What Kind Of Innovation Do Patents Encourage?
from the if-any-at-all dept
We've highlighted numerous studies that have shown how patents tend to hinder overall innovation, but there's no doubt that giving out monopolies may encourage different kinds of activities. Petra Moser's research comparing innovation in countries with patents to those without patents has shown that countries without patents tend to be just as innovative, but that the innovation takes different forms. Thus, patents tend to divert from the natural market of innovation to areas that are more easily "protectable." Whether or not that's actually "good" for progress is an open question. A while back, Stephen Kinsella posted a thought-provoking post from Prashant Singh Pawar examining how patents distort innovation incentives, based on a longer thesis he wrote up comparing "horizontal innovation" to "vertical innovation." Pawar's basic premise is that patents encourage "horizontal innovation" -- a totally different way of doing the same thing -- vs. "vertical innovation" -- building on what's been done before:So, I finally came up with the terms 'Horizontal innovation', and 'Vertical Innovation'. Horizontal Innovation is when a parallel technology is discovered (usually to avoid patent infringement). For example if a company develops a flying car using (say) hydrolic expansion, and they get a patent of it, another company develops (or has to develop) a flying car technology by using Thermo-plazma radiator engine. Both these technologies achieve the same end, they enable a car to fly, so this is horizontal innovation. This is what patent proponents talk about being squashed when they say innovation will be reduced when patents are removed. There will not be Google G1 phone,Blackberry and iPhone if there were no IP rights.It's an interesting theory, and it would be great to see some further research done to see if it's supported by the evidence. Of course, it also fits with what we've discussed in the past about the difference between invention (coming up with something new) and innovation (successfully bringing something to market such that people want it). Studies have shown over and over again that true innovation is an ongoing process, of continuing to build on what's come before, making it better and having it better serve the market. That is the sort of thing that we regularly see held back by patents -- it's the type of "vertical innovation" that Pawar is suggesting. Is society better off with a totally different type of flying car? Or are we better served by having lots more resources put towards making the flying car better serve our needs? I'd argue the latter, but would be interested to hear from people who argue the former.
Vertical innovation is when a technology is built top of another technology merely by adding a new element to it. For example if you develop a Car which can travel on water, and I take that car, and add a Sail to it to make it use wind then that's called a vertical innovation. With patents, only the patent holder can think of adding a sail on the boat-car and sell it, without patents, innovations will be done all over the world by every kind of boat and car enthusiast. There will be only one smart phone in this world, but it will be having numerous variants, such as a Google gPhone (synced with google services), a Microsoft mPhone (synced with microsoft services), and so on.
Patents promote horizontal innovation, but restrict vertical innovation. Without patents we will have more vertical innovation but less horizontal innovation.
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Filed Under: horizontal innovation, innovation, inventions, patents, vertical innovation
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Only one kind..
As in, judging economic growth and stability by how many patents a nation/sector is pumping out.
If you don't have enough numbers, you're obviously failing.
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Meh.
Horizontal Innovation is when a parallel technology is discovered (usually to avoid patent infringement).
Oh great, he's reinventing the wheel in order to explain 'reinventing the wheel in order to make a chariot.'
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The first is not always the best...
A good example is that of the diesel engine. The first diesel could have been optimized (it was, to the best extent possible), but if you have a poor design, how far do you optimize before you hit a brick wall? The answer: You stop when you hit the brick wall and start over - almost from scratch, and invent another basis (though inventing another design is not the kind of "innovation" spoken of here, it is invention). Fortunately, patents forced alternatives at a very early stage, which sped up the invention of alternative designs. "Innovation," as you so often like to refer to it, attempted to use each of the designs as a basis (fortunately, the alternative designs were already there as subsequent inventors avoided earlier patents by different designs), and the earliest versions were selected out by innovation.
Win-win-win...all around. Innovation was able to try several variations, which by the time the third iteration of diesels arrived included at least one non-patented version, and the versions that did not work went away.
More broadly, if innovation builds at some rate, say 20 innovations for one invention, and there were four diesel designs from which to innovation, and 20 innovations for each, rather than 20 innovations, the patent-driven work arounds generated another 60 innovations; 20 innovations versus 80 innovations. I choose the latter.
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Re: The first is not always the best...
That's a generous interpretation. There was nothing stopping others from coming up with alternatives... Patents didn't force anything on that front.
More broadly, if innovation builds at some rate, say 20 innovations for one invention, and there were four diesel designs from which to innovation, and 20 innovations for each, rather than 20 innovations, the patent-driven work arounds generated another 60 innovations; 20 innovations versus 80 innovations. I choose the latter.
Ah, nice. Made up math. It's not a *rate* of innovation to invention. Hell, I could just as easily make up numbers that are equally meaningless. You assume that the number of innovations is dependent on the number of inventions, despite no evidence to support that at all. I could just as easily argue that by using patents, you force multiple wasted paths of innovation, as one patent holder can block the most fruitful. So... using your silly numbers... would I rather have 80 attempts to innovate on the best technology, or would I rather have none, and 60 innovations working on less efficient technologies.
See how easy that is?
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Re: The first is not always the best...
More broadly, if innovation builds at some rate, say 20 innovations for one invention, and there were four diesel designs from which to innovation, and 20 innovations for each, rather than 20 innovations, the patent-driven work arounds generated another 60 innovations; 20 innovations versus 80 innovations. I choose the latter.
That's inane. It's not a benefit to society to force engineers to come up with a good-enough way to work around a government-granted monopoly. That leads to chariots with oblong wheels, due to protracted legal battles between the Wheel Industry Association and the Chariot Association of Assyria.
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For instance, what you will often see in the course of examining a patent is a claim (i.e. the "invention") to a device/method that is both a parallel invention and which also has a new element added to it.
Second, we benefit from both of the two "types" of "inventions" which the guy above describes, and we benefit probably in equal amounts from each. And even if it is not equal you could never do a study to find out which is "better". They both have a role to play. For instance, taking your flying car example, what if the flying car technology that the first guy came up with ends up being far inferior to the second technology in terms of gas mileage (or etc)? If the second guy never came along and invented his second type of propulsion then we'd be stuck with the gas hogs of the former category, maybe forever. This would be "horizontal" to you. At the same time, it is blatantly obvious to anyone that we need to improve on the first technology (and second) to improve whatever have you, performance over salt water (etc) and that would be "vertical" to you. And then take the guy 6 who comes along, and, seeing both tech's comes up with a third propulsion tech, which happens to be inherently great at operating over sea water. I just "diagonally" invented according to your designation.
And before we (you and me) can discuss the issue properly you're simply going to have to familiarize yourself with patents Mike more than you already are. All this broad lumping of "technologies" and "innovations" doesn't get into the technical details nearly enough. You can start by revisiting that claim about using databases with 3 different criteria you wrote about the other day. When you can understand that simply dismissing things as obvious isn't going to cut it in front of a judge (or if you're an examiner) then we can begin to have a discussion.
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Re: Re: The first is not always the best...
So, my ONLY question is how to play one of you against the other to get what I want.
Which is more pizza. Always more pizza.
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In the most advantageous scenarion, horizontal is preferred as it avoids infringement while presenting an alternative to the original product. Very simplistic examples include Beta vs. VHS, conventional reciprocating engine vs. rotary engine, drum brakes vs. disc brakes, etc.
Vertical, in contrast, renders an improvement subordinate to the original invention. Assuming the improvement is meaningful and adds value to the original invention, a "Mexican Standoff" of sorts is created. The patent holder of the original invention can proceed, but is forclosed from incorporating the improvement. Experience teaches that is such situations cross-licensing is a possible solution. Others of course include, by way of merely one example, a license of the improvement to the dominant patent holder in return for other appropriate ccnsideration.
One will typically find that a person holding a patent for a horizontal invention constantly supplements that invention with vertical improvements. Those holding other horizontal inventions do likewise.
This is a very general, broad brush, comment on a complex subject, but it does tend to reflect what is typically happening.
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Re: Meh.
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That said, I think that patents have nothing to do with horizontal innovation (other than artificially accelerating them). Horizontal innovation is just another way to compete, and smart businesses will do that even when vertical innovation may be easier without patents.
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Re: Re: The first is not always the best...
That's a generous interpretation. There was nothing stopping others from coming up with alternatives... Patents didn't force anything on that front.
If you read books about the development of the diesel engine (e.g., "The Diesel Odyssey of Clessie Cummins" and "The Engine that Could"), one point made in the early chapters was how the industry tried hard to come up with designs that avoided earlier patents. Thus, you are correct that patents did not "force" others to invent around the previous patents - they could have just taken a license or not taken a license and grumbled about how patents had stopped innovation. What they chose to do was develop a parallel technology that avoided the earlier patents, expanding technology and options and producing better technology in the process.
More broadly, if innovation builds at some rate, say 20 innovations for one invention, and there were four diesel designs from which to innovation, and 20 innovations for each, rather than 20 innovations, the patent-driven work arounds generated another 60 innovations; 20 innovations versus 80 innovations. I choose the latter.
Ah, nice. Made up math. It's not a *rate* of innovation to invention. Hell, I could just as easily make up numbers that are equally meaningless. You assume that the number of innovations is dependent on the number of inventions, despite no evidence to support that at all. I could just as easily argue that by using patents, you force multiple wasted paths of innovation, as one patent holder can block the most fruitful. So... using your silly numbers... would I rather have 80 attempts to innovate on the best technology, or would I rather have none, and 60 innovations working on less efficient technologies.
See how easy that is?
Let me flip this around. Do you have any evidence to show that three inventions will yield fewer innovations than one invention? That makes zero sense in either the mathematical world or the real world.
Yes, I do assume that more diesel inventions yielded more innovations, because the market was hungry for the diesel and lots of people tried to make each of the designs work. Prove otherwise.
As for "wasted paths," history has proven you wrong. There are at least four major diesel versions, and the only one that is no longer produced - at least, not without the innovations from the other, later developed alternatives, is the original version. If we had stuck with the original diesel, THAT would have been a waste. Fortunately, not only did patent holders not block "the most fruitful," clever inventors ignored your naysaying and found several fruitful versions still used in the market today. Even better, since all the patent holders were practical men who wanted progress, they were all willing to license their inventions for others to build upon. Amazing how invention can work.
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Re: Re: The first is not always the best...
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Re:
Though the later technologies (DVD and Blu-Ray) were not driven by patents as the earlier technologies were, note that each of these inventions spawned (Oh my Lord, is it even mathematically POSSIBLE?) MORE INNOVATION. Sanity check - alternative inventions that accomplish the same function form the basis for multipliers of innovation. Who would have thought?
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Re:
Didn't say it was clear cut, did I? But it is an interesting way of thinking about things.
Second, we benefit from both of the two "types" of "inventions" which the guy above describes, and we benefit probably in equal amounts from each.
Why?
And even if it is not equal you could never do a study to find out which is "better".
You couldn't? I would think that you absolutely could do research on which leads to greater economic output and greater benefit.
For instance, taking your flying car example, what if the flying car technology that the first guy came up with ends up being far inferior to the second technology in terms of gas mileage (or etc)? If the second guy never came along and invented his second type of propulsion then we'd be stuck with the gas hogs of the former category, maybe forever.
Hmm. That falsely assumes that with a lack of patent protection no one would ever think of coming up with the better gas mileage version. Which is ridiculous. People could still come up with that, recognizing that there was a market for more fuel efficient flying cars. Patents have nothing to do with that.
And then take the guy 6 who comes along, and, seeing both tech's comes up with a third propulsion tech, which happens to be inherently great at operating over sea water. I just "diagonally" invented according to your designation.
Again, which would be great, but has nothing to do with the point of the article. Without patents, all of that could easily happen. With them... not so much.
And before we (you and me) can discuss the issue properly you're simply going to have to familiarize yourself with patents Mike more than you already are.
Uh, yeah, ok. I love it when people tell me what I'm not allowed to talk about. Let's make a deal, before you ever post here again, you will go get a graduate degree in economics.
See how dumb that is?
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Re:
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Horizontal vs. Vertical
"Patents promote horizontal innovation, but restrict vertical innovation."
I would add that patents restrict vertical innovation to the point of practically stifling it altogether. We see that everywhere these days. New and "improved" ways to get the same thing we already have. The problem is that it's not a BETTER mouse trap, it's a DIFFERENT mouse trap; both are equally effective.
"Without patents we will have more vertical innovation but less horizontal innovation."
Key word there is "less", and therein lies the distinction. While horizontal innovation, IMHO, is no less important than vertical (and vice versa), if you can't take someone else's mouse trap and make it better, then innovation tends toward stagnation. Another way of putting it is that if someone comes up with a new invention, it's probably the best one they could come up with, so why make it legal for ONLY that person to improve it? That'll take a long time at best.
Yes, someone will always be able to come up with a better WAY of doing things, and that's what patents seem to promote. However, at least under US law, they also ENFORCE that aspect at the expense of people coming up with making the previous one better.
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Your own statistics seem to prove otherwise. You recently had an article that claimed that the rate of innovation was continuing to accelerate in the mechanical arts. If "not so much" was true, then we should have less and less innovation with more and more patents - but the accelerating rate of innovation is opposite the anticipated direction.
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Re: Re: Re: The first is not always the best...
I'm not sure what you think you're proving here. But that supports the point we were making. The patents got in the way of innovating...
Let me flip this around. Do you have any evidence to show that three inventions will yield fewer innovations than one invention? That makes zero sense in either the mathematical world or the real world.
Huh?!? This is not a zero sum game. What you are saying makes no sense at all. Innovation is not dependent on the number of inventions at all. Whether there are three inventions or three thousand, there may still be three innovations of three thousand. Learn what independent events mean.
Yes, I do assume that more diesel inventions yielded more innovations, because the market was hungry for the diesel and lots of people tried to make each of the designs work. Prove otherwise.
Heh. Yes, please prove a negative in an alternative world. Come on, anyone who's taken logic 101 knows that you set up a false unprovable.
As for "wasted paths," history has proven you wrong.
Has it?
There are at least four major diesel versions, and the only one that is no longer produced - at least, not without the innovations from the other, later developed alternatives, is the original version.
Again, what does that prove, other than that the first type wasn't very good.
If we had stuck with the original diesel, THAT would have been a waste.
Not sure why you have so much trouble understanding this, but what does that have to do with patents? Who said we would have stuck with that original diesel if it wasn't that good?!? We wouldn't. We would have moved on.
Even better, since all the patent holders were practical men who wanted progress, they were all willing to license their inventions for others to build upon
Yes, and in doing so, they made innovation that much more costly.
Thanks for supporting my point again.
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Re: Re: Re: The first is not always the best...
History is absolutely loaded with examples of competitors who sat down with patents and said, "Okay, we want to be in this market. What can we do to make a non-infringing product?"
Yes, whenever innovators want to scratch an itch, they are *invigorated* by the artificial monopolies granted by the guys with the guns.
If Jefferson had seen what you lot were going to get up to, he would have ditched the whole copyright provision. You, sir, are Jefferson's nightmare.
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Re: Horizontal vs. Vertical
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Re: Re: Re: Re: The first is not always the best...
Yes, whenever innovators want to scratch an itch, they are *invigorated* by the artificial monopolies granted by the guys with the guns.
I am unsure that patents drive innovation. I do believe they drive invention, but innovation? You would probably need to prove that.
If Jefferson had seen what you lot were going to get up to, he would have ditched the whole copyright provision. You, sir, are Jefferson's nightmare.
I have no idea what you mean by "what you lot were going to get up to." Jefferson was quite happy with what the patent system was doing until the second revision to the patent code.
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Re: Re: Re: The first is not always the best...
At some point, as you have said, the whole crowd would hit a wall. If no one else had looked at alternatives before then, the wall would force them to otherwise. Smarter or more creative thinkers would be looking to alternatives before then.
If there is a lot of room for innovation before hitting the wall, then resources are improperly re-prioritized (i.e. being wasted) if the only reason to look at alternatives is due to patents.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: The first is not always the best...
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Re: Re: Re: The first is not always the best...
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Re: Re:
Seriously?
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Re: Re: Horizontal vs. Vertical
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Re: Re: Horizontal vs. Vertical
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: The first is not always the best...
I am unsure that patents drive innovation. I do believe they drive invention, but innovation? You would probably need to prove that.
Um, I'm not saying that patents drive innovation. Quite the opposite.
I have no idea what you mean by "what you lot were going to get up to." Jefferson was quite happy with what the patent system was doing until the second revision to the patent code.
He was anything but 'quite happy.' Nonetheless, can I assume that you're fine with the original patent code?
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Re: Re: Horizontal vs. Vertical
Where is the incentive for the gatekeeper to let in stronger competitors?
Why do you feel that the first-to-the-gate should be the gatekeeper?
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Re: Re:
Which pretty much sums up my point, below.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: The first is not always the best...
Seriously, it just gets exhaustng at times listening to this one guy who is easily identifiable by his writing style and vocabulary go back and forth with M&M, in post after post, deliberately voicing antangonistic and inflammatory language and viewpoints, and then getting a running dialogue going with Mike while others pepper comments around them. I get why M&M has to do it, I think: anyone who is new or less seasoned here needs to have a rebuttal to read against what is mostly, though oddly not always, pure propoganda or industry viewpiont bullshit.
Most of the time there's enough of a conversation going on around the two of them that they become like two neutered dogs humping in the middle of a dinner party: you mostly pay them only mild amused attention because you know that ultimately what they're doing is not of consequence. And that's not meant as an insult to Mike, OR to Weird Coward, who actually says things occassionally that make me review and think.
I'm usually mature enough to act my age during what is normally wonderful, informative, and/or funny conversations I have with folks here. What I was trying to subtely point out was this is one of the times when my memory of adolescenthood was conjured and I felt like we were all the kid in the corner ignored as his/her parents bickered.
Oh well, I'll just go cut myself now :)
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Re: Re: Re: Re: The first is not always the best...
I'm not sure what you think you're proving here. But that supports the point we were making. The patents got in the way of innovating...
Really? How would that be? Rudolf Diesel and the inventors of the other designs all offered licenses. Many, many companies that still exist in one form or another today took license to those patents. However, some people and companies did not want to take licenses. Even some who took licenses, including Cummins, used the knowledge from the licensed engines to come up with another alternative. I think you would be more than a little hard pressed to show that the patents on the diesel stifled progress which so much progress was made in the development of the diesel engine in the first three decades of its life.
Let me flip this around. Do you have any evidence to show that three inventions will yield fewer innovations than one invention? That makes zero sense in either the mathematical world or the real world.
Huh?!? This is not a zero sum game. What you are saying makes no sense at all. Innovation is not dependent on the number of inventions at all. Whether there are three inventions or three thousand, there may still be three innovations of three thousand. Learn what independent events mean.
Ohhhhh...So, if we have exactly one invention in the world, and no other, we will have just as many innovations for that one invention as we would had there been 1,000 inventions. The events are not independent, and to argue otherwise is ridiculous.
Yes, I do assume that more diesel inventions yielded more innovations, because the market was hungry for the diesel and lots of people tried to make each of the designs work. Prove otherwise.
Heh. Yes, please prove a negative in an alternative world. Come on, anyone who's taken logic 101 knows that you set up a false unprovable.
It should not be that difficult. Even though there is not a one-for-one relationship between patents and innovations, you could at least get a clue by looking at the numbers of patents that trace back to the original patents for each design. It would be an interesting experiment. I suspect that you would find that each of the original inventions had approximately the same number of descendants.
As for "wasted paths," history has proven you wrong.
Has it?
Yep, and you offered no comments that would prove otherwise with respect to the diesel.
There are at least four major diesel versions, and the only one that is no longer produced - at least, not without the innovations from the other, later developed alternatives, is the original version.
Again, what does that prove, other than that the first type wasn't very good.
You asked a question, and my answer was the evidence you requested. You enjoy ignoring examples that illustrate a point, especially when your very words, "the first type wasn't very good," indicate that there was more invention to go. Thank you for supporting my point.
If we had stuck with the original diesel, THAT would have been a waste.
Not sure why you have so much trouble understanding this, but what does that have to do with patents? Who said we would have stuck with that original diesel if it wasn't that good?!? We wouldn't. We would have moved on.
Hmmm...I think I am saying plain English, but perhaps not. Let me do this the way they explain things in the 101 classes:
(1) Diesel A was invented.
(2) Diesel A was innovated.
(3) Some licensees did not want to use diesel A, so they invented diesel B to avoid the patents on diesel A.
(4) Other licensees invented diesel C and diesel D.
(5) Subtantial amount of innovation occurred with each diesel type.
(6) Diesel types B, C and D continued parallel development, sometimes with later inventions and innovations crossing between configurations, sometimes not because certain features between the types are incompatible.
(7) Diesel type A has evolved so much that it probably no longer exists as an independent type.
Now, here is the thing:
- When each type was invented, they ALL had problems. No one knew which type would ultimately solve the problems with each, and no one knew which would be the best.
- There are proponents of each type of diesel that exists today. Each type does have its own advantages and disadvantages, even today.
- Based on your earlier comments, we should have stopped with the first design and made it the best we could. All the other options are a waste. I disagree, and the customers for each disagree.
- Note that since the types existing today can each "do the job," so to speak, you could argue that only one type is really needed. Perhaps so, but the fact that customers have preference for types (which is an innovation statement, not an invention statement) validates the value of the base inventions.
Even better, since all the patent holders were practical men who wanted progress, they were all willing to license their inventions for others to build upon.
Yes, and in doing so, they made innovation that much more costly.
Well, I suppose they could have denied providing licenses. I suppose they could have gone one better and kept anyone from learning anything about their diesel engines. In "Diesel Odyssey," one of the purposes for taking the license to diesel patents was to gain the lessons learned from an earlier inventor to enable independent invention.
Also interesting is that diesel engine manufacturers, both then and now, ACTIVELY SOUGHT INNOVATION. Huh. They even paid for innovation. I fail to see how paying someone for innovation makes innovation more costly. Seems like it spread the wealth and enabled faster integration of collaborative efforts to make a better product.
Thanks for supporting my point again.
Thanks for proving that you and I speak two different languages. In my language, I have proven, once again, that patents have been beneficial to certain fields of endeavor, and continue to be so. You merely prove that you know how to be snide.
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Yes, there may have been a first flying car patent, expired so many decades ago that invention for flying cars is essentially wide open. Invent (and even innovate) away!
Awesome!
You know what we could do to accelerate the timeline for flying cars from decades into years?
Yes, you do.
*Rubs AC's chin*
*Yes, you do*
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: The first is not always the best...
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Misconceptions
From what I read there seems to be a misconception over the point of the original article, and the hypothetical scenario offered is simply unrealistic.
IE - I take the thought process to be:
1) Patents encourage horizontal innovation (theory)
2) The first diesel engines made were patented
3) Because of the patent other firms invested in different technologies to pursue diesel engines due to a market demand
4) That 'horizontal' innovation produced better technologies, as we do not use the original design today
...and then comes the leap of faith (or misconception)
5) Without patents, those investments would never have been realized, and we would have an inferior base engine today.
And that's where I think we have the miss. It takes a huge stretch to believe that no one would solve the overall 'problem'(efficiency, power density, etc) in a new ways if faster, less expensive vertical innovation was present than *is allowed with patents*. The market will still demand an ever improving product - and someone will make that investment to deliver.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: The first is not always the best...
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Re: Re: Re: Horizontal vs. Vertical
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Greed the best friend of innovation without patents.
What incentive more powerful then to make more money is there to innovation, that is the basis for patents and is also why we don't need them anymore to drive innovation because we reached a point were companies need to innovate with or without patents but with patents they can hold competition away which is bad.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: The first is not always the best...
At all.
You cannot prove that alternatives would not have been developed because of competition rather than artificial necessities injected into the marketplace by government interjection.
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Re: Misconceptions
So, better a crappy free design than one with a small fee associated with it. Lovely.
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The Diesel Engine
If I remember correctly the diesel engine is a vertical invention of something that was brought to Diesel by a friend who discovered in the jungles of the asian forests that natives used a piston system to make fire.
Fire Piston
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Re: Greed the best friend of innovation without patents.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: The first is not always the best...
I thought the original, 1790 patent code, was quite fine.
OK, so anything beyond that is just money-grubbing rent-seeking? We may be in agreement here. (Or close enough. I think that an age where everyone owns a press by default needs a far shorter term than when you had to build one. But I'll take it.)
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Re: Re: Horizontal vs. Vertical
Not at all. Because now you've put a tollbooth on that innovation, then you've immediately decreased the likelihood of that innovation happening.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: The first is not always the best...
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Oops...
Not at all what was being stated. To say so is either a complete misunderstanding of what was being said or a willful disregard in order to simply continue arguing.
More on topic, thanks for the post Mike. I hadn't thought about how patents might affect vertical vs horizontal innovation. Additional food for thought.
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Furthermore, any gas station that wanted to sell fuel for said engine would need to pay them a portion of their profits.
Maybe all of this is a bit of a stretch, but it seems to me that in today's digital age, everything builds upon other things. Patents do nothing but hinder innovation across the board, and the high-def DVD scheme is a great example. Everybody wanted to be the de facto standard so they could make the big bucks on licensing, yet the whole search for the next physical media format completely ignored the fact that physical media is rapidly losing ground.
It might not be so obvious to people who look at patents on machines, but one glance over all of the lawsuits being filed in East Texas says to me that patents are nothing but innovation-killers. The most basic of ideas are being patented by companies who do nothing with them - the only purpose is to wait until another company does something vaguely similar and becomes successful so they can head to court and try and make cash for nothing.
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And as for the "the good old days" point about invention and "incremental improvement": your vision is clouded by the history you are studying. No one documents the simple failures, the partial successes, the average man on the street. Your history studying only involves the major successes and the major failures with maybe a side anecdote to each.
The world is no more violent, peaceful, lazy, yada-yada-yada than in the past. Just because you see more "dollars 4 gold" and "slap chop" ads on television does not mean your world is any lesser than in the "traveling snake oil salesmen" days of the past.
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Why is it so hard to conceive of giving people the opportunity to build a better engine/mousetrap/whatever by looking at the previous design and fixing what is broken, rather than forcing them to build something entirely new from scratch?
Any innovation "driven" by patents is because the patent acts as a dam forcing ideas to flow around the patent. To me it just makes sense to let ideas flow as they will, rather than supporting a legacy system to allow people to put tollbooths on ideas for fleeting short-term monetary gain.
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Re: The Diesel Engine
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So, how could you accelerate the timeline for flying cars from decades into years? You do not because the market is not driving innovation for flying cars.
The market isn't driving *demand* for flying cars. The invention isn't a problem. Just google it.
But then there's the rent-seeky folks looking to leech onto anyone who actually does it well.
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Other factors that drive innovation.
The Eiffel tower history shows that war drove radar research in France and save the tower from being deconstructed.
War is paving the way to research today into regenerative medicine, prosthetics, robotics, aviationm new tools and even from an early age in history war was a very primal driver more powerful then greed, not that I'm suggesting that war is good but it does drive innovation to new levels all the time even in recent times.
So conflicts are a very powerful driver so what other factors drive innovation have anybody identified those and put on paper somewhere?
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"Most of the time there's enough of a conversation going on around the two of them that they become like two neutered dogs humping in the middle of a dinner party: you mostly pay them only mild amused attention because you know that ultimately what they're doing is not of consequence." -Dark Helmet
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Not so much, HD-DVD lost.
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Re: Other factors that drive innovation.
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Additional Parameters Required
Back before software patents, these concepts seemed relatively intuitive, particularly for mechanical patents. Back then, a patent would typically be discussed in terms of a particular product design, with implementations available for purchase. Back then it was easy to see how a particular feature of a product was worthy of a patent. However, the patents we see for software never seem to be taken in this light. Software patents always seem to lack a solution to a problem and seem to lack any unique innovation. This is how we have come to say that the bar for software patents is set way too low.
And, how can software patents be innovative when they are so common that they are traded as a bulk commodity.
So, what I'm suggesting is that this theory would be much more meaningful in combination with some measure of how low the bar has been set for the issuing of patents. More specifically, there should be a measure of how specific a patent is to a particular working solution to a problem, as opposed to being so general that it is little more than an approach to a problem.
We may very well find that patents do a much better job of encouraging innovation, as this theory of horizontal and vertical suggest, when the bar is set high--rather than so low that patents become bulk commodities.
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"He was ultimately not of consequence."
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Other factors that drive innovation.
If I understood correctly you are saying that the engine (piston fire + steam piston engine) was a horizontal innovation which I would disagree, I see it as and advance on current technologies of the day. They already had engines they just weren't powered by diesel but by steam.
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You need to point to someone who has a marketable "flying car" and how they are being "stifled" by patents.
No, you need to show how patents are helping the flying car market.
I'll wait.
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No you didn't, and I didn't imply you did. I don't know how "interesting" it is, but to each his own.
"Why?"
That is a highly fact/situation specific question. If you spent a good bit of time around patents you'll see, amongst other things, 1000001 ways to make a transistor. Each of them having their specific benefits and (usually not outright stated in the patent) there own limitations and shortcomings. Yet, they are all transistors. Likewise you will find tens of thousands of ways to make a bicycle. They're all just bicycles.
You might need to expand your view of patents beyond the obvious business methods and computer implemented bullsht to get a better view of some of the actual underlying technical progress made in various technologies.
"Hmm. That falsely assumes that with a lack of patent protection no one would ever think of coming up with the better gas mileage version. Which is ridiculous. People could still come up with that, recognizing that there was a market for more fuel efficient flying cars. Patents have nothing to do with that."
Whether or not they 'could' or not is not the issue. It is whether or not they actually DO come up with it which is the issue.
Furthermore, I'm not assuming that they wouldn't come up with that sans patent protection. They very well may. I'm not using this as a justification of having patents in play, I'm simply stating what very well could happen if the 2nd guy isn't motivated enough to work on the project. Maybe nobody is ever sufficiently motivated to take his place. Maybe they all fail. Who knows? It depends on the situation.
And before you say that it is ludicrous to say they might all fail, you need to guess again. History is literally littered with instances of people having enabled a technology where all others in the field had been failing. It isn't ludicrous, but it is rare compared to your run of the mill "inventions".
"Again, which would be great, but has nothing to do with the point of the article. Without patents, all of that could easily happen. With them... not so much."
Well actually it couldn't happen all that easily, even if I had the technical knowledge to invent in the engine/propulsion art. I would still require funding/time. And when I'm sitting in my grandfather's garage I don't typically have a whole lot of funding. (I live in the city in an apt) I'm also not too sure why you think patents would stop me from developing a completely different propulsion system than a competitor, that is in fact not the case since their claims should not cover my new device so long as I am sufficiently horizontally away from what they were doing.
"Uh, yeah, ok. I love it when people tell me what I'm not allowed to talk about. "
I didn't say you aren't allowed to talk about it. But you are precluded (not by me, but by yourself) from discussing it intelligently. You can feel free to babble nonsense all you please, I won't even try to stop you. I will however suggest to you that you might like to try to become more aware of the topic about which you are speaking than you currently are. I can also decline to have further discussions with you until you do so.
I'm allowed to talk about fine arts and ballet, but I won't really be able to converse at a meaningful level, but that won't be because anyone is stopping me.
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Patents = Flying Cars
No Patents = Boats
Obviously patents are the better system.
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So your argument is that patents are good, because they stifle competition which would otherwise drive down the marginal costs of manufacturing.
I fail to see how thats a benefit to society....
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Let's modify that a bit:
"Technology is like sex, it's better when it's free."
There we go.
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"The speed with which this thread has deteriorated impresses even I, Lord Helmet, vaunted king of thread destruction."
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Maybe Mike could do research into this, but he has his wittle ego to think about.
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Well I don't know the detail in the diesel case - but what you describe about diesel versions is also true of the gas turbine.
Except there is one difference. Frank Whittle let his patent lapse after 5 years and the key developments took place in wartime (when governments tend to bang heads together and ignore patent rights for the greater good). So gas turbine development followed the same path - in the effective absence of patents.
They also developed more rapidly than any other source of motive power in history so maybe we were better off without patents.
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Re: Re: Horizontal vs. Vertical
So they want everything unprotected. To me this an extreme perspective, but it's entertaining to watch the rationale building activities.
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Oh well, back to the humping!
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Re: Re: Re: Horizontal vs. Vertical
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Patent Good, Monopoly Bad.
The main problem with patenting is that it creates an artificial monopoly. I get that the monopoly is a necessary evil to reward the creator of the patent. However, that same monopoly in turn limits the ways in which the patent can be used, expanded upon, etc. I say the problem is not patenting, but the artificial monopoly it creates.
So how about this: You can have your patent, but you must offer it at the same licensing fee to everyone. We'll need some hefty anti-trust lawyering to make that work properly, but the main idea is sound. Instead of a monopoly that you can gouge, you get the market equilibrium price your idea is actually worth.
Even with this model, there will be some "horizontal innovation", especially if the licensing fee is high, but at least no-one will be forced into such tactics just to be able to compete. Which is probably all we need.
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But that isn't what you are actually talking about at all. You are talking about situations in which the existing technology does _not_ work - it is obviously suboptimal, and improvements and refinements must be made. And in the course of improving and refining, it may be discovered that the base design also needs to be changed.
What patents actually do is restrict the ability to _find out_ whether the base design is good for all purposes or not. We cannot refine and advance, so we try out a totally different base design. Perhaps having 10 virtually untested base designs, each with 2 or 3 refinements, is better than having only 2 or 3 base designs, each with 20 or 30 refinements. Perhaps not. It is going to be a case-by-case analysis, and it cannot be performed in advance.
Incidentally, this topic is immune to proof, because there is no appropriate sample. That is, as a theoretical matter it is impossible to construct a representative sample. In part, this is because the question itself is incoherent. Patents have no normative value outside of an externally-imposed moral system, so it does not make any sense to ask whether patents are "good" or "bad" (let alone to try to prove it). What is clear is that patents do not lead to innovation, they constrain it. Some people will respond to those constraints with redoubled effort, most will not.
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Innovation/Invention are Flashbulbs
Second, how is Pawar's concept really two concepts? Based on the short sample, there does not appear to be a recognition that companies are attempting to lock customers into a specific product and its derivatives. Pawar notes that: "There will be only one smart phone in this world" and that the phones are sync to specific companies. However, the driving force of the patents on these devices is to create defined boundaries that keep customers locked in. This approach has nothing, absolutely nothing, with using patents to promote innovation. An extreme view of this scenario is that patents are actually ANTI-innovative.
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Patents protect unique, non-obvious innovations. They exist to promote innovation by providing a way for the inventor to recoup the costs of bringing the idea to practice without having to fear another gaining an advantage by copying the innovation with comparitively little time, money, and effort. Without them, inventors would either see bringing the innovation to market as too great a risk and forget about it, or they would have to rely on trade secrets to prevent others from taking their invention and copying it. Trade secrets are currently used in jurisdictions where patents can be held, but usually for inventions that are very difficult to reverse engineer. A nice thing about patents versus trade secrets is that patents are time limited, and must specify how to reproduce the invention. This is a benefit to anyone looking to build upon it, whereas a trade secret may die with those who know it.
And let's not forget that patents are often licensed by the act of purchasing a product. One can't make the same thing, but he or she can buy it and then use it. Your car/computer/home/etc. started as a pile of patented products that were then assembled.
What I don't agree with are those who solely use patents as a way to sue others, without actually using the invention or having any intent to use it. That does stifle any good that is to come from the invention for the duration of the patent. Also, any patent on something that has been in use or is obvious (basic software routines and many of the other items subject to frequent debate) should be invalidated and the bar should be raised for securing such patents.
In short, patents are good when used correctly.
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Why are "horizontal" and "vertical" not of real consequence in the psance of time and innvation? You're making an allegation without supporting evidence.
In what jurisdictions are trade secrets used where it is so difficult to engineer? Don't make mere allegations, provide examples.
You say "recoup cost", they are they supposed to be used to recoup cost or as a provit driver? One isn't the other and the other isn't the one.
You're saying trade secrets are bad ... then is open source software bad? It's EXACTLY the opposity of a trade secret.
Your key work is "licensed". Also, you're wrong with your allegation that one cant' make the same thing. One can easily make the same thing with the right skill set. Furthermore, one probably has a legal right to make such an item. Once cannot sell it for profit.
Yay, you agree that "That does stifle any good that is to come from the invention for the duration of the patent.". This suggests you agree that Patents, at least in the current state, are nonsense.
"Patent are good when used corrently". That a low bar. Anything is good when used correctly.
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On the other hand, at least the tollbooth existed. No invention, no tollbooth. Hard to innovate an engine that does not exist.
You honestly think you're helping, don't you?
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Regarding vertical and horizontal categorizations being of no real consequence, I provided some general ideas as examples, but take the telephone as a specific example. It's purpose was to facilitate communication across distances. It hung on the wall and you communicated through a receiver and speaker that were attached to the unit. Within the recent spanse of a patent's life or two, we now have cell phones that are completely wireless that do all sorts of things that a telephone never did. Each phone maker vertically built upon it's own innovations and borrowed ideas from others to the point where a modern cell phone and an early 1980s wall mounted phone look and perform very differently, but do the same primary function. If taken separately, they look like horizontal innovations, but they really were just a series of vertical innovations, building upon previous technology.
"In what jurisdictions are trade secrets used where it is so difficult to engineer? Don't make mere allegations, provide examples."
In the United States, for example. Chemical processes and product formulas are often held as trade secret. You can't always easily see how something is made by only seeing the finished product. I don't think trade secrets are bad, they are just a different method of protecting one's IP.
"You say "recoup cost", they are they supposed to be used to recoup cost or as a provit driver? One isn't the other and the other isn't the one."
You're right. They aren't the same, but patents can be used for both. Many things are patented that yield no profit, and actually result in an overall loss. However, some do, and that's what keeps innovators in business. There are usually many failures before a profit is made, and an individual or company would go broke or out of business if it weren't for some sort of IP protection. I like the idea of supporting advancement by allowing profit, especially when it's limited and targeted.
"Your key work is "licensed". Also, you're wrong with your allegation that one cant' make the same thing. One can easily make the same thing with the right skill set. Furthermore, one probably has a legal right to make such an item. Once cannot sell it for profit."
You're right, I didn't qualify "can't". You cannot legally make it and sell it for profit. You certainly can make it, given the know-how. Actually, a patent does not give you the right to make, use, offer for sale, sell, or import anything, it only gives you the right to exclude others from doing the same.
"Yay, you agree that "That does stifle any good that is to come from the invention for the duration of the patent.". This suggests you agree that Patents, at least in the current state, are nonsense."
Yep.
""Patent are good when used corrently". That a low bar. Anything is good when used correctly."
My point was that they are not being used correctly, and that's what needs to be fixed. I don't think they should be abolished.
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Apples were patented and they weren't licensed, so only Apple makes Apple OS computers. I dare say innovation wasn't stopped in that arena either, but even if you feel that it was - I don't think consumers are suffering with wails and lamentations because of it.
It's about the standards that need to be met to be considered unique and non-obvious, and patent usage protocols that ought to be debated here, not the concepts of invention, intellectual capital, or the protections thereof via the laws.
Okay, so tweak the laws if they lend themselves to abuse by more than the occasional crank, but the idea that patents (and copyrights) are obsolete due to the advent of the internet and "non-depriving" perfect digital copies of virtual goods (the kinds of copies that can be made of software or digital media), runs counter to innovation of all sorts, and is (imho) just silly.
Look. I'm not a cop. Pirate stuff if you want to pirate it. You and the law can play cat and mouse. At this point in the information technology battles, since the prevailing attitude on techdirt is that certain laws are "unenforceable", You might even win most of the time..
But don't try to rationalize it by trying to convince yourself that the creators don't deserve this or that, or that the IP owning corporations are obligated to come up with a new business model that makes it ok for you not to pay them for something they are selling. If they go out of business because of piracy - then they just they do (yall have convinced me to seriously doubt their claims of imminent demise). They're big boys; They'll survive. And if creators and others want to do something different: viral, guerilla, loss-leader, or teaser-style marketing, I say "Great!" Let Business Evolve! Woohoo! The market is a crazy place. Personally, I'm a fan of NIN and what Trent's doing.
But really, have some integrity techdirt community.
I agree with Kazi:
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"Software is like sex, it's better when it's free." - Linus Torvalds
Let's modify that a bit:
"Technology is like sex, it's better when it's free."
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That is so true. So true. But you know what? A lot of people have to pay for it. The business around that "is like" thing he mentions? makes billions. It's the way of the world. Grow up. Now if you can steal it in a non-harming way - then good for you. I'm glad you're not harming anyone, but it is still stealing and if you get caught, there are penalties.
Me: "blah, blah, blah...there are penalties."
A Real E-pirate: (waiting for me to make a point that he hasn't already considered and factored into *his* new economy business model as a given) "And... so what? so I'm a criminal. (heh) Where are you going with this. Don't look at me like that, what.. You think I didn't know that? Look. If I was afraid of the penalties I wouldn't be doing this. You do the crime -(rolls eyes)- you might do the time.. So you want me to make you a copy of this or not?"
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He's more than likely refering to sex with his wife (gasp!) which is free and he can improve on it on a daily basis (gasp!). Sort of like open source software, right?! You're not paying extra for the kinky stuff and you're, for the most part, safe from STDs.
The only reason "the business" you refer to makes billions (Whether you are refering to prostitution or pornography, I won't know nor do I want to know) , or did make billions, is because there wasn't as much free content available. Right now that market is flooded with free content because the line between "amateur" and "professional" is blurred - the entry point is extremely low. This even suggests that amateur content is a driver to sell professional content.
Therefore, let's not mix Linus' quote with prostitution or pornography. He's refering to something you can improve on freely and take care of when it doesn't require a payment. At that point it becomes prostitution of knowledge, sort of like prostitution of the body. Both are evil.
Also, taking on Apple vs. Microsoft ... Who is more sucessful? Apple or Microsoft by "opening up" their platform? Microsoft is. Apple did try "opening up" their platform but I believe they shut it down and bought out the company (Was it DEC? ... Probably not ... they where like the DELL / Gateway of Windows but for Apple) because the company was making more sales than Apple was computer wise. You may call the company successfull right now but Apple should be way more successfull had they just concentrated on the OS, left the hardware to 3rd parties, and develop a business model similar to Microsoft's. See, we have 2 examples here where 1 company (Apple) was concerned about locking down their platform while another (Microsoft) wasn't so concerned and won out the duel. Rightfully so. Guess what is happening to iPhone? I'll give you a hint: Android.
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Until fairly recently, there was no "intellectual property." Patents were pure economic monopolies, not over defined technology but over regions and people. Eventually, society recognized that those sorts of patents were not socially beneficial, and abolished (and even criminalized) them. We have not yet done that with "intellectual property," the newest breed of government-permitted monopolies. We should. IP is not obsolete because of the advent of the internet, IP was dangerous and ill-advised at its inception.
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Re: Re: Misconceptions
By developing a non-encumbered version, they are at complete freedom to evolve the technology in whatever way they wish...except for all of the existing patents.
So the patents may have caused the alternatives not because of the cost of the licenses, but possibly due to the control exerted by the licensors. Become to good a competitor, the licensor might yank your right to licenses, or whatever.
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Regarding the blurring of the line between amateur and professional in that media sector, I never said that free content couldn't/shouldn't support protected content. And I mean this talking about digital and physical media in both "industries" if you will. I'm just saying that stealing protected content when someone wants to sell it, no matter how easy or safe it is for the thief, (giving someone counterfeit dollars for services rendered or shoplifting the DVD in the physical vs, lying when promising to pay or internet hacking in the virtual) it is still theft.
If your point in the MS vs Apple discussion is that licensing to flood them market with everything from great down to subpar goods is "more successful" than higher quality control with out distributing licenses, we still don't have an argument against patents. Actually I think Apple does a much better job of CwF and creating a RtB, but Neither approach's use of IP definitions and protections has hindered innovation.. hence the rise of Android. If apple's vertical innovation is too slow, horizontal innovation will catch up and surpass it right?
So like I said, the arguments here should be about degrees and tweaks, not overarching concepts that have been proven to facilitate high levels of innovation and competition in the capitalist economy experiment of America (vs the concurrent social and communist experiments in other places) for dozens of years in the post war (WWII) boom when our economy grew and grew with patent and copyright laws firmly in place to support the definitions and limits of intangible goods so that they could be priced, bought, and sold (what we now call monetized).
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No one said stop innovation. We said slowed it down. And, actually, the basic setup of a PC was not patented.
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Throughout DC and even now within our law firm, I am hearing with more and more frequency the term "Masnick the clown" used to describe an anti-i.p. person (both copyright or patent).
Usually it's used in the context of "we need to send a cease and desist letter to some "Masnick the clown" over the unauthorised use of . . .," or sometimes "client such and such is being criticized on a "blog" by some "Masnick the clown.""
Just thought you should know.
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What he is doing is saying two services (Software/Sex) can be paid for but why pay for it when it is available for free (Software/Sex) and you can vastly improve on it.
He probably didn't use "better" as in ok/good/acceptable/morally acceptable as he's not looking for that debate at all. Furthermore, if one wanted to, one could figure out that the quote is praise for his wife in a nice and nerdy way. It also shows good character and humor on the side of Linus. The quote, furthermore, can be made dirty but those are additions not presented there by Linus.
The right response, to throw a bone in the argument, would be "How would you know?!". Why? We don't specifically know about the software. Nonetheless, if we tried the other part the wife would castrate one and have a celebration with the friends. Software can't castrate us (Thank god).
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Licensing to flood the markets works then and is a more effective strategy that not licensing. Therefore, you are suggesting something. Furthermore, patents failed apple on the GUI interface and failed apple on the licensing of technology (Because they didn't, they were too concerned about their bottom line not, like Bill Gates was, getting a computer in every home).
Your last paragraph is merely unsupported statements. I'm envisioning you bare chested on a cliff hitting your chest screaming "PATENTS ROCK AS USUAL! PWNED YO!"
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folly
It remind me of a story about how Edison asked a mathematician who worked for him to calculate the volume of a bottle. After perhaps an hour working elaborate formulas the mathematician came back and gave him the answer. Edison then filled the bottle with water and poured it into a measuring cup. Your experts are like the mathematician. All they really need to do is ask inventors and they will tell you. The folly of fools.
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Re: folly
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Theoretical Patent #7,912,118 : A method of delivering data to an end-user through a system of interconnected electronics, including but not limited to: a storage medium, a display device, an input device, and a centralized circuitry repository (also known as a "mother" board).
It's the "method of" patents that give me fits.
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As unlikely as I find that to be, I'll take it as a huge compliment.
In the meantime, you might want to consider that when posting such a thing directly from your work computer, you're not particularly anonymous. Now that I know you work for one of the major law firms helping firms abuse patent laws against the public good, I'll make sure to start noting that in future posts.
Hell, your website practically screams out loud how you help companies abuse the public with that front page graphic. How proud you must be to work for a firm that helps pharma steal from the sick to give to the rich. Congrats for being able to sleep at night.
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I would not dismiss the possibility that this individual did not comment as a personal criticism. Nowhere does he suggest he subscribes to what he says others are saying.
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His message is getting heard. Phase 1 completed successfully.
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And when you are my boss, then you have the right to tell me what I can and cannot post. Until then, I get to make that decision.
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You're telling me that isn't being mocking? People wirte differently when mocking and not mocking. The comments are clearly aimed to be insulting, thus mocking - especially usage of "clown".
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Confusing
Mike, are you saying we should ignore snaps and zippers and only concentrate on improving buttons and button holes? Are you, maybe, trying to point out we should have stuck with improving horse and buggy transport and ignored the automobile? Are you, perhaps, trying to say this whole internet thing is a waste of resources and we should stick to the tried and true physical storage containers for content distribution?
I don't think you have thought the position quoted above through very far because it appears to me that you have successfully argued the former, not the latter. You have shown time and again how wrong it is to rely on a single path to success; how single paths leave us vulnerable to changes in market dynamics. To present a specific case, you have shown how authors, artists and media distributors have missed years of money making opportunity by following the single and limited innovation path of physical storage containers as a method for distributing content; a path that you repeatedly point out is out-dated and becoming obsolete even though there is still plenty of opportunity for innovation along this path.
I think that anyone needing further convincing that single path is inherently wrong should spend more time in a natural history museum and consider all the resources that were wasted in trying to make one idea the best it could be. Diversity is not just a good idea for survival of species.
"Patents promote horizontal innovation"
I agree with Mike and others that patents do not and have never promoted innovation. But then, that is not what the patent system is designed to do.
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You will write whatever you want to write, and nothing I say will ever change that.
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Re: Confusing
I'm saying none of the above. Not sure why you would assume any of that.
I don't think you have thought the position quoted above through very far because it appears to me that you have successfully argued the former, not the latter. You have shown time and again how wrong it is to rely on a single path to success; how single paths leave us vulnerable to changes in market dynamics
Indeed. But a lack of patents doesn't force people into a single path. A patent system, on the other hand, often pushes people onto wasteful paths.
I think that anyone needing further convincing that single path is inherently wrong should spend more time in a natural history museum and consider all the resources that were wasted in trying to make one idea the best it could be. Diversity is not just a good idea for survival of species.
Indeed. But why not let that diversity happen naturally, rather than through an artificially forced mechanism?
I agree with Mike and others that patents do not and have never promoted innovation. But then, that is not what the patent system is designed to do.
Um. That's EXACTLY what the patent system was designed to do. "Promote the progress of science and the useful arts..." Or have I read that wrong?
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I think you have read that wrong. Innovation benefits the economy first and the arts and science after. Patents benefit the arts and science first and MAY benefit the economy IF innovation occurs when bringing a product to market. The way I see it, a patent without a product is research; a patent with a product that no one buys is research and development; a patent with a product that people buy is innovation. Everytime a patent is filed the arts and science is advanced and the system does what it was designed to do; entice the sharing of information with the lure of easy money.
"Indeed. But why not let that diversity happen naturally, rather than through an artificially forced mechanism?"
It does and you have pointed that out many times. My position is why not have both?
"I'm saying none of the above. Not sure why you would assume any of that."
I assume nothing, which is why I asked. All of those examples were successfully presented by you in past posts as examples of bad business models that failed because they continued to follow one path of innovation rather than diservifying into alternative horizontal paths. Or was that not the message you were trying to get across?
Hmmm, let me present your words back as I read them; we could be on that whole semantical thing again....
Is society better off with a (totally different) multiple types of flying cars? Or are we better served by having lots more resources put towards making (the) one type of flying car better serve our needs?
If that is not the position you wanted to discuss then please elaborate with more detail.
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Care to back that up with any form of proof? Anything AT ALL?
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I think it represents research at the very least. I do not think it represents all research but it does represent some research. Not every researcher produces papers for scientific journals, just as not every researcher takes out a patent or even produces results that could lead to a patent, but EVERY patent is available for review due to the public nature of the patent system. Even patents that are hoarded benefit us all.
I point out that a patent benefits the arts and sciences first because the benefit happens on public disclosure, which as I understand the system happens after a claim is filed, rather than when a product has successfully been brought to market.
To recap, knowledge benefits and promotes the arts and science and patents add to the public store of knowledge. The patent system entices people to share information that would not ordinarily do so. It is not all about what works, i.e.innovation, but also what doesn't work.
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Ah... you're one of those folks who believes in the disclosure myth. That's been busted ages ago. First, rarely do patents reveal anything actually useful. If they did... you might have an argument. Second, if it's true that the disclosure is so beneficial, then there's *greater* value in keeping it as a trade secret. The only reason to disclose a patent is if you have a high probability of someone else coming up with the same solution separately, and you want to block them (anti-competition). Third, thanks to willful infringement laws, many companies forbid engineers from even looking at patents.
As we were recently discussing, a recent study showed that the *vast* majority of patent infringement claims show *no* evidence that an invention was copied. Given how many independent inventions have been massively stifled, while so few people use patents for R&D purposes, isn't it possible, no, likely, that the harm done outweighs the benefit?
Yes... actually... because that's what EVERY STUDY has shown.
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We are discussing whether or not patents and the patent system promotes innovation. Your contention is that it does, at least in design but not in practice. I am saying it does not and never has either here in the U.S. or anywhere else.
"First, rarely do patents reveal anything actually useful. If they did... you might have an argument."
Interesting; Mike if you continue to ignore your own admissions then this discussion, if it continues, will be difficult. You admit that patents have the ability to provide information that promotes art and science which is good enough to validate my position.
Mike, you keep talking results but have shown nothing to validate your claim that patents are designed to promote innovation. I just do not see any design aspect past or present that aids inventors in getting their products to the marketplace and be successful. Isn't that what separates invention from innovation? Are you trying to say that "Promote the progress of science and the useful arts..." equals invention or innovation?
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