for it.
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loki
Better to die fighting, than live on knees
02:57 PM on 02/28/2011
yup, i have millions of ideas, just proving that one of them is worth a darn is the problem. That is where prototyping comes in. make it work, then you have something to prove your idea is valid.
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Klarsonent
Semi-retired landlady, small business entrepreneur
11:31 AM on 03/01/2011
Thanks. I already found this out. And I still can't afford to do a prototype.
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loki
Better to die fighting, than live on knees
02:48 PM on 02/28/2011
you might be lucky. I know someone who spend tens of thousands of dollars on his "sure thing" invention. Building the prototypes and taking it to everyone in the industry. He is a lot poorer now and hates to talk about his " sure thing" that was going to make him a millionaire..

But, I give him credit, he tried when everyone around him told him he was nuts. And who knows, maybe it would have been the next biggest thing ever. After all, dont we all need a remote controlled Duck retriever for when your duck hunting?
10:35 AM on 02/28/2011
This is the kind of law a lawyer at a patent mill would write. Lawyers want to be able to create patent walls or gates. They don't know how to actually build anything. So this so-called reform gets around that little problem.

Corporations like this because it works for anti-competitive patent filings. Large corporations are slow to get products out will use the patent laws to create floods of patents to block the competition. The goal is to slow down innovation.

Orin Hatch is a huge supporter of H-1b work visas which are a form of federal wage suppression. So keep that in mind.
10:18 AM on 02/28/2011
The real question is why does our federal government interfere in the market for ideas. Patents were meant for devices, physical things. Today we allow patents for what is essentially math.
01:14 PM on 02/28/2011
I agree that software patents are basically patents on mere ideas not actual products. There are software patents granted on nothing more than flow charts or psuedo code. These are completely bogus.

Because we are dealing with machines, software patents need to be a lot more precise- programming language, runtime and hardware environment and of course actual code.
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Kache
Toodlum, wake up, I hear a prowler downstairs
09:03 PM on 02/28/2011
Wrong. Patents are never about things, they are always about ideas.

Patent applications require a "preferred embodiment" of the idea being patented simply as proof that the idea can be put into practice. A "preferred embodiment" does not need to be a physical "thing", it can be the result of the application of the idea. That has been true since day one in the world of patents.

What is described in the "preferred embodiment" is not at all what is being patented. In fact, what is being patented are the "claims" made in the patent about the originality of the idea as described in the disclosure and exemplified in the "preferred embodiment". Indeed, by the time the idea makes it to market, the product may be quite different from the embodiment in the patent, that's why it is called the "preferred" embodiment.

Formulas have always been patentable, and were patented in the first year. So-called "math" patents are nothing new, the SSL encryption used by your browser for secure transactions was patented in 1983 and it is nothing but a mathematical formula that produces a unique result.
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loki
Better to die fighting, than live on knees
02:55 PM on 02/28/2011
interesting post. basically, there are misnomers in the above huffpo article? Like patent law was changed last in 94, not 52 .... patent extensions and more. All under the guise of GATT treaty?

Thanks for the post.