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Report Shows Patent Trolls Are Thriving

eldavojohn writes "The 2009 Patent Litigation Study has been released by Price Waterhouse Coopers. It shows evidence that patent trolls are growing and doing quite well. Using a very conservative view of a non-practicing entity (referred to as NPE in the report), PWC noted that 'damage awards for NPEs have averaged more than double those for practicing entities since 1995' and 'certain federal district courts (particularly Virginia Eastern and Texas Eastern) continue to be more favorable to patent holders, with shorter time-to-trial, higher success rates, and higher median damages awards.' The report paints a dire picture of the state of patent lawsuits and especially those brought by NPEs and also shows that in the past eighteen years the number of patent cases filed yearly is on the rise significantly when normalized against the number of patents granted yearly."

21 of 135 comments (clear)

  1. "...shorter time-to-trial..." by John+Hasler · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Is favorable to both sides. It's especially favorable to the defendant if a preliminary injunction is issued.

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    Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    1. Re:"...shorter time-to-trial..." by darkmeridian · · Score: 5, Informative

      A shorter time to trial is not more favorable to a defendant UNLESS a preliminary injunction is issued. The plaintiffs hold an overwhelming advantage. They get to spend months or years preparing their case, having their motions ready, doing research and investigation, finding experts, etc. They get to chose the time and venue of the suit. Once they file, they can drown the defendant in motions for preliminary injunction, summary judgment, etc. The defendant has to play catch-up because they have no idea what's going on with the plaintiff's patents. They have to play defense on PI motions without a lot of discovery. Rushing a case to judgment is very unfair to defendants who did not have the time the plaintiff had in figuring out their case.

      --
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    2. Re:"...shorter time-to-trial..." by eldavojohn · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Is favorable to both sides. It's especially favorable to the defendant if a preliminary injunction is issued.

      I'm not a lawyer but there's an article from Sunday about Dallas firms specializing in 'tricky, rocky terrain' of patent litigation to be hired out in the Eastern Texas District Court ('Rocket Docket') cases listed in the report.

      Now, pay attention to this part of the article

      'Rocket docket'

      The Eastern District, which includes Collin County and much of eastern Texas, has won a reputation as extremely plaintiff-friendly and a preferred venue to get patent claims through quickly.

      Just getting a case into the Eastern District – known by some as the "rocket docket" because its comparative lack of criminal cases lets judges move civil patent cases swiftly – has prompted some companies to settle quickly.

      Nguyen says the district's reputation as friendly to patent plaintiffs is widespread; whenever it's mentioned at law conferences around the country, she hears the same reaction.

      A case against you that you found out about last week has just gone to trial in Eastern Texas and you need to be there to represent yourself even though you're based out of New York City. The reputation of the court is a bias toward the plaintiff and on top of that they have the Dallas firm that specializes in winning patent cases ... now, quickly, you need to decide to settle or fight this.

      Sound fair to you?

      --
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    3. Re:"...shorter time-to-trial..." by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yes! I am a lawyer and i can bill for travel time :D

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
  2. Disgusting by HEbGb · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's a real shame that the patent system has been able to be manipulated so effectively, to siphon hard-earned money from real companies, and real inventors, into the pockets of these parasites. They're nothing but a drain on everyone. Lemelson's legacy lives on!

    I'm glad this is getting some attention, though.

  3. Don't Abbreviate by whisper_jeff · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Don't abbreviate it to NPE. Spell it out, each time - non-practicing entity. By just saying three letters, it weakens the point that these companies do nothing. They exist solely to sue. They are the personification of what is wrong with the patent system. Make it clear that these companies are leaches that do nothing of good. They are non-practicing entities.

    We may have issues when companies like (for example) Nokia and Apple wage patent warfare but both of these companies spend enormous fortunes on R&D and they both produce exceptional products. While the patent system may be borked, it exists so that companies like Nokia and Apple may exist and view R&D as a worthwhile expense. Patent trolls should be legislated out of existence. Don't produce anything using the patent? Bye bye patent. Your business model is built around "buy patent, sue everybody in sight"? Bye bye company. Start with that and we might get closer to a point where the patent system isn't a joke.

    Non-practicing entity. Spell it out. Make it clear. Leaches who do nothing of value.

    1. Re:Don't Abbreviate by Grond · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Don't abbreviate it to NPE. Spell it out, each time - non-practicing entity. By just saying three letters, it weakens the point that these companies do nothing. They exist solely to sue.

      Right, because universities, individual inventors, and non-profit research organizations do nothing and exist solely to sue. Oh, wait, those are actually common examples of non-practicing entities. For example, in the article the chart of damage awards exceeding $100 million lists 4 NPE plaintiffs, one of whom is an individual inventor (a doctor who invented a kind of drug-eluting stent) and another is Cornell University.

    2. Re:Don't Abbreviate by devnullkac · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Just goes to show that the US generally values the ability to convince people that something is true over the ability to discover that something is true. Time and again we see that marketing, fear mongering, and legal tactics overwhelm reasoned arguments and hard work. Not that I would have the laws simply torn down to get at this devil (see A Man For All Seasons). We must take care in our approach to reform that we don't find ourselves adrift in a worse sea of argument and arbitrary assignment of winners and losers.

      --
      What do you mean they cut the power? How can they cut the power, man? They're animals!
    3. Re:Don't Abbreviate by vadim_t · · Score: 5, Insightful

      For universities it's easy: as most of them benefit from public funds, they shouldn't be able to patent anything and release it all under the public domain for the public's benefit.

    4. Re:Don't Abbreviate by Rogerborg · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Let's say I invent something

      Let's not, until you do. Can you name three patents for inventions in the past 20 years that were filed by Joe Basement which were subsequently abused by Evil Incorporated? And when I say "abused", I mean that you can show that they only started to design Widget X after the patent had been published, rather than that they were developed co-incidentally?

      Three examples from the past 20 years, and I'll cede you the point.

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    5. Re:Don't Abbreviate by Red+Flayer · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Look at Microsoft's abuses. i4i and others.

      It doesn't need to be Joe Basement (the single inventor), many firms are "small" when compared to the deep pockets of Microsoft, IBM, et al.

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    6. Re:Don't Abbreviate by jandrese · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It costs the public more, but you also get a benefit: namely patent free technologies that can be incorporated into products far and wide. It is actually a public good to have more technology available to entrepreneurs who would make the best use of it, instead of just to large corporations who can afford the up-front costs of licensing the dozens of patents they need to tie together to make a new product.

      Then again, I'm also one of those crazy people who thinks the Public Domain and Fair Use should be greatly expanded for the same reason. All of the great men of the world did their work standing on the shoulders of giants, and we have been letting the system stifle that for too long IMHO.

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    7. Re:Don't Abbreviate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That is a bad idea, because that would cause universities to only research what makes the most money, not what is best for humanity.

  4. Re:What I want to know is... by bschorr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It would probably be pretty easy to fake that though. Create some bogus plans to produce the thing you're patenting but never actually go through with it. It would be too costly to follow-up on every patent to make sure people actually did what they said they would.

    Plus there are folks who get patents who don't intend to actually produce the thing themselves, rather they want to license it to others. Sort of an "R&D Department for Hire" concept. Unfortunately it's a fine line between those who intend to license their patents and those who intend to lay in the weeds and wait for somebody to infringe their patent and then sue.

    It's those kinds of parasites we need to figure out way to deal with.

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    -B-
  5. Re:What I want to know is... by Grond · · Score: 4, Informative

    how come patent trolls are awarded patents in the first place? Would it be possible to make an applicant show proof that they are in the planning stages or are currently using what they are trying to patent?

    That's called a 'working requirement' or a requirement to practice the invention. A few countries have such a requirement (Turkey, for example), but the requirement is usually riddled with exceptions that make it essentially toothless. There are several reasons why a strong working requirement is a bad idea, as I explained in a comment on a recent Slashdot story that suggested forbidding patent ownership by or assignment to non-practicing entities.

    In the US patents are personal property--and thus freely assignable--by statute. 35 U.S.C. 261. Assignability is also guaranteed by Article 28 of the TRIPS Agreement, which is a treaty that the US is party to. So changing the assignability of patents would require amending the law and withdrawing from or amending a very important international treaty.

    And even if the law were changed, it would mean that hundreds of patent holding companies would suddenly lose their patent rights because of an action by the government. That's called a taking, and the ex-patent holders would be able to sue the government for the value of the patents. It would be a massive litigation and cost the tax payer an enormous amount of money.

    But anyway, how would we implement such a requirement? We could require that patents only be assigned to an entity that intended to practice the invention. Sounds great, right? No more patent holding companies, therefore no more trolls. There are at least five big problems with that:

    1. Not all patents can be freely practiced because of other patents surrounding the technology. Imagine I own a startup company. If I invent a new transistor design I can't be expected to practice it myself: other companies have patents on things like manufacturing processes, bus designs, chip packaging, etc. I would have to license dozens of other patents in order to sell chips with my new transistor design. But that's backwards. Instead, I should license my one patent to companies like Intel and AMD and let them do the manufacturing and sales. But a requirement to practice means I couldn't do that; I'd have to practice it myself.

    2. And what about pure research institutions like universities? They can't be expected to also become manufacturers.

    3. But suppose we say it's worth making universities sell their patents. So now the patent will be owned by a single practicing entity. The patent can no longer stay with the university and be licensed to whoever will pay the fee. The end result is less competition in the market place for the finished product.

    4. Okay, suppose we say that it's sufficient that the patent owner license the patent to at least one entity that is going to practice it. But then the law is too narrow. Almost no patent trolls actually rely on litigation damages for income; it's too uncertain and the margins are too narrow--and often negative. Litigation is just a tool to extract a licensing fee. So the end result is that the trolls can point to a manufacturer who licenses the patent and nothing changes.

    5. What about patents on technologies that are ahead of their time? For example, suppose I invented an amazing new transistor design. It will make computers much faster but it requires X-ray lithography in order to work. Well, X-ray lithography is not cost-effective yet, so I can't really practice my invention. Does my patent just evaporate? How does that spur innovation?

    As you can see, there are a lot of problems with such a proposal.

  6. Cheers to Non Practicing Entitites! by BooRolla · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is great! The only way these things changing is if the game becomes to costly for the corporations who write the rules. I hope "NPEs" start putting more companies through the wringer.

    Sounds harsh but consider this: If I independently created something useful and it blows up like Facebook or Google but infringes on some minor or trivial patent for IBM/MS/Apple/Etc, the fruits of my labor will be taken from me.

    God bless the NPEs for taken advantage of the game created by the advantaged.

  7. Re:What I want to know is... by grasshoppa · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm probably alone in this, but if the patents were of significant value, I wouldn't have a problem with the "trolls".

    The problem is that they are not of significant value. Usually, they are trivial extensions of existing technology which are inevitable. Thus, they are worthless to exploit directly, but if you wait for someone else to exploit it you can derive more value from them. That's the problem that needs to be fixed.

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  8. Re:What I want to know is... by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 4, Informative

    It'd be a nightmare. The guy who invented pulse wipers has sued every car company for royalties now; when he first invented them, he presented the idea to 2 car companies, who dismissed him because his idea was non-useful. They immediately implemented pulse wipers, followed by every other car manufacturer. After several years of legal bullshit, he managed to start making some headway and getting judgments against them for the theft of his idea.

    Patents are marketable. Some folks like to sit back on a patent and wait for someone else to re-invent it, rather than go out there and risk someone finding a way to work around your idea so you can't sue them for it. If they successfully work around it, then they don't have to license the patent from you and can't be successfully sued, so there is incentive to attempt to come up with a similar-but-legally-different implementation. On the other hand, waiting for the entire industry to implement your invention and then suing everyone in the world is a shit move.

    Forbidding inventors from profiting from their inventions would be a disaster. It would prevent small-shop inventors without the capital to make a real, marketable product from capitalizing on their work at all. I could design a new type of nuclear reactor, but I can't build any significant components for it and thus my invention is impossible for me to actually manufacture (I'd need hundreds of millions of dollars). I could license the design to someone else, of course. There may not be a market for new nuclear reactors at this time, though; maybe I need to wait 10 years....

    What a mess, yes? The system has to make these considerations, but in doing so it leaves itself open for abuse. In failing to do so, however, it also leaves itself open for abuse.

  9. Re:What I want to know is... by russotto · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There are a few research institutes that make money by licensing research, though. Would they be considered non-practicing entities? Because that does seem like a legitimate use of the patent system.

    It's legitimate if they're actually doing research. It's not legitimate if they're just brainstorming a bunch of ideas based on the current state of the art and then patenting everything which comes out of the brainstorming session.

  10. Re:Those who can do. Those who can't sue. by kimvette · · Score: 4, Funny

    Well, considering that one of the hotbeds is Texas, maybe some of the defendants can use the "Well, he needed killin'" defense? ;)

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  11. Re:Prima Faciae Corruption? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    Being from Eastern Texas, I feel like I can speak with some authority in the matter. I've known many of these judges and lawyers (and bar-tended a few of their private functions) and I have found that they are idiots. It's really that simple. There is no conspiracy, there is only a mindset of "If someone sues someone else, then the defendant must deserve it".