Patent Firm Woos Inventors
An anonymous reader writes "C|Net has an article up discussing a new way to win the patent race; hook up with the inventors." From the article: "'They are more concept type of patents. It is a very blue sky kind of thing,' Langer said of the patents that Intellectual Ventures is trying to develop. By contrast, the type of patents that Langer continues to file on his own are typically based on several years of lab research and targeted at very specific ideas, he said. Other researchers working with the firm include Eric Leuthardt, a neurosurgeon with St. Louis' Washington University, and Muriel Ishikawa, a physicist at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. "
-1, Patent Troll
Jesus said to his disciples: "If you don't have a sword, sell your cloak and buy one" - Luke 22:36
What the hell is this doing on Slashdot? What next, Slashvertising for Russian kiddy porn makers?
'It is a very blue sky kind of thing,' Langer said.
And thats how, my child, the blue sky was patented.
In the past year or so, Intellectual Ventures has emerged as one of the more controversial companies in the tech industry. The company is filing patents, but also buying patents from defunct companies, independent inventors and others.
One telling excerpt reveals the truth:
The company is filing about 300 patent applications a year, but so far has only been granted one patent. Typically, the company will not seek royalties until the patent is granted. Lawsuits have also not been filed. Some deals may be announced in a few months.
So they haven't started shooting the lawsuit shotgun because they don't have enough ammo yet. And yes, I did read the part about how they work with some big names actively developing their ideas. But these are people who would be inventing anyways. This company is just a convenient way of outsourcing the legalese.
argumentum ad fallacium: Fallacy of defining a fallacy which allows one to dismiss the argument in question.
Let's supose you have an interesting idea but don't have the time or resources to file a patent, develop a prototype or put them into practice. What should you do? * Forget about it? * Disclose it into the public domain and not get a penny? * Are there easy ways to get the idea to interested developers in such a way that you would get at least some small royalties if the patent is sucessful? Also there are a lot of scams for would-be inventors out there.
I mean, why stop with just the inventors? If you truly want to get rich and be happy, I suggest you hook up with as many people as possible.
who owns the patent on stupidity ?
malheureusement la stupidité n'est ni curable, ni mortelle.
My verdict: Troll to the Xth Degree!
While Intellectual Venture isn't playing its cards out yet, there are rumblings that even insiders at the company aren't quite sure yet whether the best path for what they're developing will be through new companies (as start ups) or in selling their portfolios (e.g. Ocean Tomo's recent auction).
It's an interesting challenge really, companies make lots of money from their engineers/technical staffs while those same companies are 'globalizing' their staffs thus releasing the workers from any ties back to those companies. Nathan is really tapping into this as an advantage (for himself, of course).
While playing the patent as a game, and creating useless patents, shouldn't be a goal, I wonder just how long it will be before all of these cool 2.0 collaboration tools and an open, innovative community figures out that there's a way to be a part of the value chain and not just at the end as a consumer.
(hint, hint...)
Working to make ideas into reality. www.i4e.com