As most engineers know, the U. S. patent system is intended
to protect the inventor's rights in an invention. A patent holder has exclusive rights to make, sell, or
license an invention for a limited period of time (currently 20 years). This is a compromise between two
extremes: the free-for-all extreme
in which no patent law exists and anyone who can figure out an invention can
copy it and make it without incurring development costs, and the
perpetual-monopoly extreme in which patents would last forever and nobody else
could ever make the invention.
Most compromises need adjusting as circumstances change, and
patent law is no exception.
According to U. S. Senator John Cornyn of Texas, one of the worst
current problems in patent law is the growing number of so-called "patent
trolls." Who qualifies as a
patent troll? It probably depends
on who you ask. If you ask someone
at Apple Computer, which is named as the defendant in more cases filed by
patent trolls than any other U. S. firm, Apple will probably tell you that a
patent troll is a person or organization that acquires a patent solely for the
purpose of suing a deep-pocketed firm such as Apple.
For that matter, any patent is nothing more than a license
to sue. This is because, at least
in the U. S., patent infringement is a violation of civil law, not criminal
law. But with full-blown patent
infringement cases complete with a jury costing upwards of $1 million, and
current laws that allow the plaintiff to conceal the details of the accusations
until later in the legal process, the defendant named in a patent troll's lawsuit
usually has only two choices:
(1) call the plaintiff's
bluff and go to trial, knowing you might lose, and even if you win it will cost
you a megabuck or more, or (2) settle out of court without seeing the details,
and write off the six-figure settlement expense as just a cost of doing
business.
Of course, patent trolls may view the situation
differently. Some legitimate
inventors do not have the financial backing to found a company in competition
with one of the big boys, and patent litigation may be their only hope of
profiting from their invention.
But if an individual or group clearly has no intention of making or
using the patented item, and is formed for the sole purpose of pursuing patent
litigation based on dubious claims, you can be fairly sure you are dealing with
a patent troll.
Sen. Cornyn's proposed changes would move the law in what he
thinks is a fairer direction. For
the first time, plaintiffs (i. e. patent trolls) would have to reveal their
accusations up front in enough detail so that the entity being sued could make
an informed decision as to the likelihood that a full-scale lawsuit would
succeed. With this and other
changes, the hope is that frivolous and baseless patent suits that amount to
little more than legalized blackmail would disappear from court dockets, while
leaving the more substantial cases in place.
Like any change in the law, the proposed legislation may
have unintended consequences. But
to find out what they are, we'd first have to pass it into law. Somewhat surprisingly, the ideas behind
the Republican Sen. Cornyn's proposal have been endorsed by President Obama,
and Cornyn cites the U. S. Senate as the main roadblock, which under the
control of the Democratic Party has so far not acted on the legislation. We have noted the sclerotic state of
Congress elsewhere, and will simply express here the hope that the Senate will
do the right thing and pass Sen. Cornyn's legislation, if it will do as much
good as he says it will.
One advantage to doing a blog for a long time (we observed
our eight-year anniversary a couple of weeks ago) is that you can note
long-term trends, and call for changes, and actually see them happen after a
while, sometimes. Back in 2006,
the first year of this blog, I discussed a patent issue not entirely unlike the
current one of patent trolls: the
situation of "submarine patents." Until 2000, the content of a patent filing was a deep secret
between the person who filed the patent application and the U. S. Patent and
Trademark Office. The secret was
revealed to the public at the end of the process, only after the patent was
issued, so some inventors became skilled in intentionally delaying the granting
of a patent in order to keep it secret until its contents became something
valuable. Then, the patent
submariner would allow the patent to issue and try to sue the pants off some
large firm that was profiting from a technology at least remotely related to
the now-surfaced patent.
According to Wikipedia, one of the most skilled
practitioners of this art was an independent inventor by the name of Jerome H.
Lemelson. Lemelson was without
question a clever and legitimate inventor, who clearly began his career as a
fruitful developer of original ideas which he licensed to various firms, mostly
in the areas of machine vision.
But as time went on, he developed habits which his critics began to
describe as filing for submarine patents, although Lemelson always denied the
accusations. He also became very
wealthy, and after his death his estate contributed to the formation of the
Lemelson Foundation with the purpose of encouraging invention and innovation by
individuals. The Foundation's National
Collegiate Inventors and Innovators Alliance (NCIIA) sponsors competitions and
grants to teams of college students and faculty members interested in
developing inventions, and has no doubt done a lot toward encouraging such
activities over the years since Lemelson's death in 1997. As Lemelson no doubt intended, any bad
memories or ill will created by his patent litigation activities during his
lifetime are fading in the light of the good his money is doing after his
passing.
As it happened, when I wrote about submarine patents in
2006, they were already passing from the scene, because in 2000 the Patent
Office began revealing the contents of most applications no longer than
eighteen months after filing. So
it is no longer possible to do the submarine-patent dodge today, at least in
the U. S.
If he were still around, Lemelson might not like the tone of
Sen. Cornyn's proposed changes to patent law. Lemelson always sided with the underdog in a patent fight,
and anything that would tend to make the independent inventor's lawsuits harder
to prosecute against major firms is something he would probably oppose. But law is inherently a balancing act,
and if the U. S. Senate sees fit to pass the anti-patent-troll legislation,
maybe in another eight years I can look back and see how well it did what it was
supposed to do. But don't hold
your breath.
Sources: Sen. John Cornyn's editorial "It's
time to stop patent abuse with bipartisan Senate support" appeared in the
Mar. 15, 2014 edition of the Austin
American-Statesman. I referred
to Wikipedia articles on Jerome H. Lemelson, submarine patents, patent trolls,
and the term of U. S. patents. The
NCIIA website is nciia.org.
Hi,
ReplyDeletePatent Trolls are least of the system problems. There is a complete level of skilled organized white collar criminal activity taking place inside of the USPTO. It is my experience that patent applications are confidential for at most 2 weeks before selected companies get them into their hands. The last US patent application I was involved with appeared to be intentionally block on orders within the USPTO from being formally entered into their system. This appeared to be so a competitor, who appeared to have cloned the application, could get their patent issued without mine being included as prior art. How extreme is the criminal activity? The interference appears it may have come from the Canadian government and involved the suspicious deaths of two prominent Texans (in the high tech field) and 5 attempts on my wife and my lives. The last attempt on my wife's life (attempted strangulation) with police report was last August 2013. The crime involves documents of public record and the attempted murder of key individuals was the only way to cover it up. Action upon police complaints sorry no such luck because it appears the key individuals behind the organized crime group have the enforcement agencies bought and paid for. David Kelly I can be reached at vagary9876@yahoo.ca