Patently Silly Blog
clonebarkins writes "The Patently Silly blog takes a humorous look at ridiculous (and, in some cases, rather uncomfortable) patents, using limericks, haikus, and Dr. Seuss-style rhymes to explain functions covered by the patent. Examples of patents parodied: Post-Mortem Reconstitution Of Circulation (6824389), Gene Related To Migraine In Man (6825332), and the anus-delving Micro Robot (6824508). Links to details about each patent are available for the genuinely curious."
While they may be silly, they're not dumb.
The exceptions (that I saw) were the Migraine Gene and the Transgenic Pig.
All the others (that I saw) were actual inventions. Dumb or silly in some cases, but actual inventions.
General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
No, it's actually called an orincopter. It is actually different than other helicopters, which require some sort of counterbalancing torque. Otherwise the helicopter just spins around out of control. Most helicopters have the sideways propeller in the rear (which consume 5-10% of total power per http://www.fmp.lr.tudelft.nl/showarticle.php?artic le=30), and others, like the Chinook, have two separated top blades that rotate in opposite directions.
This guy's "orincopter" invention is not too vague- it's just in patentese. I speak patentese (IAAL), and this was a horribly drafted patent. It utilizes terms that are not defined anywhere else (such as orincopter), and do not define them in the patent itself- poor patent drafting IMHO. You want all non-common terms defined within a patent itself. The patent, although confusing, does describe the invention.
That said, the orincopter stabilizes its flight by both spinning the propellers for lift, and also flapping the propellers for stabilization. It's kind of based upon how birds/dragonflies flap their wings. And before people start crying "you cannot patent natural things like gravity," this guy has a patent for a mechanical invention that performs this. That is something patentable.
My Congressman, Bob Goodlatte (R-VA, 6th), was one of the guys behind the DMCA. He got on my case for suggesting a few years ago that the DMCA might actually be harmful to individual rights and the economy. So when I contacted his office about the abuse of patent law, I sent several examples from the USPTO. I took the time to find a few stories online, pulled the patents out, looked them up on the USPTO website in a few minutes, printed them out and mailed them with a quick not on each saying what they did in plain English.
I actually got a semi-personalized response from Goodlatte saying thanks for sending him examples of how messed up the system is. In the end that package only got his attention for a few minutes, but imagine if thousands of geeks poured through the USPTO's website and sent 10,000-20,000 patents dangerous to the U.S. economy to Congress like that. It might be enough to give whoever is in opposition enough ammo to take charge and push reform through as a way to take a jab at the majority party.
At least do something about it, then you're basically blameless when it all goes to hell in a handbasket.
Click here or a puppy gets stomped!
You're most welcome.
Thanks for the link SlashDot! I was wondering why my traffic shot up over the last few days!
Daniel Wright
www.patentlysilly.com