WSJ Latest To Note Ridiculous State Of The Patent System
from the anyone-not-noticing? dept
The avalanche of mainstream press stories condemning the state of the patent system (especially when it comes to software) continues. The latest is a column in the Wall Street Journal by former WSJ publisher L. Gordon Crovitz that also condemns the state of the patent system. I don't always agree with Crovitz (in fact, I was just strongly disagreeing with him over his First Amendment views), but it's nice to see another well known commentator point out the problem and pure economic waste created by the patent system:The costs of our broken patent system are often abstract, but this month Google put a price tag on the problem: $12.5 billion. That's what Google paid for Motorola's U.S. smartphone business and its 17,000 patents. This is $12.5 billion that one of America's most creative companies will not use to innovate, fund research or hire anyone beside patent lawyers.So now we've got This American Life, the NY Times, the Washington Post, the Economist and the Wall Street Journal -- all coming out with articles about how the patent system is massively hindering innovation in the tech industry, and is generally driving money to unproductive and non-innovative parties. So, again, we have to ask, why is Congress still pretending that it's tackling this problem with its current useless patent reform bill that doesn't address the problems raised by all of these articles? Where's the real patent reform, Congress?
[....]
The value of patents in software and hardware such as smartphones has everything to do with litigation risk. It has almost nothing to do with technology.
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Filed Under: l. gordon crovitz, patent reform, patents, software patents
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Meh! More inflated noise!
Anybody can quote some obscure nobody from some little fringe rag to support their views.
Give it up Mike. Come back when you can quote someone real.
/sarcasm
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At least this way they have pretty shiny happy patent paperwork.
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hmm... is that right?
where have i seen this before? oh yeah, in the comments of just about every troll on this site ever atleast once or twice
same as above, for someone who is so quick to complain how somebody else is "not writing their own content copying and pasting" stuff (not to mention hating copying in general) you trolls sure seem to do alot of it
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Hmm. The exact opposite is true. I want people to be able to make money on their inventions and ideas by innovating and bringing them to market. My problem is when they are prevented from doing so.
Just give it all away and hope someone will spend money on something else while they come to see you or something.
Funny. I've condemned the "give it away and pray" approach. I'm arguing for smart business models.
You dont even write your owon articles, they are just copy and pastes from other articles and links to other articles
Um. Ok. Anyone can look on the site and see that's simply not true. But thanks for playing.
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Shouldn't this read "I want as many people as possible to make money on inventions and ideas by innovating and bringing them to market." The word "their" seems missplaced since the crux of the arguments presented here is no one should be precluded by "monopolies" from using anything whether created by them or not.
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Real patent reform won't happen
You can't fix that.
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Congress
Where's the real Congress?
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Re: Congress
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Google didn't just buy patents
So, maybe they only paid $11.5B for those patents ;)
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Then it occurred to them that their was a large high-tech industry that would benefit from their solution, bought some equipment and fully developed the solution which worked really well in their setup. They demonstrated their solution to one of the larger players in that industry and carefully explained how to implement it on their equipment. The modifications were made and demonstrations worked very well and yet, a few months later, the company said they weren't interested.
You know where this is going -- the company decided they could just steal the idea and the inventor discovered this by testing several of the company's new products (the effects of the solution are visible in the performance). They sued. That suit has been dragging on for years, so much so that the only folks who'll make any money will be the law firm handling their suit while the thief prospers. To them, the suit's costs are pocket change.
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Citation needed.
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http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20110822/23373615624/wsj-latest-to-note-ridiculous-state-pa tent-system.shtml#c137
A wild citation appears, it uses Troll Slapper... It's very effective.
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A good start, now we just need more publications to notice the ridiculous state of copy protection laws.
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Congress Pretends to Solve but Does Nothing
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Huh
Did we not just sit through the most pathetic excuse for politics over the US debt ceiling? To say nothing about the generations of politics that brought us to that point?
Congress is broken. It's possible that human culture in combination with modern environment is fundamentally flawed. Since neither will change, we're screwed. I wonder what's next? I suspect it will suck (from the POV of a single human)
In short: if getting congress to be less stupid is part of the solution, then you don't have a solution. (kinda like security and users not being stupid)
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Some slack needed
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So, what would be the alternative to the current soundbite and poll-chasing special interest puppet show that our democratic republic has become? (Yes, that is an honest question--I really don't have an answer.)
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bias
It's about property rights. In Federalist No. 43, James Madison wrote regarding constitutional rights of inventors, "The utility of the clause will scarcely be questioned. The copyright of authors has been solemnly adjudged, in Great Britain, to be a right of common law. The right to useful inventions seems with equal reason to belong to the inventors. The public good fully coincides in both cases with the claims of the individuals."
Please see http://truereform.piausa.org/default.html for a different/opposing view on patent reform.
http://docs.piausa.org/
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Consistency
"This is $12.5 billion that one of America's most creative companies will not use to innovate, fund research or hire anyone beside patent lawyers. "
This is the same argument seen in a lot of content industry propaganda about "lost money'. Google now won't use this money for R&D or innovation, but the remaining part of Motorola that receive it might use some of it for those things, the money didn't just disappear.
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fail to see
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