EFF Tells The Supreme Court How Obviousness Isn't Obvious When It Comes To Patents
from the it's-a-problem dept
We've been following the KSR v. Teleflex case for a while, as it's an important legal case concerning the future of the patent system. If you recall, it's a patent infringement lawsuit where one side is claiming that the patent is quite obvious and never should have been granted (patents are only supposed to be granted for ideas that are non-obvious to a skilled practitioner). In this case, it was taking two commonly used ideas and linking them together -- which plenty of people (including the defendant in the case) suggested was completely obvious. Many people stepped up to point out that there really isn't a test for obviousness, despite the requirements of the patent system. The court system currently uses prior art as the only test for obviousness -- but it's possible for an idea to be obvious without it having been written about in a journal or earlier patent. However, for years the patent office and the courts have disagreed, basically ignoring the "and" statement in the "new and non-obvious" requirement for getting a patent. Back in June, the Supreme Court agreed to hear the case, and now the EFF has stepped up and filed an amicus brief, pointing out the problems of the current obviousness test. As they say it, "has forced litigants to search through haystack upon haystack of technical knowledge for the exact needle in which someone, somewhere, bothers to state the obvious." When you need to "search through haystack upon haystack" to prove "obviousness," something seems wrong. Having a better test for obviousness makes a lot of sense. We've all heard too many stories of "obvious" ideas getting patents, and if the idea of the patent system is to promote new and novel ideas, we're all better off (well, perhaps not the patent attorneys) if obvious patents aren't granted.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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Tear it down
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Haystacks? Obviously.
Yet every bloody webdesigner (worth anything) on the planet knows that the more loops you make a user jump through, the less likely they are to do anything.
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Re: Haystacks? Obviously.
1-click has nothing to do with web design - it's rather clever application of the concept of cookies to internet shopping
Nothing spectacular, but not as bad as some MS patents
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Re: Re: Haystacks? Obviously.
I don't know if you mentioned this one before but the course management system known as Blackboard is suing people over a patent on having roles in courses i.e. having a student, faculty, or teaching assistant role in a bloody online course. Blackboard is not only crappy software, it is a monopoly trying to corn hole higher ed and bend over K-12.
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Re: Re: Haystacks? Obviously.
Sounds like web design.
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Re: Re: Re: Haystacks? Obviously.
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A proposed test for obviousness:
Ask 3 'expert practitioners' in the field how they would solve the 'problem'. If any of them suggest what the patent is trying to patent, it may be obvious. (Exact details of how many to ask and how many need to suggest it to be 'obvious' is not something I'm trying to suggest.. just the general idea of asking experts how they would solve/implement something.)
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Not so Common Sense --
Lay all the experts in a field end to end and they still wouldn't reach a conclusion.
The problem is that the idea of common sense is antithetical to the law. Lawyers see to that. Isn't it a fine example of the problem itself that even on this site, we're having trouble coming up with a definition of obvious, even though we'd all recognize "obvious" if we saw it?
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