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Patent Reviews Via Wiki

unboring writes "Fortune reports on a pilot program where the patent approval process would be opened to outsiders for review. Reviewers can vote and discuss on different proposals, through say a wiki. Given the many (recent and past) patent approval fiascos, this seems like a good idea. It'll be interesting to see how they would deal with the issues faced by Wikipedia."

24 of 84 comments (clear)

  1. Why a wiki? by eln · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Wouldn't a good old-fashioned forum serve this purpose more effectively? I mean, it's not like the reviewers are going to be editing the actual patent submission, just discussing it.

    1. Re:Why a wiki? by tacarat · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Probably because a wiki is more meant to be a point of reference than forums are. There's nothing to stop them from adding a forum to the wiki, though.

      --
      "Common sense will be the death of us all"
    2. Re:Why a wiki? by Alien+Being · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You and your parent poster are both right because a wiki is nothing more than a collapsed forum. When I read /. at threshold==5 it's the same thing as reading a wiki without looking at the deltas.

      The bottom line is that the process will be more transparent and more open to correction than the current system.

    3. Re:Why a wiki? by interiot · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Wikis are better at presenting a single summary of discussions. In a forum, minor mistakes don't get fixed easily (eg. if one person corrects another person, you have to read through the whole conversation to get an accurate glimpse of the conslusions drawn).

      That doesn't mean wikis present only one view... a page can note that disagreement exists, and the page can present different views of a situation by different groups of people. But when there's longer amounts of discussion, having a single-page summary is far far better for newcomers, and for decision-makers to scan the arguments more quickly.

    4. Re:Why a wiki? by NetSettler · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Wikis are better at presenting a single summary of discussions. In a forum, minor mistakes don't get fixed easily

      I took the original poster's (excellent) suggestion not to mean "literally use a forum" but rather, more generally, why not keep track of who said what? There's nothing to say you can't design a forum in which there are discussion threads and other mechanisms, such as accounts you can log into and vote. It's not rocket science to give the person a menu that says:

      • Post a comment to the discussion forum.
      • Register (or re-register) your present opinion about this in a multiple choice form that can be aggregated mechanically with others' votes.
      • Attach a free-form summary of your personal opinion on this item in 300 words or less (with optional URL pointer to a continuation page in another venue of your choice).

      I don't think everyone editing each others' text is the way to go on this since it creates an artificial sense of tension--there's no reason that my having a different view than you means we have to fight over who's view gets recorded. But allowing each person the choice of several ways to present their throughts (interactively or not, multiple choice or not, size-constrained or not) seems good because you can get summarizable info when people choose to offer it.

      Also, allowing anyone to update at any time means you can keep by-day summaries of how people's opinions change and to review the history of what the discussion and opinion summaries looked like on a given day.

      --

      Kent M Pitman
      Philosopher, Technologist, Writer

  2. Link to patent review project by FleaPlus · · Score: 5, Informative

    Curiously, neither the submission nor the CNN article gave a link to the actual project page for the Peer to Patent Project. That page has more information and a blog giving updates on progress. There's also a Community Patent Proposal Wiki, but it seems to be down.

    Interestingly, the lead sponsors for the project are HP, IBM, Microsoft, and Red Hat. Strange bedfellows, eh?

    1. Re:Link to patent review project by Meneguzzi · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I think that these companies might actually be very interested in a fair patent process, especially the large ones. My reasoning is the following: even if it would be in their individual interest to try and exploit the patent process, they also know that their ability to exploit this process will be similar to that of the other companies.
      The benefits of a large company being able to jeopardize another are clearly offset by the fact that they can be pushed back. This translates into every company spending large sums of money to maintain a legal team just to handle the "patent fast-talk". This is not in their best interest, and in the end this will probably escalate ad infinitum. So, if they all agree to use the system fairly, they can put that extra "lawyer money" into doing actual research, improving their chances to survive, rather than simply waste effort legally fighting other companies.

      --
      www.meneguzzi.eu/felipe
  3. If you build it, they will abuse it. by crazyjeremy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The chances of this happening are inversely proportional to the chances that it will be abused if it does happen. If a major company has a multimillion dollar product on the line, they will do ANYTHING to make sure it gets approved, even if it means sabotaging any method open to the public. It doesn't matter if it's a wiki, a forum or a voting system, they will abuse it because millions (or even billions) could be on the line.

    1. Re:If you build it, they will abuse it. by ian_mackereth · · Score: 4, Interesting
      One of the best features of a wiki is that all the edits are visible. If there's consistent corruption of particular information damaging to a claim, then that's the information to look at!

      I suspect that there will be more need for accountability than there is with, say, wikipedia, but just having the facts unearthed by an army of interested persons will be valuable.

      The mere fact of having some prior art or other pertinent information on the wiki won't be 'make or break', but an idea of what factors need independent verification should add enormous value to the Patent Office's research.

    2. Re:If you build it, they will abuse it. by tacarat · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The chances of this happening are inversely proportional to the chances that it will be abused if it does happen. If a major company has a multimillion dollar product on the line, they will do ANYTHING to make sure it gets approved, even if it means sabotaging any method open to the public. It doesn't matter if it's a wiki, a forum or a voting system, they will abuse it because millions (or even billions) could be on the line.

      Conversely, if a company's competitor has a multimillion dollar product on the line, it could be very beneficial to help dig up prior art to prevent/negate a patent and then cash in by selling (or not withdrawing) a similar product. That might sound bad, but it would allow for actual innovations to get protected (no prior art) and allow the public (as well as other companies) to pay less for derivative items because of increased competition. If the idea catches on, the grassroots/astroturf community could get used to help ensure keep sabotage successes to a minimum.

      I think it's a great idea. I just wish I could see how it'd apply to biotech items. Patenting genes and chemicals found in nature still bugs me.

      --
      "Common sense will be the death of us all"
  4. If it would be a forum.... by RuBLed · · Score: 4, Funny

    by page 20, they would be arguing why pink ponies are pink and if [insert favorite politician] owns one.

    1. Re:If it would be a forum.... by shadowcode · · Score: 3, Funny

      So unlike Slashdot where that already happens on page 1 :)
      \o/

  5. This will produce some *very* unhappy campers. by 70Bang · · Score: 4, Interesting


    Specifically, those who would ordinarily slip through the cracks because someone doesn't catch prior art.

    A significant population with an [almost] unmeasurable body of knowledge and information would do a pretty thorough job of flagging someone which the patent examiners working under extremely high pressure to push things down the assembly line. This would make the examiner's job one of validation of claims posted via wiki.

    One question remains: What's going to happen if we see a couple of companies who shall remain nameless and are granted patents by filling out a pre-approved form are faced with prior art (or silly art) claims and the company receives the approval anyway? That might prove there's some monkey business is afoot. (Donating a Playboy Bunny to their favorite charity? (Charity begins at home)

  6. Obvious problem by moquist · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The content of a patent application isn't protected until the patent is approved. Submitting your patent application to a public site lets all your competition know details of what you're doing with absolutely no guarantee that you'll get patent protection of your idea(s).

    I must be missing something, because this seems so obvious and insurmountable.

    1. Re:Obvious problem by nonlnear · · Score: 4, Insightful
      The content of a patent application isn't protected until the patent is approved. Submitting your patent application to a public site lets all your competition know details of what you're doing with absolutely no guarantee that you'll get patent protection of your idea(s).

      I must be missing something, because this seems so obvious and insurmountable.

      Yes, you are. First, your first statement is only partially true. An invention only has guaranteed protection once a patent has issued. However, once the application is submitted, the contents are retroactively protected if the application succeeds.

      Also, any inventor who wants to seek protection outside the US has to make a public application anyways. The US is basically the only country left with a closed review process. You can opt for a closed review, but then your patent is only enforceable inside the USA (and possibly a couple other places - but not Europe, and some other large markets).

      Second, the fact that the site is "public" is ot the relevant fact for patent validity. What matters is if the inventor makes one of a few categories of "disclosure". That includes most avenues of publishing, sales, etc. But if the USPTO does something that resembles disclosure (like posting it in a review wiki), they are still free to give it whatever legal definition they deem appropriate. And there's no way that they would define any part of their review process as a disclosure.

      --
      argumentum ad fallacium: Fallacy of defining a fallacy which allows one to dismiss the argument in question.
    2. Re:Obvious problem by heinousjay · · Score: 4, Funny

      Everything's obvious in retrospect. People seeing something for the first time claiming "I could have thought of this" have no credibility in my book, whether or not they cry out loud.

      --
      Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
    3. Re:Obvious problem by 49152 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Bullshit.

      Already today the USPTO publishes pending patent applications, usually years before they are either approved or denied.

      You can see for yourself here: http://appft1.uspto.gov/netahtml/PTO/search-bool.h tml

      Publication is a very fundamental part of the patenting process, if you do not want your competition to know about your invention then you cannot patent it either. The idea is that if your invention really is novel then you will get protection sooner or later and can go after anyone thats infringing on your patent.

      If your application does not get approved, then you are correct that you will have lost any edge on your competition by way of secrecy. But then again, if your application is rejected then its most likely not very valuable anyway.

      BTW: This is the reason a lot of millitary research or technology deemed important for national security is never patented. Patent applications implies publishing.

    4. Re:Obvious problem by mavenguy · · Score: 3, Informative

      Your correction of the GP is mostly correct, but has, itself, one error: There is no retroactive effect to issue of a patent; it is only effective as of the date of issue, and expires no later than 20 years from the effective filing date of the application (the expiration date might be sooner due to things like terminal disclaimers, failure to pay maintenance fees, but might also be longer due the effect of the Patent Term Extension Act, mainly for pharmaceuticals subject to regulatory approvals). The benefit of an earlier filing date is immunizing the application/patent against prior art attacks.

  7. Bad idea by Turn-X+Alphonse · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Wikis are great at things which involve facts where no one gains anything from lies (See Guildwiki for example).

    Wikis are bad when millions of dollars are involved and anyone can edit them. It only takes some "unknown person" who "doesn't have anything to do with the company" to goto the wiki and repeatedly edit it so it seems the patent is invalid or worthless and it may just seem that way (yes I know theres checks). Look at viral marketing and Sony's "lets graffiti shit to look cool" idea, notice how companies don't care how much money they spend just so they can look cool? Well what if they could pay some kid a couple of bucks a week to edit a wiki which could influence major things down the line... Yep you guessed it, they'll eat it up.

    People need to register "Use the right tool for the right job" rather than "Wow it's open source! I bet I can use this system to fix everything in the world! Cancer/World hunger/Wars I've got your number bitch!"

    --
    I like muppets.
  8. Some real flaws by aiken_d · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I hate patent abuse as much as the next guy, but this seems like it's just begging for abuse.

    How's this for a (new) patent abuse business model:
    - Watch patent review wiki for interesting stuff
    - Steal good ideas that other people have
    - Instantly work on creating pre-dated "prior art" on websites, blog postings, etc
    - Use shill accounts to point out the "prior art"
    - Make some good cash off of other peoples' R&D

    Or how's this for a "fuck with a much-hated company" mob mentality:
    - Watch for patent applications from the hated company
    - Instanlty work on creating pre-dated "prior art" on websits, blog postings, etc
    - Post to slashdot, digg, etc, linking to the manufactured "prior art"
    - Watch while thousands of tech zealots slam the patent on the wiki, citing your dishonest "prior art"

    There are plenty more ways to abuse this, of course, those two just came to mind quickly and are kind of amusing.

    The patent system is broken, that's for sure. But this isn't the answer. Or at least, if this is the answer, we might as well do away with patents altogether, since they will be very, very easy to dishonestly undermine. I know I'll get jumped on here, so let me ask that if you favor simply removing patents (or software patents, or whatever) from the law, please just say that and don't defend this terrible idea because it gets the outcome that you want while still pretending to support the idea of patents.

    -b

    --
    If I wanted a sig I would have filled in that stupid box.
  9. Bills into Laws by thekaleb · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Or one could use a wiki system to write bills for congress. Citizen generated laws.

  10. This already exists for over 1 year already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Take a look at my site:
    http://prevalent.de/index.pl?site=1&subsite=3&lang =en

    Ok, it's for german and european patents only, but it should fit to give you an idea on how I imagined this. On the left side there is always a patent application, and on the right side you can vote the patent, submit prior art, use a forum to discuss or enter a wiki side for each patent.

    The difference is, that I don't review patents before they are published. (That's not possible of course). But there are new patents that are granted, but are still within the german or european objection time.

    Until today I filed four objections at the german patent office against granted patents. The cases are still running and not yet decided.

    Take a look at it: http://prevalent.de/index.pl?site=1&subsite=3&lang =en

    cu,

    Jan

  11. Project Red Herring by Elektroschock · · Score: 4, Insightful

    For me the whole approach looks amaterurish. It's like some persons who are clueless about patent reality thought of a new solution at the round table. It sounds nice and that is why Slashdot reported it, but in fact it is toyground action.

    The patent problem has to be solved and the patent problem is NO problem of prior art, novelty assessment, "triviality" or "obviousness", patent examiner laziness or mistakes etc. However patent institutions and patent professionals like to let you enter the toyground. There you can think up solutions, but they will not solve the problems, and the institutions are safe.

    Patent reform of Congress went into the same trap. They discussed the issue for the ..hmm ... third time(?) in 2006. It makes no sense to follow the red herrings. Red herrings serve the purpose that you don't get the fish.

    1. Re:Project Red Herring by simong_oz · · Score: 5, Interesting

      It's like some persons who are clueless about patent reality thought of a new solution at the round table.

      Even worse, it's a solution to a problem which doesn't actually exist. The vast majority of people think they understand the patent process but simply don't. Publication is a vital part of the process, as is prior art assessment, demonstrating novelty and non-obviousness (to a "person skilled in the art"). You get a patent (ie. exclusive right to commercially prosper) for a set amount of time (20 years in most places) in exchange for disclosing the idea to everybody.

      There is nothing to stop you filing a patent application which is an exact copy of an existing, granted patent. That patent application could go to PCT and be published at 18 months and then progress into national levels in individual territories. This could take 3-5 years and can happen without anyone in the patent office having actually examined the validity of that patent . If the patent application was published without an international search report, it might not even have been cross-referenced against the existing patent database!

      Even granted patents are technically not valid until they have been challenged and upheld by a court.

      --
      "Because it's there." - George Mallory, when asked why he wanted to climb Mt Everest, March 18, 1923 (New York Times)