Patent Office Agrees To Check Into All That Prior Art On The Eolas Patent
from the oh,-look-at-that... dept
The latest in the Eolas patent saga is that someone at the Patent Office has finally agreed to review the patent based on stacks and stacks of prior art that people have been finding. Amazingly, the Patent Office appears to have responded quickly (though, they don't say how long it will take for a new decision on the patent) to the requests for a re-examination of the patent. There's a quote from the USPTO's deputy commissioner for patent examination policy saying that this was an "extraordinary situation" which necessitated the quick response. The problem with this statement is that it's not an extraordinary situation. In fact, it's an increasingly common situation, where silly patents are getting the stamp of approval every day - and then used to hold other companies up for extortion, rather than for encouraging innovation.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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What happens if a company has their patent revoked
I'm not sympathizing with these parasites--just want to know what to expect when they get what they deserve--nothing.
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Re: What happens if a company has their patent rev
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No Subject Given
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Re: No Subject Given
I'm sure that the intention is for the benefit of individual inventors. Say a guy in his garage invents something like a new feature to be built into cars, which would take the resources of General Motors to bring to market. The patent gives him the rights to the invention whether he can produce it himself or not, and he can take those rights and try to license them to GM. (In fact, wasn't one of Lemelson's big patents something for intermittent wipers?)
The current problems with patents lie not in the patent system itself, but in how it's being applied today. The situation is as if I file for a patent on intermittent wipers today, and nobody in the patent office notices that they've been built into cars for decades.
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