Lemelson's Legacy: Great Inventor Or Patent Hoarder?
from the take-your-pick dept
It seems like we can barely go a day without coming across some story of ridiculous patent hoarding by a company that clearly didn't do anything innovative or new, but which is holding plenty of other companies (who actually did innovate and did bring a product to market) for ransom. If you ask the folks at these patent hoarding companies (often made up entirely of one or two lawyers) where they got the idea for this business plan, many would likely point to Jerome Lemelson, the well known patenter who turned those patents into millions of dollars from companies. The Associated Press has an in-depth look at Jerome Lemelson's legacy, and the fact that many consider him a complete fraud. Throughout the entire process of getting plenty of large companies to pay him for ideas that it seems quite likely they came up with outside of Lemelson's patents, he kept pushing forward claiming he needed to win these lawsuits to get the respect he deserved. It's hard to see how sitting on the sidelines, waiting for someone else to do something innovative, and then suing is deserving of respect, however. As you read through the cases, it seems clear that Lemelson's strategy is being followed by so many companies today, as a form of legalized extortion. Companies feel they need to pay up a settlement fee because it's cheaper than going to court, especially with the risk of a loss -- which, with a jury trial, is something that can certainly happen. In Lemelson's case, even judges looking over his claims admitted that it was clear he was "abusing" the patent system -- and yet, his successes have made it the norm today. Lemelson's patents were often based simply on ideas, rather than anything he implemented -- leading one of his critics to refer to him as a "science fiction writer" rather than an inventor, and claiming that "crediting Lemelson with machine vision is like 'saying Jules Verne invented space travel.'"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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At what point...
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It's Serial Patent Abuse
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an possiblity of getting a list of his patent port
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Subject
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Re: Subject
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Possible direction...
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Second part of article
The best part is that the company that sued really didn't need to do so, for the most part its founder was just angry about Lemelson claiming to "invent" stuff he didn't.
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Lemelson story
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LEMELSON
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Re: LEMELSON
cheers,
eric lemelson
503-951-7195
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Re: Re: LEMELSON
My father's story is a bit more complex than last year's AP article attempted to illustrate - in fact it was a pretty lame effort. The reporter was apparently looking to boost his career, and after this sensationalist piece was published he got what he wanted - a promotion.
Anyone who knew my father realizes that portraying him as submarine patent king is bullshit - that it serves corporate America quite well, but says nothing about his career, his vision, the body of his work, or his commitment to the individual American inventor. But it is alot easier to smear him than to tell the true story. Perhaps that will change with time.
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Re: Re: Re: LEMELSON
Do you have your dad's inventive genes?
Just curious.
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Re: Re: Re: LEMELSON
> portraying him as submarine patent king is bullshit
Lemme see. Files patent applications in 1954 and 1956. Slows down their progress so that they aren't granted till 1963. Add 17 years, and they should still expire in 1980.
From the article
> While battling the Japanese, Hosier had also started sending
> form letters to hundreds of companies in 1989, accusing
> them of infringing Lemelson's machine vision and bar code
> patents.
That's *THIRTY-FIVE YEARS AFTER THE ORIGINAL PATENT APPLICATION*. It'a also *TWENTY-SIX YEARS AFTER THE ORIGINAL PATENTS WERE GRANTED*. Patents are supposed to last 17 years. Unless you claim that these statements of fact are outright lies, he was gaming the system; perfectly legally I might add, but I question the ethics. If you claim this isn't submarining and gaming the system, then what exactly do you call it???
Mr. Lemelson was a small-time inventor who did make a few useful inventions, and would've retired being financially comfortable from his real inventions. However, he wasn't satisfied with enough, and wanted more, more, more. The result was that he was always going after big targets with deep pockets. When you attack enough big guys, you'll eventually run into some who will fight back, and one who will win.
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Re: Lemelson story
The companys that finally exposed him (Symbol Technologies and Cognex) are not at all the largest companys in the world. In fact, Lemelson had a larger budget to defend himself with than they did, due to all of the money he had extorted. His donations to schools and hospitals doesn't excuse his behavior. He was very generous with other peoples money.
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Re: Re: Lemelson story
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Spoiling it for the rest of us...
Me, I'd like to see the patent process include an affidavit that you actually got a (however imperfectly) working prototype.
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Get the USPTO to disallow continuation filings or
But more important: continuation filings are really a problem and should disallowed. And withdrawal of any application ought to cause a delayed publication of the application by the USPTO after 17/2 years (after the filing date).
The whole society pays for the prolonged time it takes to get a patent evaluated. Look at what happens to the price of a medicin when it goes off patent: Typically it drops to less than 1/2 ... just count the billions we all spend too much.
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Re: Re: LEMELSON
Sorry, I just found your comment==some 3 years later.Sorry.
My phone number is 202.787.3936
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Re: Re: LEMELSON
Sorry, I just found your comment==some 3 years later.Sorry.
My phone number is 202.787.3936
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Re: Re: Re: LEMELSON
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Re: Re: Re: LEMELSON
Your father was a great American and a mensch. Ignore the lies.
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