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Why Geim Never Patented Graphene

gbrumfiel writes "As we discussed on Tuesday, Andre Geim won this year's Nobel prize in physics for graphene, but he never patented it. In an interview with Nature News, he explains why: 'We considered patenting; we prepared a patent and it was nearly filed. Then I had an interaction with a big, multinational electronics company. I approached a guy at a conference and said, "We've got this patent coming up, would you be interested in sponsoring it over the years?" It's quite expensive to keep a patent alive for 20 years. The guy told me, "We are looking at graphene, and it might have a future in the long term. If after ten years we find it's really as good as it promises, we will put a hundred patent lawyers on it to write a hundred patents a day, and you will spend the rest of your life, and the gross domestic product of your little island, suing us." That's a direct quote.'"

238 of 325 comments (clear)

  1. But if he doesn't patent it... by Narcocide · · Score: 3, Funny

    Can't they just patent it anyway, and sue him instead?

    1. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If a Nobel prize doesn't count as prior art, the system is even more broken that it seems

    2. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 1

      Pretty sure nobody could get away with patenting something someone already published and won the Nobel Prize for.

    3. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Method of making something similar to Graphene but isn't"
      "Method of using a Graphine-like material to wipe your ass"
      add "on a smartphone", "on the internet" etc. to each of them.

      They can generate a mountain of patent applications and a good chunk would be granted. They'd never stand up in court, but they don't care. Like the guy said, they'd kill the competition with legal fees.

      Yes, it's an abuse of the legal system. Good luck getting THAT to stick.

    4. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by dougmc · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well, they don't have to patent graphene itself -- they can just patent every possible application of it that they can think of.

      That's really the way things seem to work -- if you patent something really awesome, somebody with a lot more lawyers will surround your invention with patents so it can't be used, even by you, without infringing on one of their patents. In general, these patents tend to be "obvious to the layperson" and therefore should be thrown out, but that requires lots of money, and it's easier to just pay their extortion money.

      The system is screwed up. It would be even more screwed up if you needed a Nobel prize to protect yourself against it, but at least in this case it's not needed -- and doesn't even help.

    5. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by canajin56 · · Score: 3, Informative

      They seemed to think they would ruin him if he had a publication and a patent. Why would a Nobel Prize be a good example of prior art, but an actual patent would be a joke? Even with a patent and a Nobel prize and a dozen publications, there is nothing you can due when sued for violating 1,000 different patents and faced with a team of 200 lawyers filing a dozen lawsuits every day until you fold. That's the point. They don't care if they lose a lot in court. The point was they will never license his discovery, they will take and if he tries to fight, they will dedicate their entire existence to ruining his life. AKA they will act like any corporation ever. Steal and then sue your victim for 10 trillion dollars.

      --
      ASCII stupid question, get a stupid ANSI
    6. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by DJ+Jones · · Score: 5, Informative

      RTFA. In the next paragraph Geim talks about what the guy from the electronics company meant. Patents only work if they are for specific devices or processes. Since graphene hasn't been use in any practical real-world solutions yet, there's really nothing to patent at this stage. The company that develop devices and uses for Graphene will end up filing more specific and enforceable patents.

      He wasn't necessarily knocking the system.

    7. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by MozeeToby · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Oh yes, a very simple method to make graphene is covered by the prior art. But what if they come up with some tiny improvement to the process (or more likely a massive improvement if they're going to commercialize it I don't think using scotch tape and pencil lead is going to cut it). And then you can file a patent for each possible use that you can come up with, and another for every tiny incremental improvement you make to those uses, and even uses that you come up with that you know won't work but might end up being close enough to something that does work that you can sue someone later. Broken... broken... broken, I just can't express how broken the patent system is.

    8. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      They'll also patent every way of making it. Then they'll patent every change/improvement
      to the process for the next 50 years.

    9. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      That's how patents work in biotech. First you find a gene, then you immediately patent it - don't worry about figureing out what it does, because if you delay to do that a competitor might file first. Then you figure out what it does, and then you patent every possible application just to be safe. Commercial biotech research is basically driven by patents, but it can get extremally aggressive.

    10. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by E+IS+mC(Square) · · Score: 1

      But but.. capitalism must trump any prize, right? After all, the patent lawyers are byproduct of the capitalism as we practice in the US (and around the world too).

    11. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      Making an improvement gives you the right to the improvement only. The rest of the process is still covered by the original patent.

      So you might file a whole raft of improvements but it won't get you any economic benefit.

    12. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by MozeeToby · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Never understood the 'not obvious to the layperson' requirement, seems to me like it should be 'not obvious to someone in the given field'. In other words, if you presented 5 engineers with a problem and they all came up with the same or similar solutions, that solution should not be patentable, there is no leap that is worth rewarding with a monopoly. But I guess just getting the layperson requirement to actually be honored would be a good step in the right direction.

    13. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by hey! · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You don't understand how this works. You write patents like "Use of graphene as a conducting element in an electronic device," or "Method of fabricating graphene on silicon substrates employing one of several obvious design choices that nonetheless sound like witchcraft to anyone without a PhD in Materials Science."

      It doesn't matter if the patents won't stand up. If there's enough of them, it won't be worth the cost for any private party to knock them all down. The only way to stop this is to get tough on fraudulent claims. If an "inventor" shows a pattern of putting his name on patent applications that a professional working in the field would consider trivial, then he should go to prison for perjury.

      The problem with the current system for policing fraud is that it relies on competitors. But the whole strategy is to pile the BS so deep it's not worth the competitors' bother. Furthermore, the competitors aren't going to rock the boat because they're doing the same damned thing.

      Patent abuse is a win-some, lose-some proposition for the corporations engaged in it. It's the public and the real inventors who consistently lose.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    14. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Dachannien · · Score: 4, Informative

      In the US, the standard is "not obvious to one having ordinary skill in the art". In other words, someone with more skill than Joe Sixpack, but less skill than an expert in the field.

    15. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by MozeeToby · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm just saying that an army of patent lawyers will box in any important invention so much that any layman's patent is going to be 100% worthless because they won't be able to do anything with it without stepping all over a dozen other patents. Lets say that you're one of the inventors and want to start a business to actually sell a product that uses graphene. Oh, you want to mass produce graphene now? Well, there's 13 patents on ways to mass produce it so you'll need to license one of them even though it is really just an automation of the process that one you a Nobel prize. You want to use graphene in a touchscreen display? Sorry, that violate the patent on "monolayer semiconductor based resistive devices". etc, etc, etc.

    16. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Lunix+Nutcase · · Score: 1

      You can't obtain a patent on a substance. You can only obtain patents on the manufacturing or some "novel" usage of the substance.

    17. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by TheKidWho · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Once the patents expire the knowledge will be in the public domain and free to use for everyone. Much better than keeping it a family/industrial secret for hundreds of years IMO.

    18. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by danpat · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The problem is that it takes less than those 5 engineers to get a crap patent into the system in the first place. When the cost of entry is lower than the cost of removal, the system is going to tend to fill up with crap.

      Now, if there was a fine levied against those that had their patents invalidated......

    19. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Intron · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You can't obtain a patent on a substance. You can only obtain patents on the manufacturing or some "novel" usage of the substance.

      If there's only one way to make a material and you patent it, then you have essentially patented the material. That's how gene patents work too, they're on the process to produce the gene.

      --
      Intron: the portion of DNA which expresses nothing useful.
    20. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by TheDarkMaster · · Score: 4, Funny

      Simply ignore the patents ... And if any laywer appeared at the door of your company trying to extort you because of such patents, return then to his employer by mail. Just the head.

      --
      Religion: The greatest weapon of mass destruction of all time
    21. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by John+Hasler · · Score: 2, Informative

      > Never understood the 'not obvious to the layperson' requirement...

      There is no such requirement in the USA.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    22. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Grond · · Score: 4, Informative

      In the US, the standard is "not obvious to one having ordinary skill in the art". In other words, someone with more skill than Joe Sixpack, but less skill than an expert in the field.

      It's a little more complicated than that. The level of skill involved depends on the subject matter. If the patent is about a simple mechanical device, then the level of skill will be relatively low. Perhaps a bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering, if that. If the patent is about a complex genetically modified organism, then the person having ordinary skill in the art would have a high level of skill, probably a Ph.D in biology with some additional years of experience.

      You tend to have alleged infringers arguing that the level of skill in a given case is very high and therefore the super-genius involved would easily have found the invention obvious. The patentee tends to argue that the level of skill is very low and that the Joe Sixpack involved would find the invention astonishingly unobvious.

      The European Patent Convention--and thus the patent law of EU countries--follows a similar standard as the US ('a person skilled in the art').

    23. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Dachannien · · Score: 3, Insightful

      if you patent something really awesome, somebody with a lot more lawyers will surround your invention with patents so it can't be used, even by you, without infringing on one of their patents.

      If you hold the patent for Illudium Pu-36, for instance, then even if someone else patents the Illudium Pu-36 explosive space modulator, they will be on the hook if they try to make their invention without getting a license from you. So even if everyone else comes out of the woodwork getting patents that hedge out all the possible applications of your invention, you're still better off with the patent, since they can't make their own patented inventions without using your patented invention.

    24. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Spatial · · Score: 5, Insightful

      We've arranged a society based on science and technology, in which nobody understands anything about science and technology. And this combustible mixture of ignorance and power, sooner or later, is going to blow up in our faces. I mean, who is running the science and technology in a democracy if the people don't know anything about it?

      Carl Sagan

    25. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by CyprusBlue113 · · Score: 1

      Clearly you're just better off patenting the original necessary piece, and then just being a patent Troll, instead of using your own invention.

      Yeah, I'd say the system is broken.

      --
      a handful of selfish greedy people are no match for millions of selfish, greedy people -u4ya
    26. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by sleeping143 · · Score: 1

      Suing a researcher for producing small quantities of your product in order to use it in his research wouldn't make financial sense. So unless the patent holder had a personal vendetta against the researcher, they wouldn't act on the infringement.

    27. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Alef · · Score: 1

      I'm not familiar with the details of the patent system of the USA, but normally the requirement is that it shouldn't be obvious the someone "skilled in the art" and having access to all available knowledge in the field. For instance, if the invention offers a solution to a problem that skilled people have been trying to solve for some time, it cannot be considered obvious. In practice, however, I think the requirements are quite a bit lower.

      Thinking about it, I wonder what the consequences would be if that specific requirement were added: The problem that the invention solves must have been known for at least X years.

    28. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Chosen+Reject · · Score: 1

      This is why I think the inability to easily reverse engineer must be the standard for obtaining a patent. That is, if whatever you are trying to get a patent for can be reverse engineered before that patent would expire, then you don't get a patent. That way, either patent terms would become much shorter, or only really difficult, non-obvious things get patents. Granted, this would probably mean the death of patents, and I'm fine with that as well.

      --
      Stop Global Warming!
      Just say no to irreversible processes!
    29. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Never understood the 'not obvious to the layperson' requirement, seems to me like it should be 'not obvious to someone in the given field'. In other words, if you presented 5 engineers with a problem and they all came up with the same or similar solutions, that solution should not be patentable, there is no leap that is worth rewarding with a monopoly. But I guess just getting the layperson requirement to actually be honored would be a good step in the right direction.

      This is exactly why the poster child for bad patents, Amazon's 1-click purchase (i.e. no confirmation) is a terrible example of a bad patent. It's quite an awesome one.

      I came from that era, and earlier. No programmer in their right mind would ever do something so stupid as to let a book get bought and shipped by one click -- "What if the guy accidentally clicked it? There should be a confirming dialog!"

      Bezos say no.

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    30. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by chowdahhead · · Score: 1

      Pharmaceutical patents are for the molecule itself, and sometimes a novel dosage form used to deliver the drug. The usage or mechanism of the drug is not, and that is why we usually have several members of a given drug class, like protease inhibitors or beta-blockers.

    31. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by gotfork · · Score: 1

      There may not yet be any consumer devices that use graphene, but they are coming up fast. Now that Korean scientists know how to produce high quality graphene in bulk with roll-to-roll processing, it will probably start replacing indium tin oxide as the transparent electrode of choice in flat displays: http://www.nature.com/nnano/journal/v5/n8/abs/nnano.2010.132.html Graphene will also probably appear in next-generation chemical sensors -- its so thin that individual molecules adsorbed on it can have measurable changes in its electrical properties: http://www.nature.com/nmat/journal/v6/n9/full/nmat1967.html I don't know if Geim anticipated either of these, but I wouldn't be surprised. An interesting comparison is the story of Peter Gruenberg who did patent his Nobel Prize-winning discovery: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Gr%C3%BCnberg I wonder how much money he actually saw from the patent though. GMR-based hard drives are a multi-billion dollar industry, but there are hundreds of knock-off patents floating around too...

    32. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by HungryHobo · · Score: 4, Informative

      Something obvious you simply avoid doing for (probably)good reason is still obvious.
      How many of those same programmers who I assume were at least moderately skilled in the art would have had the slightest problem creating code to let a book get bought and shipped by one click?
      Where is the invention?
      Where is the non-obvious bit?

      If every gun manufacturer included a safety but is quite capable of building one without but don't that doesn't make it an "invention" when one of them does even if it turns out that people like guns with no safetys.

      It's an ideal poster child for bad patents.

    33. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by ChipMonk · · Score: 4, Funny

      using XML

    34. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      Aside from being dead, I would much rather these things be run by a pot smoker like sagan. It seems like most everything else in the terms of our social systems are designed by alcoholics and crack heads, and the worst addicts of all Teetotalers (self-righteousness is a hell of a drug)

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    35. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by AhabTheArab · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But then you can't use your Illudium Pu-36 for any practical applications. Your patent is as useless as theirs at that point.

    36. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by gauntletguy · · Score: 1

      with a synergistic approach

    37. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by srussia · · Score: 2, Insightful

      In the US, the standard is "not obvious to one having ordinary skill in the art". In other words, someone with more skill than Joe Sixpack, but less skill than an expert in the field.

      Sounds like they should just include an "Ask Slashdot" step in the patent process. In fact, I think I'll patent a "method for determining 'obviousness to a person skilled in the art' for patent puproses".

      --
      Set your phasers on "funky"!
    38. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by idontgno · · Score: 1

      In some ways, it's a little worse than that.

      Holding the key basic patent and being surrounded by implementation patents means facing escalating pressure (perhaps even legal pressure) to permit cheap licensing or outright sale of your patent to your besiegers.

      Try owning the only block of property not already sold off to a huge developer. Eminent domain, though not strictly applicable here, is still a pretty good snapshot of the mindset involved.

      --
      Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
    39. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      Patents are actually anti-capitalistic. They give the patent holder an artificial temporary monopoly, and therefore for that time shield him from the free market.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    40. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by brainboyz · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But if they're big enough compared to you, they'll make their space modulator anyway and drag things out in court when you sue. Better have the money to have lawyers dedicated to the case for 8 years. If you run out of money, they win. If your lawyers miss an objection or technicality, they win. If you win, you'll eventually get money and damages.

    41. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Jonah+Hex · · Score: 2, Funny

      Where's the kaboom? There was supposed to be an earth-shattering kaboom!

    42. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Jonah+Hex · · Score: 1

      This makes me very angry, very angry indeed.

    43. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Hal_Porter · · Score: 5, Funny

      Hey, I work in commercial biotech research! Are you calling me aggressive?

      You wanna come over and say that, buddy?

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    44. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      I came from that era, and earlier. No programmer in their right mind would ever do something so stupid as to let a book get bought and shipped by one click -- "What if the guy accidentally clicked it? There should be a confirming dialog!"

      UNIX programmers certainly would - "if you didn't want to delete it, you shouldn't have typed 'rm file'".

    45. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Jafafa+Hots · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So, you invented Illudium Pu-36 and get a 20 year patent.
      You spend ten years defending that patent, and get very little out of it because you're too small to get good licensing deals, too small to effectively fight off infringers, etc.

      Meanwhile, they after a few years patent every concievable use of it. You're boxed in now. You can spend all your time fighting them. Some of their patents are very obvious, others have prior art, but you have to prove that in court and you can't afford to.

      Your patent expires. They still have years left on theirs and make a billion. Meanwhile they are creating new slight variations of every patent to effectively REpatent the same shit. Most get through because patent examiners are clueless, and nobody wants to fight them in court.

      Rinse, repeat.

      --
      This space available.
    46. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Jafafa+Hots · · Score: 3, Informative

      They used to say that about copyrights.

      --
      This space available.
    47. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by leonardluen · · Score: 1

      sorry that was patented by someone else, and you failed to pay the proper royalties.

    48. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      to embiggen the scope of our operational parameters

    49. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by shaitand · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Small correction if you presented 5 engineers with a problem and ANY of them came up with the same or similar solutions, that solution shouldn't be patentable.

      Patents are given out way too easily. I used to think patents should be eliminated altogether but I've finally settled on the belief that we simply give out too many and for too little.

      Progressive inventions will be made without patents. Patents should be reserved for solutions that aren't reached by 1 in a thousand peers let alone five out of five random peers.

    50. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by t2t10 · · Score: 1

      Not even that. If it's an important technology, your original patent will likely run out beflongore major applications of the technology are made. So, you paid for your patent and to maintain it, but the later patents cover a much more lucrative period in the use of the invention.

    51. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Kvasio · · Score: 5, Funny

      mod parent +1, aggressive

    52. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Well, there is more than one way to obtain graphene. In fact Geim used at least 6 different ways of doing it.

    53. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by dougmc · · Score: 3, Informative

      By default rm asks for confirmation before deleting a file. You have to override this behavior with the -f flag.

      You're wrong. rm only asks for confirmation if it's given the -i flag or if you're doing something unusual like removing a file you don't have write access to.

      Perhaps you have an alias set up that maps "rm" to "rm -i" -- it's a pretty common default alias, but it's a function of your *nix setup, not the rm command itself.

    54. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by shentino · · Score: 1

      In theory you could simply refuse to license to them, since infringement would be sorta implied by the act of a derivation which makes the original invention a part of itself.

      In practice they'd probably infringe anyway knowing they'd outlast you in court.

    55. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by dougmc · · Score: 1

      the bar for patent-ability IS 'not obvious to an expert in the field'. not sure where this obvious to the layperson thing came from.

      Not sure, but it would seem that I was wrong to repeat it.

      Either way, when somebody surrounds a new invention/discovery with patents like this, most of them should be thrown out on a basis of that rule.

    56. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Kreigaffe · · Score: 1

      and integrate with various geographically disparate locations

      --
      ... still waiting for this free-as-in-beer free beer I keep hearing about. :|
    57. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by shentino · · Score: 1

      If you're big enough to grind them to smithereens in court, you always have a case.

      "We will drag you to pieces" is the same as "we got you cold" when you're too broke to defend yourself anyway.

    58. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by shentino · · Score: 1

      That's actually a good example of prior art for a lot of the genetics patents out there.

    59. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Dachannien · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's a little more complicated than that.

      True, but it's nigh impossible to convince /.ers to read the claims of a patent, so I figured I'd give the Cliff Notes version.

    60. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by dgatwood · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And, of course, the way it should work is this:

      • Gather a panel of people with a typical level of knowledge in the field.
      • Ensure that none of them are aware of the invention.
      • Tell them the problem the invention is trying to solve.
      • Give them any building blocks used.
      • See if they can replicate the invention or a close approximation thereof.
      • If so, reject the patent.

      The problem is that 99% of "inventions" are nothing of the sort. They're little more than ideas that are obvious as soon as you are told the problem that you're trying to solve, and the only reason they weren't invented decades earlier is that nobody was trying to solve that problem yet because the problem space itself did not exist.

      For example, a patent on how to take bids via the Internet could not reasonably be invented prior to the Internet. But ask ten people how they would set up an auction site on the Internet, and even if they've never used eBay or heard people describe how it works, they'll still describe most of it pretty accurately. As such, it's obvious to even a nimrod who knows how the Internet works and wants to conduct auctions online. Since the core purpose of patents is to protect an inventor's exclusivity temporarily in exchange for publishing how something works instead of keeping it a trade secret, and since a patent on that concept would contribute nothing of consequence to the general understanding of technology, such a patent should be soundly rejected.

      Further, any patent on any software technology that does not include the corresponding source code to demonstrate how something is done should be rejected. And again, if the source code is obvious once you've been told its inputs and expected outputs, the patent should similarly be rejected.

      It should not be enough to be the first to think of doing something. The patent should at a minimum provide some significant insight that would not be obvious to a typical person who has been exposed to the problem. Most patents do not, and as such, most patents are junk.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    61. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by E+IS+mC(Square) · · Score: 1

      Right. But my comment was more about "only answerable to shareholders" mantra of today's corporations and hence their tendency to hire an army of lawyers to protect them when they do things which are not exactly morally right - as in the case we are discussing.

    62. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by tonywong · · Score: 1

      Just because he has a PhD and he has just won a Nobel Prize, it doesn't mean he can't get scammed. He was foolish to cave into the electronics company's demand. He should have just said, oh, I suppose you aren't interested then. I'll just go to your /// instead.

      They would change their attitude right quick if they felt that this guy was going to go over to the "enemy". Sometimes you have to fight evil with a larger evil.

    63. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by dougmc · · Score: 1

      In theory you could simply refuse to license to them, since infringement would be sorta implied by the act of a derivation which makes the original invention a part of itself

      They don't need you to license to them. It's not like they have to use their patents themselves (they haven't built anything, just written up a bunch of "as vague as they can get away with" potential inventions) -- the patents are only there to make sure they get a part of whatever pie develops.

      It is in their best interests for a pie to develop, but if one doesn't, well, they're not out an invention that cost them 15 years to develop (like you are) -- they're just out some money put into people writing up and filing some patents.

      Though you could be right about the "in practice" part too.

    64. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      By default rm asks for confirmation before deleting a file. You have to override this behavior with the -f flag.

      Only if you have an alias setup for 'rm' to 'rm -i'.

      This is certainly something most _distros_ do, but it's not the default behaviour of 'rm' itself.

    65. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by bzipitidoo · · Score: 1

      I used to think patents should be eliminated altogether

      Why did you change your mind? I've gone the opposite direction.

      I used to think only software patents should be eliminated, or patents should be shortened. I've decided the whole thing should be eliminated. Even patents on mechanical devices should no longer be granted. Otherwise it will still be possible to patent software, since all you'd have to do is implement it on a Babbage style computer. An example is a patent from 1900 on a 24 hour clock. Then it was necessary to realize it with mechanisms, today the device can be done entirely on a computer.

      It is the exclusivity that causes such trouble. We've foolishly engaged in the business of trying to enforce unnatural monopolies. Fear of lawsuits drives way too many decisions. Is this guy's threat credible? Yes! Even though patents were never meant to be so draconian, and were supposed to be very narrow, and the guy is exaggerating a little, the fact is patents can and are being used so. The forces in favor of such rights have been very successful at expanding the interpretation far beyond what was intended, so that what would have been nothing to worry about now is. Stop granting monopolies, and this sort of intellectual oppression will end.

      We need a positive system, not the current negative one. We have tried to make ideas profitable by denying their use to all but a chosen few who manage to obtain rights. This "opt in" system is a huge mistake. It's allowed way too many trolls to game the system and leech off of other's hard work. I'm open to letting the patent system continue, but only if patents no longer come with monopolies. This game of denial, of hitting innovators for protection money in the form of licenses, and of stealing the rights to their ideas by working the system faster and better than they can, is very discouraging and chilling to exactly the sort of innovation we revere most. The market is entirely one-sided.

      Verizon should never have been able to nearly strangle Vonage, IBM should not have been able to mug Sun, NTP shouldn't have been given such a gigantic pile of RIM's cash, there should be no legitimate reason why Apple thinks they can arrogate how users shall use what others produce that happens to run on Apple products, and of course MS's adopted, late poodle, SCO, should never have had any hope of success in going after not just Linux producers, but users who were not properly part of the dispute. And all that is just some of the more prominent examples from the IT world. In biotech, Monsanto should not be allowed the insanity of suing farmers for using certain seeds! And our enforcement should never have been engaged to confiscate prescription drugs at border crossings.

      End the monopolies, and reward innovation in other, positive ways, and all this evil will have no ground to stand on.

      --
      Intellectual Property is a monopolistic, selfish, and defective concept. It is "tyranny over the mind of man"
    66. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by nhavar · · Score: 1

      so that people can be empowered to reach out

      --
      "Do not be swept up in the momentum of mediocrity." - anon
    67. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Pinky's+Brain · · Score: 1

      Probably because a jury of lay people in Texas get to make the decision.

    68. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by ewanm89 · · Score: 1

      "r" == 1,"m" == 2, " " == 3, at least one character for the filename == 4, return == 5.

      So that's at least five clicks.

    69. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by 427_ci_505 · · Score: 1

      and touch themselves.

    70. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Sabriel · · Score: 1

      And a big multinational can patent them all, retain a legal firm to defend them, and call it pocket change. Lone inventor? Not so much.

    71. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      That may be the /de jure/ standard. But the /de facto/ standard is "non-obvious to the jurors deciding the case". After all, it's not as if them there college boys with their book-learning are any smarter than regular Americans, right?

    72. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Ihmhi · · Score: 3, Funny

      Mod Parent "+1, Like, You're a Cool Guy Man, And... And And I Like What You Said Dude, It Reached Me. Really Reached Me."

    73. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by shaitand · · Score: 1

      I believe there are solutions worthy of a patent. Things that provide society with enough benefit that it is worth limited exclusivity (certainly not 20yrs worth!) in order to keep that inventor content and at home.

      Examples (not US examples, global ones) are the printing press, the automobile, the turning machine, the steam engine, the time machine... wait, you guys don't know about that one yet. I believe the kinds of things that are worthy of a patent come along maybe once or twice a generation. I also believe that every 20 years or so when a 3-5yr patent IS granted it should go to the inventor(s) and not the company, even if it is a work for hire. The inventor should be protected from being bound to any prior agreement or obligation that would cost him/them his/their rights including employment agreements, outstanding loans, and tax debts. If it was a work for hire the company will have to settle for most likely having first dibs on licensing.

      Patents don't inspire loyalty in companies because companies lack human values. It's the people with brilliant ideas we need to cultivate. Not the companies.

      To give further clarification. The first engine is patent worthy, a new engine is not.

      And no, software is not patent worthy unless it is an AI on a level it eliminates mankind of all menial thought. Then the inventor should be able to enjoy the benefits for the short transition phase in which money has meaning.

    74. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by shaitand · · Score: 1

      I stand corrected. This has been the case on every box I've touched in so long I've just come to expect it.

      rm is hardly the only example that supports your point in any case.

    75. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by shaitand · · Score: 1

      "Perhaps you have an alias set up that maps "rm" to "rm -i" -- it's a pretty common default alias, but it's a function of your *nix setup, not the rm command itself."

      You are correct. Since every major distro has done that for the past 10+ years out of the box I'd actually forgotten.

    76. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by cduffy · · Score: 1

      Since every major distro has done that for the past 10+ years out of the box I'd actually forgotten.

      Anything I've used lately has that default out-of-the-box only for root.

    77. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      The click is when you hit enter at the end of the line.

    78. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by ckaminski · · Score: 1

      Actually, it doesn't.

      Many Linux systems/shells alias rm to 'rm -i', especially root accounts, to prevent this sort of foot-shooting.

      The default rm will happily delete any file it can without prompting.

    79. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

      Given the current backlog at the USPTO, I think that your solution would considerably slow the process down. What we need over here is a tiny bit more:

      >> If the patent is rejected, bill the applicant with the price of the process.

      Granted, it will make it more risky (for a small company or an individual) to file a patent. OTOH, it will make it dangerously expensive for a big company to file 1000 patents a day.

    80. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Anpheus · · Score: 1

      And don't forget the patents that are basically like the "with a mobile phone" or "on the internet" patents. That is, expect to see patents that are just like all the existing literature on transistors reiterated as "with graphene" at the end.

    81. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Anpheus · · Score: 1

      You can't send a patent troll corporation to jail, you can only sue the troll for their inevitably empty bank accounts. It doesn't cost much to file for a patent, so the limited liability means the creator(s) of the corporation don't have much to lose.

    82. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by hey! · · Score: 1

      You can send the person who signs his name to the fraudulent patent application, which is already is a crime.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    83. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Anpheus · · Score: 1

      You mean the corporation?

    84. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by Chowderbags · · Score: 1

      Unless all the profits were put into a separate company that just happens to have the exact same leadership. Then you'll get nothing, because gosh, there's no assets here. Accountants are the silent partner in crime to lawyers. A lawyer defends company assets by twisting words, an accountant defends company assets by twisting numbers.

    85. Re:But if he doesn't patent it... by hey! · · Score: 1

      No. A *human* has to sign the application, thus being at risk (we are warned) of perjury.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  2. Name and Shame. by Hatta · · Score: 4, Interesting

    He could at least have mentioned which "big, multinational electronics company" he spoke with.

    --
    Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    1. Re:Name and Shame. by hedwards · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That wouldn't be smart. If he did that, he'd probably get taken to court for slander, and if he didn't have evidence that the individual said that, he could very easily lose. Given the content of the quote, I rather suspect that the individual wouldn't have the scruples to look the other way if it is an accurate quote.

    2. Re:Name and Shame. by arivanov · · Score: 1

      You cannot guess which one? It is fairly easy to guess. There are about two of them which fit the bill and I am pretty sure which one was he talking to. It is not the one which once upon a time did a blue roses advert. That one would have given a considerably more subtle answer.

      --
      Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
      http://www.sigsegv.cx/
    3. Re:Name and Shame. by chemicaldave · · Score: 1

      "big, multinational electronics company"

      It doesn't take a genius to know the answer is IBM

    4. Re:Name and Shame. by FooAtWFU · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yeah..... that is one of the many reasons the US put "freedom of speech" in a Constitutional amendment and wrote very loose slander/libel laws.

      --
      The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.
    5. Re:Name and Shame. by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 3, Interesting

      My first guess was actually Intel. The "little island" comment lead me to think that the executive had mixed up the UK and Ireland (Intel have a big plant in Ireland). Then again, I wouldn't put it past the executive of any major US company to use the a pejorative like "little island" when referring to the UK. UK-ians need to learn to stop speaking American.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    6. Re:Name and Shame. by SleazyRidr · · Score: 1

      Also, the name of the person who actually said it.

    7. Re:Name and Shame. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      100 years from now no one will care who the richest corporation or individual was but all scientists will know his name.
      A Nobel prize, a great book or painting, etc can bring a kind of immortality that money never can. Edgar Allan Poe died an alcoholic pauper but he left all of us a timeless legacy.

    8. Re:Name and Shame. by Duketape · · Score: 1

      He is professor in Nijmegen. Philips has there a big laboratory...

    9. Re:Name and Shame. by readin · · Score: 1

      It is more accurate that a person's basic human right to free speech (UN article 19) may have been violated if it is shown that it didn't infringe on another person's basic human right to not be falsely accused (UN articles 8,9,10 and most importantly article 30). These are listed within the UN's Universal Declaration of Human Rights [un.org].
      Being falsely accused in a conversation is different from being falsely accused by a court of law.
      Fortunately the U.S. is governed by the U.S. Constitution not by the U.N.. We still have some freedom here, and some semblance of democracy too.

      --
      I often don't like the choices people make, but I like the fact that people make choices. That's why I'm a conservative.
    10. Re:Name and Shame. by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      Well if that's so much of a problem, I suggest that he can come to Canada. Where the accuser has to prove justifiable libel and slander in court for it to stick.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    11. Re:Name and Shame. by snowgirl · · Score: 1

      Yeah..... that is one of the many reasons the US put "freedom of speech" in a Constitutional amendment and wrote very loose slander/libel laws.

      Actually, the slander/libel laws are so loose due to case law establishing that the 1st Amendment right to Freedom of Speech is paramount, and thus things like prior restraint are impossible, and that truth is an absolute defense.

      The states then came along with their Restatement of Torts and defined the slander/libel laws loosely around what tradition had already established.

      Welcome to the Common Law system where case law and legal tradition were more instrumental in defining laws than legislators.

      --
      WARNING! This girl exceeds the MAXIMUM SAFE standards established by the FDA for BRATTINESS
    12. Re:Name and Shame. by t2t10 · · Score: 1

      The "Congress shall make no law..." is the reason libel and slander laws in the US are so weak; stronger laws would be unconstitutional and have been struck down when Congress tried enacting them.

      So, yes, the First Amendment is "granting you immunity for many kinds of liability" because liabilities only exist as a result of laws, and Congress shall make no laws creating such liabilities for protected free speech.

      Much as I like the UDHR, it is far less useful because it is rather vague and can actually be used to stifle free speech. For example, under UDHR, you might legally restrict criticism of a religion, while under the Constitution, you cannot.

    13. Re:Name and Shame. by t2t10 · · Score: 1

      Defamation laws are becoming increasingly important to protect our democratic process.

      Quite the opposite: laws against defamation and insults are a serious threat to our democratic process since they are being used to stifle free speech. These laws are a serious problem in Europe. In the US, they are usually unconstitutional and usually don't stand up to a serious court challenge.

    14. Re:Name and Shame. by Gamma747 · · Score: 1

      If the patent system in the US weren't horribly broken, then he could have both.

    15. Re:Name and Shame. by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

      You're absolutely right about the potential for misuse.

      However with the "Citzens United v. F.E.C" ruling, we are pretty much at the mercy of wealthy corporations and individuals.

      After further thought, I withdraw my assertion about defamation laws being a form of protection of our democratic process since the PACTS are short lived, the courts are too slow, the corporations could fund a strong team of defense lawyers, and the plaintiffs would have to prove that "actual malice" was involved.

      So basically journalists are our only line of defense... o wait. We're screwed.

      --
      These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
    16. Re:Name and Shame. by KingSkippus · · Score: 1

      Based on what?

      If I described IBM to someone, I wouldn't call it an "electronics" company. I mean, sure, they dabble in electronics, but if I were describing it, I would call it a "computer" company or a "technology" company.

      When I think of companies that are "electronics" companies, i.e. that's what they're primarily known for, I think of either hardware manufacturing companies such as Intel (as someone else mentioned here) or "consumer electronics" companies such as Sony, which is where my money is, and which was modded as "Troll" below because, I'm guessing, some fanboy got mod points.

      So why do you think it's so obvious that the "electronics" company is IBM?

    17. Re:Name and Shame. by batura · · Score: 1

      Actually, it would the little island of Great Britain. The UK refers to the whole country, which spans many islands, including GB and Northern Ireland.

    18. Re:Name and Shame. by Zadaz · · Score: 1

      Does it really matter? Do you think that they're so different?

    19. Re:Name and Shame. by Libertarian001 · · Score: 1

      How were you mod'ed "Insightful?" The U.S. 1st Amendment has nothing to do with slander/libel laws in a civil context, which this is. It's about preventing the Federal government from censoring its citizens.

    20. Re:Name and Shame. by dkf · · Score: 1

      He is professor in Nijmegen.

      Was. He moved to Manchester subsequently.

      --
      "Little does he know, but there is no 'I' in 'Idiot'!"
  3. That's not a direct quote. by Culture20 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That's a threat to abuse the legal system.

    1. Re:That's not a direct quote. by Tim+C · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The two are not mutually exclusive.

    2. Re:That's not a direct quote. by electricprof · · Score: 1

      It seems to me that the whole patent trolling industry is an abuse of the legal system ... at least in terms of what most reasonable people would think the legal system is for.

    3. Re:That's not a direct quote. by spidercoz · · Score: 1

      reasonable people aren't allowed in the legal system, the whole fucking thing would collapse

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - Evelyn Beatrice Hall, re Voltaire
  4. One word: libel by dazedNconfuzed · · Score: 3, Funny

    Do that, and he'll spend the rest of his life and gross income fighting interminable libel suits.

    --
    Can we get a "-1 Wrong" moderation option?
    1. Re:One word: libel by inode_buddha · · Score: 1

      It isn't libel if what he said is true. If the other guy did indeed say that.

      --
      C|N>K
    2. Re:One word: libel by meerling · · Score: 1

      yeah, I've heard that in the UK the truth is less important than the appearance in libel suits, so even if you had a video recording of the CEO saying something like that, they could still sue and win if you published that statement. Don't know how true that is, but the UK laws have some really stupid stuff in them. (All countries laws have some stupid stuff, but the longer the country has been around, the more moronic stuff is there.)

    3. Re:One word: libel by denis-The-menace · · Score: 1

      Prove it!
      Oh, you can't -> Libel!!!

      --
      Obama's legacy: (N)othing (S)ecure (A)nywhere and (T)error (S)imulation (A)dministration
    4. Re:One word: libel by Intron · · Score: 4, Funny

      It isn't libel if what he said is true. If the other guy did indeed say that.

      Didn't you read the article? They have 100 lawyers sitting around waiting for something to do.

      --
      Intron: the portion of DNA which expresses nothing useful.
    5. Re:One word: libel by surveyork · · Score: 1

      I read a bit about libel when I got interested in the Simon Singh case and libel tourism. Apparently, even if what you say is the truth, a fact, it doesn't matter (much) if what you said about somebody/some company somehow damaged the image of the company. An extreme example: A company makes toys laden with lead. You publish an article explaining all the facts. Company sues you for libel. "But I said is the truth. You can check it!" Doesn't matter in England. You damaged the image of the company. Now, pay billions of pounds. Thanks to Simon's case -and a few recent others- things are a-changin' in regard to libel laws. Good riddance!

      --
      2019 is going to be the year of Linux on the desktop.
    6. Re:One word: libel by haruchai · · Score: 3, Informative

      Geim lives in the UK. Libel is a pretty big deal by UK laws. If you don't have money and good lawyers, you don't want to be sued for libel

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    7. Re:One word: libel by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 1

      In fact, truth is not an absolute defense in UK libel suits. That's why it's so great to sue for it there.

    8. Re:One word: libel by RomulusNR · · Score: 1

      If only they had their own internal corporate Tea Party to chide them for wasting money!

      So much for running government like a business.... If we did that, we'd have jury duty every day, health insurance wouldn't exist, and the President would just live at Camp David playing golf, while telling us we're all lazy.

      --
      Terrorists can attack freedom, but only Congress can destroy it.
  5. What island are they referring to? by jeffmeden · · Score: 3, Funny

    I don't get it, he is Russian born and works in Manchester, England. Are they saying $2.2 trillion (nominal GDP of England in 2006) isn't enough to win a patent war? My god, if that's the case, then what is?

    1. Re:What island are they referring to? by KingSkippus · · Score: 1

      Trick question. It's impossible to win a patent war... unless you're a patent lawyer, of course, in which case you always win.

    2. Re:What island are they referring to? by jd · · Score: 2, Funny

      Maybe the GP has discovered an underground channel linking the east and west coasts far beneath Hadrian's Wall, with a tributary running down to the Severn.

      --
      It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    3. Re:What island are they referring to? by jorenko · · Score: 4, Insightful

      While we're being pedants here, the UK isn't an island either.

      Or are you one of those people who doesn't understand the difference between the UK and Great Britain?

    4. Re:What island are they referring to? by BadAnalogyGuy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's really simple, and Geim seems to have totally misunderstood the guy's comment.

      By patenting it, and the company creating patents surrounding it, Geim stands to gain in licensing incredible amounts of profit. He would be able to "buy his own island".

      Geim calls this comment arrogant, but by not patenting it he has simply made it possible for the multinational electronics company to use his invention at no cost. They reap all the benefit while his work to discover/invent goes unrewarded - even the Nobel prize award would be dwarfed by the licensing fees he could make if the invention is truly useful. Geim's altruism benefits only the "arrogant" companies he seems to disdain.

    5. Re:What island are they referring to? by dhammond · · Score: 1

      Okay, yes, I'm one of those people that get all of these mixed up. Time to remedy that:

      http://www.woodlands-junior.kent.sch.uk/customs/questions/britain.html

    6. Re:What island are they referring to? by Phleg · · Score: 1

      For what it's worth, the UK isn't an island either. Great Britain is, and North Ireland isn't on Great Britain.

      --
      No comment.
    7. Re:What island are they referring to? by Lumpy · · Score: 4, Funny

      you can for sure win a patent war.

      You just use weapons the other size will not expect.

      If the entire other side ended up in a horrible accident, you suddenly win.

      Just saying.... I have a hundred "associates" just sitting around waiting to do something.... Am I making my self clear? capisce?

      I would hate for an unfortunate circumstance to happen, causing something to happen... Right Vito?

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    8. Re:What island are they referring to? by snowgirl · · Score: 2, Informative

      While we're being pedants here, the UK isn't an island either.

      Or are you one of those people who doesn't understand the difference between the UK and Great Britain?

      Great Britain isn't 1 island either. :)

      Great Britain is one island. There are a number of islands in the British Isles, however.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terminology_of_the_British_Isles

      --
      WARNING! This girl exceeds the MAXIMUM SAFE standards established by the FDA for BRATTINESS
    9. Re:What island are they referring to? by falsified · · Score: 1

      Yeah. How could we forget about the Isle of Man?

      --
      HI, MY NAME IS ISAAC.
    10. Re:What island are they referring to? by simondm · · Score: 1
      How is this insightful? He actually quoted the GDP of England, which is also not an island, however nobody mentioned the UK.

      For the sake of correctness the GDP of GB in 2006 would be $1.9trillion (England) + $85.4billion (Wales) + $194billion (Scotland) $2179400000000 according to wikipedia.

    11. Re:What island are they referring to? by simondm · · Score: 1

      Uh my apologies browser fail.

    12. Re:What island are they referring to? by zoloto · · Score: 1

      Not many people off that island know the difference.

    13. Re:What island are they referring to? by Trogre · · Score: 1

      You made yourself perfectly clear, right up to "capisce".

      --
      "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
    14. Re:What island are they referring to? by sorak · · Score: 1

      That really is insightful. He should have patented it and then told this company, "either pay your lawyers to sue me, or cut out the middleman and pay me"

  6. Patents help the little guy by Stiletto · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is as fine example as any about how patents help the small business and/or lone inventor.

    1. Re:Patents help the little guy by thijsh · · Score: 1

      Clearly this is an example where patents helped him develop a revolutionary new substance worthy of a Nobel prize. Patents are 'absolutely necessary' for innovation after all, and this is some greyt innovation so patents *must* have helped.

    2. Re:Patents help the little guy by darjen · · Score: 1

      No, it's exactly the opposite. How on earth will this guy will benefit from large companies writing a hundred patents surrounding his discovery? Patents will always be detrimental to the little guy, and innovation in general. You can't improve anything that's patented, even if your application is 100% better.

    3. Re:Patents help the little guy by rufty_tufty · · Score: 3, Interesting

      They do help a little. I have a number of friends involved in startups and the patents they own are valuable, but they are not everything. As with all things in life if the big guy wants something they'll find a way to get it.

      IME if you have done a startup (e.g. electronics company) then you have three things of value:
      1) Your customer: lets say you have interest (but not sales) from a large company A and another large company B wants to sell to A. By buying you if they can get a foot in the door to company A that would be worthwhile.
      2) Your employees: startups tend to attract the bright go-getters - often useful to infuse a big old company
      3) Your IP, the code and the patents, although given the fact that the big company can out compete you in terms of bruteforce coding then once they know what you are up to, which if you have come onto their radar they will do; then once you have proved your technology then you have a very short window in which to get bought before this last item becomes worthless because they can set 100 monkeys onto the job.

      I've seen on a number of occasions the patents protect the small startup, but only as far as the demonstration of the specific technology they have developed.

      --
      "The weirdest thing about a mind, is that every answer that you find, is the basis of a brand new cliche" -
    4. Re:Patents help the little guy by ChrisMP1 · · Score: 2, Funny

      You are very good at detecting sarcasm. Really. You are.

      --
      <sig>&nbsp;</sig>
    5. Re:Patents help the little guy by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 2, Funny

      You are very good at detecting sarcasm. Really. You are.

      What are you talking about? He missed it completely.

  7. Blackmail is illegal, right? by jd · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Y'know, just asking. If this isn't a demand with menaces, it sure the hell ain't kippers.

    The interesting part of this is the use of the patent system to prevent an inventor patenting their invention. (You know damn well that the company WILL file patents in ten years anyway and will make gob-loads of money, prior-art not withstanding.) The sole value of a patent system is to ALLOW the inventor to patent their invention. It serves no other function. (The other theoretical value of properly documenting an invention has long-since given up the ghost.) That we now have a verifiable, demonstrable example of patent inversion shows that the system as it stands must be replaced.

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    1. Re:Blackmail is illegal, right? by rufty_tufty · · Score: 1

      I've been thinking about this and I seriously can't come up with a way to improve the patent system in a way that will mean it can't be abused in some way.
      All the current abuses of the patent system I am aware of involve doing things that are already banned under the current rules: obviousness, prior art etc. It used to be that a patent would be to prevent the large corporation copying your idea and running you out of business. Nowadays the patent system prevents the inventor even selling anything in the first place because it is impossible to come up with a device that doesn't infringe someone's patent. It seems now that a patent protects the large corporation from the small corporation.

      All said and done I don't know what change would make it any better,
      perhaps:
      * Corporations may not own patents, only individuals
      * Corporations are not allowed to force an employee to give them access to one of his patents.
      * No individual may own more than 100 Patents(so make them count).

      But these are all open to abuse, the first would mean some hairy employment contracts, the second would lead to some individuals trolling their company (sometimes fairly, sometimes much less so), the final one maybe the least vulnerable to abuse, but IMO quite unfair to a really good inventor.

      That all said and done though I have been royally screwed by the patent system myself so I'm hardly the best person to ask about this..

      --
      "The weirdest thing about a mind, is that every answer that you find, is the basis of a brand new cliche" -
    2. Re:Blackmail is illegal, right? by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

      Y'know, just asking. If this isn't a demand with menaces, it sure the hell ain't kippers.

      The interesting part of this is the use of the patent system to prevent an inventor patenting their invention. (You know damn well that the company WILL file patents in ten years anyway and will make gob-loads of money, prior-art not withstanding.)

      But I guarantee you that it won't be a patent claiming "1. A composition of matter comprising graphene."
      What useful product has Geim invented? Nothing yet - he just discovered a new form of carbon. Allowing him to get a patent on it would preclude all research into uses of graphene, stifling innovation. How can you "invent around" graphene?

      Now, if he starts making graphene based transistors or the like, okay... but not just "graphene". He even realizes this in the next paragraph in the article. The other side was right.

  8. And that's why, my friends, patents are evil. by wazoox · · Score: 3, Interesting

    As said in the freely available e-book "against intellectual monopoly". I didn't write it, but it's well worth a read.

    1. Re:And that's why, my friends, patents are evil. by CannonballHead · · Score: 1

      I didn't write it, but it's well worth a read.

      As opposed to all the other books that you didn't write. ;)

      (I know, it's just a saying, but figured I'd poke fun at it anyways. O:) )

    2. Re:And that's why, my friends, patents are evil. by illtud · · Score: 1

      I didn't write it, but it's well worth a read.

      Well if wazoox didn't write it, it can't be worth reading...

    3. Re:And that's why, my friends, patents are evil. by wazoox · · Score: 1

      Actually I found there are quite a lot of books I haven't enough time to write, that were quite nicely approximated by other people, saving me a lot of my precious hours. Isn't it wonderful?

  9. Patent for a specific application of Graphene by roman_mir · · Score: 1

    It would be hundreds of patents of specific use of Graphene, not of Graphene itself.

    What Geim needs to do is open a small production facility, produce this Graphene and sell it to different companies / research institutes, see what they can come up with.

    --
    Oh, as to patents, all patents should be abolished.

    1. Re:Patent for a specific application of Graphene by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      Right, and the patents on the basic uses of graphene will be useless because without the patent on graphene itself these companies won't be able to manufacture the stuff.

      It's patents 101. Getting a patent on something gives you the right to prevent others from using the claimed matter in the patent. It doesn't give you the right to practice what you have patented because your invention might depend on a technology that someone else has a patent on.

      If somebody had given me that line quoted in the story I would have laughed. There are plenty of ways to monetize such a patent that would make it far cheaper for the company wishing to develop graphene based applications than going through all sorts of legal fights, and there are plenty of patent businesses that would cherfully take on such a fight.

    2. Re:Patent for a specific application of Graphene by Lunix+Nutcase · · Score: 1

      Right, and the patents on the basic uses of graphene will be useless because without the patent on graphene itself these companies won't be able to manufacture the stuff.

      Which is completely wrong. If that were true, no one else would have been able to produce rubber after Charles Goodyear patented vulcanization. But this wasn't the case as other people just came up with their own way to manufacture it. Geim cannot just get a blanket patent on "graphene" but only on a specific manufacturing process or usage of it.

  10. Why are some people so completly evil? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Power corrupts, absolute power corrupts absolutely. Corporations, and their masters have become absolutely powerful and absolutely evil. The only thing more absolute is people's denial and greed.

    How many people have sold themselves out into corporate slavery?

    Now, go as your told, boy.

    1. Re:Why are some people so completly evil? by Rude+Turnip · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Evil prevails when good men do nothing.

    2. Re:Why are some people so completly evil? by Jafafa+Hots · · Score: 1

      and often when they do do something.

      --
      This space available.
  11. I'm confused. by masterwit · · Score: 3, Funny

    It also has the largest surface-to-weight ratio: with one gram of graphene you can cover several football pitches (in Manchester, you know, we measure surface area in football pitches).

    Can someone put this in terms of American Football fields please? Or perhaps school buses will work...thanks.

    --
    We should start a new Slashdot and return control to the geeks. It actually wouldn't be that hard to get some users to
    1. Re:I'm confused. by slim · · Score: 1

      Tricky, since an Association Football pitch, for non-international matches could be as small as 45m * 91m = 4,095m^2 or as large as 91m * 120m = 10,920m^2

      But then I suppose "several" is sufficiently vague to compensate for the variation.

    2. Re:I'm confused. by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      Long or short?

    3. Re:I'm confused. by electricprof · · Score: 1

      Taking a stab at it ... imagine an NFL football field, plus the stands, PLUS the parking lot.

    4. Re:I'm confused. by oldmac31310 · · Score: 1

      I think the fuckton would be a better unit of measurement to use as it is universally recognized, regardless of the fact that it is a unit of weight and not area. Clarity, y'know?

      --
      http://www.acetonestudio.com
    5. Re:I'm confused. by oldmac31310 · · Score: 1

      Asstonne Villa FC?

      --
      http://www.acetonestudio.com
    6. Re:I'm confused. by RealGrouchy · · Score: 1

      (in Manchester, you know, we measure surface area in football pitches).

      Can someone put this in terms of American Football fields please?

      Ah, you must be from the American part of Manchester.

      - RG>

      --
      Hey pal, this isn't a pleasantforest, so don't waste my time with pleasantries!
    7. Re:I'm confused. by meerling · · Score: 1

      What most of the world calls football, the US calls soccer. And by pitches, they don't mean throws, they mean the same as fields.
      As to stones, the British girlfriend I had didn't even know exactly what the hell that was, just that it was a lot larger than a couple pounds weight.

      I know this doesn't answer your question, but I'm simply highlighting the apparent British tendency to use esoteric measurements that just confuse most people for no other apparent reason that it just seems British. (You really don't want to hear a friend of mines 15 minute rant on the stupidity of the UK phone system. It's hilarious if painful.)

    8. Re:I'm confused. by Kepesk · · Score: 1

      How about the size of Wales? I need to know this in area-of-Wales units. Or alternatively, Rhode ISland.

    9. Re:I'm confused. by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      How many Libraries of Congress is that?

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    10. Re:I'm confused. by VGPowerlord · · Score: 1

      You really don't want to hear a friend of mines 15 minute rant on the stupidity of the UK phone system. It's hilarious if painful.

      0118-999-881-999-119-7253

      -- Emergency Services number.

      --
      GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
    11. Re:I'm confused. by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      American Football fields are about 80% of the size of English Soccer (football) pitch. So the answer is .... Several American Football fields.

      Hope that helps

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    12. Re:I'm confused. by BlackPignouf · · Score: 1

      Several football pitches are approximately as big as several American Football fields.

    13. Re:I'm confused. by tophermeyer · · Score: 1

      Or alternatively, Rhode ISland.

      Thank you! I had this exact joke in my head and was scrolling down the list to make sure nobody had already used it. Though In this case, the surface area unit of one Rhode Island is actually moderately useful./p.

    14. Re:I'm confused. by MartinSchou · · Score: 1

      You can cover about 1.61803 average American adults with 1 gram of graphene.

  12. Special Slashdot Memo #456555 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    You CANNOT patent basic elements: Graphene is a form of carbon.

    However, you CAN patent a process for using graphene.

    Go ahead and mod this post DOWN !

    Yours In Akademgorodok,
    Kilgore Trout

    1. Re:Special Slashdot Memo #456555 by Grond · · Score: 3, Informative

      You CANNOT patent basic elements: Graphene [wikipedia.org] is a form of carbon.

      It wouldn't be a patent on carbon itself as graphene can be considered an indefinitely large molecule. In the US it would be a patent on a 'composition of matter,' which is one of the basic classes of statutory subject matter. Although graphene does occur naturally in graphite and elsewhere, it does not occur in an isolated, purified form. The patent claims would be to isolated, purified graphene, probably having certain other characteristics (e.g., an average sheet size of at least X mm or whatever). All of this would be backed up with a description of (and probably claims for) a method of making graphene with those characteristics.

    2. Re:Special Slashdot Memo #456555 by arivanov · · Score: 1

      You can patent a method for producing graphene, not just for using it.

      Example - the Aluminium purification process presently in use across the industry was patented once upon a time. The zone recrystallisation used to purify Si and other semiconductor materials was also patented. Both patents have expired now, but they were perfectly valid patents on how to produce what you call a "basic element".

      --
      Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
      http://www.sigsegv.cx/
    3. Re:Special Slashdot Memo #456555 by dbIII · · Score: 1

      "Molecule" doesn't make sense in the context of crystal structures, just as we say a silicon wafer is cut from a single crystal of silicon or you can easily see the single crystals of zinc on the surface of galvanised steel.

  13. Geim is one froody cat by oldhack · · Score: 2, Informative

    Finally, are you one of those Nobel prizewinners who is going to go crazy now that you've won?

    ...I'll try to keep my sanity as long as possible.

    The dude seems to know where his towel is.

    --
    Fuck systemd. Fuck Redhat. Fuck Soylent, too. Wait, scratch the last one.
  14. Re:My money is on... by omnichad · · Score: 1

    But Sony only goes after technology that nobody else wants to use. If the whole industry is interested, they wouldn't be. Just look at Minidisc, ATRAC, Memory Stick, Betamax, Blura...nevermind.

  15. 1 football pitch = 1.334 US football fields by tepples · · Score: 2, Informative

    A soccer field (BrE: football pitch) is 105 by 68 meters, or exactly 0.714 hectare. It's about one and a third U.S. football fields, which are 360 by 160 feet, or 0.5351 ha. So yes, 1 gram of graphene would still cover several football fields (in Indianapolis, you know, we measure surface area in football fields).

    1. Re:1 football pitch = 1.334 US football fields by lgw · · Score: 1

      0.714 hectare? What kind of made up unit is that? It's 0.176 square furlongs! (Which is 1.76 acres in US units).

      In proper units, 1 gram would cover about a square furlong, which is pretty impressive.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  16. it's not in public domain? by z-j-y · · Score: 3, Interesting

    isn't his research funded by public money?

  17. Patents by cjcela · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Maybe patents use to work 50 years ago. Now it is always the case that the company with deeper pockets always gets its way one way or the other. What really gets to me is the hypocrisy of people saying 'patents protect innovators'. They do not. Patents do anything but protecting innovation.

    1. Re:Patents by wizkid · · Score: 1

      Patent's Used to protect innovators. Unfortunately, the lawyers got involved. The patent system now needs a re-write to get back to it's original intention. But with the fox in the hen-house, (Corrupt lobbyists controlling congress) we're not going to see this until we change congress. See change-congress.org for details.

      Hmmm,
      I double-checked my link, and if you type changecongress instead of change-congress, you go to the democrat website. Democrats are half the problem with congress. Of course the republicans are the other half of the problem. Both are owned by corporate America. It's a sad state this country is in....

      --
      I take no responsibility for what I say. Even though I'm never wrong :)
    2. Re:Patents by BitZtream · · Score: 1

      Patents worked when people were honorable.

      The problem is, people aren't really honorable, at least not the ones with power and money (rare exceptions excluded). They didn't get power and money by playing 100% fair, they got there by taking advantage of every situation they could.

      Patents worked when people were honorable because they did not yet realize the various ways to game the patent system to their advantage. Now, 50 years later, its an industry on its own, with men and women who's sole job is to figure out ways to twist the written laws into a way that suits them rather than the actual, good spirited intention of the laws.

      Its not unique to patents, this sort of behavior is simply the way people work, like it or not. Everything works this way on a large scale. Sure you can have a good small business in a small town that flourishes because its good to its customers and its customers like it, but on the large scale it simply doesn't work because someone else is willing to cut every corner possible to take your customers and the customers don't always know that they are hurting themselves by going with the other guy so the other guy wins unless you play his game.

      Sad, but true.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    3. Re:Patents by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

      Maybe patents use to work 50 years ago. Now it is always the case that the company with deeper pockets always gets its way one way or the other. What really gets to me is the hypocrisy of people saying 'patents protect innovators'. They do not. Patents do anything but protecting innovation.

      No, they do protect innovators. Geim has done the base research and discovered graphene, but he hasn't made a useful product out of it yet. Giving him a patent at this stage would be giving him a monopoly on research on graphene, a "hunting expedition", as the Supreme Court has called it in other contexts.

      In his next paragraph, Geim realizes this - the hundred patents that the other company would write would be for useful inventions. At his early stage, it's like inventing a new chemical and getting a patent on it without knowing whether it's a floor cleaner or a cure for cancer.

    4. Re:Patents by hoggoth · · Score: 1

      Me, is that you?

      That sounds so much like myself that I had to think twice to make sure I didn't submit that and forget.

      --
      - For the complete works of Shakespeare: cat /dev/random (may take some time)
    5. Re:Patents by RonTheHurler · · Score: 1

      Nope, it didn't work 50 years ago either.

      I'm a toymaker, and I had what I thought was a novel idea for a toy windmill. I had no intentions of patenting anything, but searched the patent database to make sure I wasn't infringing on anyone else. Sure enough, there was an application dated 2007, and an actual patent from another person dated 2005. I put my project away for a year, but on hearing that the patent office doesn't really check for prior art, I decided to do it myself.

      I found more patents for virtually identical mechanisms, right down to specific gear ratios, dated 1986, 1933, 1915 and 1890. It gets better. Cornell university has a working model of the thing, made in 1827. I don't see how using a chain drive vs. mesh gears vs. push rods, or using six vanes instead of four vanes makes it a different invention. All these machines do exactly the same thing, and all are patented as windmills or machines used to convert a moving fluid to energy.

      The system has always been broken. It's just more visible and more abused now.

      I'd offer references, but my records are in the other office. (sorry).

      My toys can be seen at www.RLT.com

    6. Re:Patents by ProfBooty · · Score: 1

      The reason you don't see it as being a different invention deals with what the legal requirements are for a different invention. The examiners are somewhat constrained in showing why a skilled artisan would choose six vanes instead of 4 if your invention claims using 6 and the prior art uses 4. Arguably almost any aspect could be "design choice" but examiners have a hard time in properly applying the case law for design choice and the BPAI in holding up their decision.

      --
      Bring back the old version of slashdot.
    7. Re:Patents by Jonathan_S · · Score: 1

      I'm annoyed I can't remember the details well enough to find a reference to it, but back when gun were just transitioning to self-contained cartridges there was someone who patented a design. One of the gun makers signed an (exclusive?) licensing deal with him with the stipulation that he was responsible for defending the patent. They made a ton of money and he went broke from the court costs of suing the vast number of companies that simply ripped off his invention.

      Patents have had problem with deep pockets for longer than 50 years.

  18. Re:My money is on... by oldspewey · · Score: 1

    You sure it's not SCO? They're probably ready to take a flyer on something new and random.

    --
    If libertarians are so opposed to effective government, why don't they all move to Somalia?
  19. Re:My money is on... by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

    My money is on someone like DuPont, Siemens, Phillips, 3M, BASF or a "carbon company" like Ashbury.

  20. Better idea: by Penguinisto · · Score: 1

    Just out of spite go to the corp's direct competitor(s), and let them know exactly who said what. Then offer to help said competitor(s) get a jump on things.

    Hell - I'd do it just out of spite; the original corp gets bitch-slapped, competitor(s) get a Nobel Prize-winning scientist's name in their press releases, and while you still have to stupid patent issues, at least the evil is more diffuse (among competitors), and therefore less of a threat at large.

    --
    Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
  21. Geim also won the Ig Nobel by walmass · · Score: 4, Interesting

    TFA asks: "Finally, are you one of those Nobel prizewinners who is going to go crazy now that you've won? "

    The interviewer probably didn't know that Dr. Geim won the Ig Nobel for levitating a frog.

    Between that and the fact that he cited saving taxpayer's money as a reason behind not filing a patent and his Friday experiments (which led to the scotch-tape on graphite) discovery, I think I have a new hero.

  22. Re:How do you keep a patent alive? by Lunix+Nutcase · · Score: 1

    Patent term extensions.

  23. "That's a direct quote" by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

    It's also bullshit. Yes, they might be able to tie him up in court, but it would cost them more than it would cost him. That's why companies often pay up rather than fight patents that are weaker than his might have been. Cheaper to license or purchase the patent, unless the owner is insanely greedy.

    --
    Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    1. Re:"That's a direct quote" by JSBiff · · Score: 1

      Apparently you've missed the other threads about the "island" - the "island" is the place Geim is from - Great Britain, which makes up the majority of the land-area of the United Kingdom, so the guy meant that it would take all the money in the UK to fight the patents.

      Although, having read your posts, I have a sneaking suspicion you're just having fun with people by being purposely obtuse.

    2. Re:"That's a direct quote" by BadAnalogyGuy · · Score: 1

      Reading other threads in this story, it's pretty clear that most people haven't got the slightest idea what they are talking about.

      Think about the quote for a minute. I'll copy it here so you can read it.

      We are looking at graphene, and it might have a future in the long term. If after ten years we find it's really as good as it promises, we will put a hundred patent lawyers on it to write a hundred patents a day, and you will spend the rest of your life, and the gross domestic product of your little island, suing us.

      First, the guy declares his intention to find markets to use the invention.

      Then he says that the company will base hundreds of inventions on Geim's invention.

      The last line is where everyone seems to be having trouble. Take it in context with the first two points, though. Why would Geim need to sue the company? Because they aren't paying him for licensing, ostensibly. Because they have hundreds if not thousands of patents based on his patent that they are using in their products or licensing to other companies and not paying him. Note that *there is no downside except the opportunity cost of losing licensing fees which can only be gained by actually having the patent*

      The island comment is not about GB, it's about the dream of retiring rich off of a world-changing invention. The multinational company guy is holding it out there in front of him. Hey, if you patent this, trust us, we're going to find a great way to use it and we're all going to get rich!

      If he doesn't patent it, they use it. If he does, they use it. There is no downside to getting the patent, but somehow he took some joviality to mean something nefarious. That's a shame, because if this invention really delivers on what it promises, he would have been really rich.

    3. Re:"That's a direct quote" by Haedrian · · Score: 1

      I'm sure it would cost the multi-national company with a stockpile of lawyers much more than the single person who is trying to defend himself.

      The company can afford it, he can't.

      Companies often pay up when its other companies who can do even more damage. If you want to see a great example, find out what happened to the person who patented the windscreen wiper design we all use today.

    4. Re:"That's a direct quote" by Sabriel · · Score: 1

      (long stare)... You actually believe that? Just for one example to the contrary, the CSIRO had to fight tooth and nail to get the big corps to finally pay up for exploiting the CSIRO's patents on wireless technology, and it had government resources to back it up in court. Do you really think a corporation - an entity designed to be selfish - wouldn't steamroll some lone inventor if it thought that was the most profitable route?

    5. Re:"That's a direct quote" by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Come on now, the "retire to an island" bullshit wasn't even funny the first time so please stop trying to stretch it out.
      It's obvious you are not being serious and it's no longer remotely funny pretending you are and also insulting just about everyone else that wrote comments here.

  24. patents and the US legal system by bl8n8r · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Patent System: A system put in place to be manipulated to protect corporate IP while stifling competitive innovation.

    Legal System: A corporate asset which is manipulated to keep innovative products from being competitive.

    --
    boycott slashdot February 10th - 17th check out: altSlashdot.org
  25. Re:How do you keep a patent alive? by JSBiff · · Score: 1

    Laws might vary from country to country, but there's a couple things at play:

    1) In the most basic sense, I think most patents expire after like 5 or 10 years, but you can renew it for another 10 years, or something like that. You can only renew a finite number of times, usually, for a total limit of 20 or 40 years or something.

    2) You can also 'extend' the patent by creating 'new' patents that derive off the old patent - the pharmaceutical industry is particularly active with this sort - you start with say a basic pill. Then 5 years later, you get a patent for the same drug in a gel-cap formulation. Then 5 years later you get another patent for a chewable formulation, etc. So, you create a 'new' invention which is the old invention plus some slight improvement.

          Or, you get a patent on a different way to mass-produce the product much more cheaply/efficiently, so that even though the product itself is no longer patented, you control the patent on the most superior way to produce the product, so that you have a significant competitive advantage vis-a-vis the competition.

          Or you get individual patents on new applications of the old product, so that you are the only one who can use the product in the new application.

  26. Re:I give up - hwat is the diff between UK, GB and by Lunix+Nutcase · · Score: 1

    England is simply the country of England.
    Great Britain is geographically the island that encompasses England and Scotland. Politically it can also include Wales as well.
    The UK is the inclusion of Great Britain, Wales, the many smaller isles around Great Britain and Northern Ireland.

  27. libraries of congress! by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    libraries of congress!

    how many times do i have to say it? the relevant unit of measure is libraries of congress and is always libraries of congress no matter what the subject matter. or maybe beowulf clusters of libraries of congress

    get it right please!

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:libraries of congress! by zenyu · · Score: 1

      According to wikipedia a LoC is exactly 10 terabytes. Never mind that my home library contains many times that amount of data and the LoC probably contains trillions of times that amount of data.

    2. Re:libraries of congress! by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      look, it's really simple:

      1. a hard drive can contain many LoCs
      2. the LoC can contain many hard drives

      duh! just contemplate #1 and #2 until your head asplodes, then no more problem

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  28. Actually a case for stronger patents by Grond · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Counter-intuitively, this actually presents a case for stronger patents. A strong, easily enforced patent would allow Geim to secure licenses from companies using graphene without a long or expensive legal battle. Strong patents give individual inventors and startups the leverage they need to compete against established players.

    Weak patents favor large, established companies. A single weak patent isn't very useful, but a thousand weak patents can destroy a startup competitor or force a settlement with a large one. The result is that large, established companies will tend to accumulate huge portfolios while preventing startups from flourishing. Startups will tend to hope to be bought up by established companies rather than try to compete on their own. And that's exactly what we see today: comparatively few new, large companies and a lot of established players with large patent portfolios that buy up new competitors and engage in low stakes patent litigation with each other that routinely ends in status quo-preserving settlements and cross-licensing agreements.

    Note that strong patents are not mutually exclusive with tougher examination and stricter patentability standards. We can do things like reform the written description and enablement requirements so that patentees are forced to write narrower claims that only cover what they actually invented and not just whatever they could brainstorm or dream up without actually nailing down the particulars. Such reforms are not incompatible with making patents stronger and more easily enforced.

    1. Re:Actually a case for stronger patents by Wolfbone · · Score: 1

      Counter-intuitively, this actually presents a case for stronger patents.

      It portrays - anecdotally, in narrow circumstances, and hypothetically - just one potential (benefit side) effect of such a change, which even if realised still only might lead to an overall improvement in the performance of the patent system - and might just as easily do the opposite.

      Just saying. ;-)

      It would be nice if cases for change could be made so easily in patent system economics, but the system is complex and they can't.

  29. The pointlessness of patents by kinabrew · · Score: 1

    Patents provide minimal protection for individuals and significant protection for large corporations.

    If a large corporation creates something and someone infringes the patent, the large corporation sues the person who's infringing until the person who infringed is broke.

    If an individual creates something and a large corporation infringes the patent, the individual sues until the individual is broke, and the large corporation continues infringing on the patent.

  30. he also won the ignobel for physics in 2000 by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    http://improbable.com/ig/ig-pastwinners.html#ig2000

    PHYSICS

    Andre Geim of the University of Nijmegen (the Netherlands) and Sir Michael Berry of Bristol University (UK), for using magnets to levitate a frog. [REFERENCE: "Of Flying Frogs and Levitrons" by M.V. Berry and A.K. Geim, European Journal of Physics, v. 18, 1997, p. 307-13.]
    NOTE: Ten years later, in 2010, Andre Geim won a Nobel Prize in physics (for research on another subject).

    winning the nobel is of course impressive. winning the nobel AND the ignobel is beyond impressive

    improbable research indeed!

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  31. We have another option. by TheDarkMaster · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Kill the "big company", with bullets, literally. There is no dialogue with the kind of company that says such things. You do not tell to the bad guy "please, do not shoot me!", you shoot him. Twice.

    --
    Religion: The greatest weapon of mass destruction of all time
  32. What I don't get. . . by JSBiff · · Score: 1

    The thing I don't get is why the 'big corporation' didn't go ahead and partner up with Geim so that the big corporation could use the patents against other big corporations? I mean, sure, if you just look at it as a game of inventor vs. big corp, the inventor is screwed. But there is more than one big corporation in the world - why wouldn't such a corp partner with a small inventor so that the big corp effectively controls the patent? Wouldn't that be cheaper than employing a hundred patent lawyers every day to fight the small inventor, and provide them protection against competitions from other big corps?

  33. Old School Patent Corruption by adavies42 · · Score: 1

    The system was broken long before software patents. This reminds me of RCA and Farnsworth.

    --
    Media that can be recorded and distributed can be recorded and distributed.
    -kfg
  34. bad reasoning, good result by frovingslosh · · Score: 2, Informative

    Rather than look at this as a story about a big electronics company pushing around the little guy, I look at is as the right result reached, no matter by what means. I'm sick of seeing all of the patents that have been issued for things that were not really invented, just found to always exist and be useful. Perhaps they should be entitled to a patent on a fabrication method, on on a particular application (although that second one seems dubious), but not a patent on Graphene itself. That would be like suggesting basic elements could have been patented. Graphene is just a very common form of carbon that has long existed.

    --
    I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
    1. Re:bad reasoning, good result by Grond · · Score: 1

      I'm sick of seeing all of the patents that have been issued for things that were not really invented, just found to always exist and be useful.

      While one can certainly argue that patentability should distinguish between inventions and discoveries, in the US the Patent Act specifically addresses this issue. "The term "invention" means invention or discovery." 35 USC 100(a) and "Patentability shall not be negatived by the manner in which the invention was made." 35 USC 103(a).

      Graphene is just a very common form of carbon that has long existed.

      This is technically true, but isolated, purified graphene does not occur naturally. Similarly, macroscopic graphene molecules also do not occur naturally. A patent on graphene would almost certainly claim isolated, purified graphene with an average molecule size of at least some useful lower bound, backed up by a method for making such purified, large-scale graphene.

      This is similar to patents on new metal alloys. It is likely that some tiny smattering of the right mixture of metals exists in some deposit somewhere on Earth, but that doesn't mean anybody knew about it or knew its properties. It's also still worth encouraging research into and helping commercialize the discovery of which alloys are actually useful.

      on on a particular application (although that second one seems dubious)

      Why does it seem dubious? If the application consists solely of replacing an existing material with graphene in an already known device (and doing so only because graphene is just lighter, stronger, etc), then that is probably obvious. But if the application consists of a new device made possible because of graphene's particular characteristics, then that would most likely be patentable.

    2. Re:bad reasoning, good result by tonywong · · Score: 1

      So then the big electronics company is going to file patents around all of this anyhow, make millions of dollars and the original researcher is out in the cold. How is that the 'right result' again?

    3. Re:bad reasoning, good result by aug24 · · Score: 1

      Graphene is just a very common form of carbon that has long existed.

      Um, no it isn't. You may be thinking of graphite. Even that's not that common.

      Graphene doesn't occur in nature except as part of graphite, and can't be separated unless in tiny, tiny pieces. To be of useful size it has to be manufactured.

      Justin.

      --
      You're only jealous cos the little penguins are talking to me.
  35. Wrong number for surface area... by yet-another-lobbyist · · Score: 1

    I happen to work on graphene (since 2005). The surface area of graphene is about 2600 m^/g. And that's counting both sides. So one side would be about 1300m^2. that's 13m times 100m. Definitely less than a football field -- American Football or soccer.

  36. Re:I give up - hwat is the diff between UK, GB and by JSBiff · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Why doesn't "Great Britain" *geographically* encompass Wales, also - isn't it all one island? If GB is the name for the island, as opposed to any of the political entities that share the island, isn't Wales also part of that island?

  37. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  38. Re:Oh come on by TheKidWho · · Score: 1

    Out of all the nations in the Americas, only the "United States of America" has the word "America" in it.

  39. NOTof course impressive. by frovingslosh · · Score: 1

    winning the nobel is of course impressive.

    It is certainly not impressive to everyone, the awarding has become dubious and maybe even a bad joke. Not so much the science prizes, but the Nobel peach prize winners in the last 20 years or so have more to do with politics than peace. Examples include one to someone for making a scientifically inaccurate movie and last year's award to a President running two wars and escalating one, which they acknowledged was not for anything at all that he had done, but rather was for what they hoped he would do!

    And in this case maybe the science prizes are starting to suffer the same fate. Over the years the science prizes have been awarded many times years later, after the research and insights have been seen to produce results. I'm not comfortable with this particular reward being given in this case for a new fad material that has great promise but is very thin on substance (yea, a bad pun).

    So I'm really not trying to troll, but I take exception with your statement that "winning the nobel is of course impressive".

    --
    I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
  40. the peace prize is always political by circletimessquare · · Score: 2, Insightful

    always will be political. additionally: ANY peace prize will be political, forever. any kind of peace is dictated according to terms. terms are always decided by processes that are political. therefore, the very concept of peace is essentially a political animal

    since the peace prize is always political no matter what, then the prize will always bother someone somewhere. therefore, the existence of yourself, someone who is bothered by it, is simply a problem that has no solution. therefore your complaint has no merit, because there is nothing that can be done about your complaint: whiners and gripers will always exist in politics

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:the peace prize is always political by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      Astute observations, but the GP was discussing the peach prize, and I have to agree with him -- it's the pits.

  41. So why didn't he patent it? by jgtg32a · · Score: 1

    Or did he already own the island?

    1. Re:So why didn't he patent it? by dbIII · · Score: 1

      The island is the UK and the gangster was making a threat.

  42. I wish he'd had the sack to take him on. by jbeach · · Score: 1

    A material that promising could generate enough money to fight off said corporate douchebag - while licensing the product to the douchebag's competitors.

    --
    The Invisible Hand of the Free Market is what punches workers in the nuts.
    1. Re:I wish he'd had the sack to take him on. by jameskojiro · · Score: 1

      Heinlien had a simular story where someone invented a solar energy collector, The big oil was after his ass, he immediatly posted the plans and patent information to their equavalent of facebook, The other energy companies stopped trying to kill him shortly after that.... And a new renassaince was born.

      --
      Tsukasa: All I really want, is to be left alone...
    2. Re:I wish he'd had the sack to take him on. by jbeach · · Score: 1

      I remember that one. :) A great story that he wrote pretty early on in his career, and something that shows him not quite the Libertarian deity some people inferred from his other writings.

      --
      The Invisible Hand of the Free Market is what punches workers in the nuts.
  43. Re:My money is on... by k_187 · · Score: 1

    Much like patents, if you throw enough shit at the wall, some is bound to eventually stick.

    --
    11 was a racehorse
    12 was 12
    1111 Race
    12112
  44. Your patent isn't useless by tobiah · · Score: 1

    If each of you have patents that the other needs, you make a sharing arrangement, this happens frequently between big players. Better, you make no product and license the patents you have and they need to use theirs, and they make the products. I'm pretty sure that's how the patent system is supposed to work for inventors, who are more interested in inventing than manufacturing and sales.

    --
    "The ability to delude yourself may be an important survival tool" - Jane Wagner -
    1. Re:Your patent isn't useless by SilentSandman · · Score: 1

      Patents are designed to protect the -greater good-, in that these ideas which have been invented, will not be kept secret, but instead be made known, in exchange for a -limited- monopoly while the inventor recoups their costs. Whatever the current system, I believe the intent was not to make 'inventors' sit around all day without doing any actual work to see their ideas become reality.

      From a software developer perspective, 'inventing' an idea is trivial, it's the hard work of turning that concept into a reality that has ANY value whatsoever. There is -nothing- good about the idea of making nothing, but coming up with lots of 'inventions', and forcing those who -can- and -will- do the hard work, to pay in order to actually create.

  45. "Maybe I'm going down, but he's coming down too" by DrYak · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yup, indeed. Patents are the modern and scientific equivalent of the "Mutual Assured Destruction" doctrine and its nuclear madness.

    only much worse because during the cold war, the nuke-equipped countries kept showing off to each other only through weapon tests, nobody nuked small nuke-less countries on a regular basis just just to kill off competition.

    --
    "Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
  46. Re:I give up - hwat is the diff between UK, GB and by Pentagram · · Score: 2, Informative

    Yes, Wales *is* part of Great Britain. GP is incorrect.

    Great Britain = England + Wales + Scotland

  47. Re:why depend on an obviously broken system? by MichaelKristopeit+34 · · Score: 1
    considering my assertion was conditional, you're an idiot.

    if you wish to test my assertion, attempt to extort anything from me and see what happens.

    why don't you?

  48. One word: libel, leads to.... by HeckRuler · · Score: 1

    So sit down, shut up, and don't question the ministry, Peasant!

  49. Prior Art Combinator: A tool to preemptively inval by GrantRobertson · · Score: 1

    I have an invention to prevent the patenting of inventions. While that may sound onerous, I suspect that it will actually alleviate a lot of the trouble we have been having with patent trolls and return patents to the realm of real innovation. I invented it last July but it doesn't seem that anyone has actually taken me up on the idea.

    I propose that we create a database of all possible discrete elements and limitations that have appeared in all existing patents and any other documentation anywhere. Heck, people could even add any additional elements or limitations as they see fit. Then use a simple computer program to generate and "publish" articles with every possible combination of element and limitation. I know, we are talking about trillions and trillions of articles. The program could never finish.

    Therefore, I also propose the following additional, optional features:

    • Users of the system could vote on which would be the most important elements and limitations to make sure are covered in our "articles."
    • Users could add tags to elements indicating which fields they are most likely to be used in. This would reduce the number of "articles" about "Umbrellas with USB connectors sewn into the seats of their pants for control and monitoring of garage doors."
    • Users could then also vote on which tags are the most important to focus on.

    I realize that this would likely require more web document storage space than is currently indexed by Google. Therefore, I also propose the following additional options for storing and "publishing" the "articles":

    • The web pages could actually be automatically generated by PHP or JSP scripts using variables to represent and insert the particular combination of elements and limitations specified for that "article." Each element and limitation in the database would necessarily have a unique code number or index key. The body of the web page could then simply list the codes as parameters and call the function to build the page. The script would then simply insert the appropriate text from the database in the appropriate location in the web page and send it out. Presto, we have a web page listing a specific set of elements and limitations. As far as the browser is concerned, the web page is static and has been "published."
    • It would also be possible to just use HTML server side includes and generate static web pages with various combinations of elements and limitations included. Naturally, this would require that all the elements and limitations be in separate .shtml files on the web server.
    • Here is an even more efficient, if ethereal proposition: Simply create one web page with some PHP or JSP in it to generate a page based on the codes given as parameters, just as before. However, the codes for the elements and limitations would actually be part of the URL and sent to the server in an HTML GET request. The script then takes the codes specified in the URL and automatically generates whatever combination of elements and limitations are specified in the URL. We get an actual web page sent back even though one never really existed before. Simply by posting that one web page and putting the elements and limitations in the database, we have statistically published all possible combinations at once. Anyone who wants to view an article with a particular combination of elements and limitations simply constructs the proper URL and they can see that the page is "there." It's like quantum computing without all those pesky sub-atomic particles. Like Schrodinger's Cat, every combination would "exist" simultaneously but only by observing it does it then become, well, observable. For prior art dating purposes, I suppose we would also have to list when each element and limitation was added to the database. Only if all the elements predate the offending patent would the "Schrodinger's Article" in question apply. Now, I don't know if the PTO would go for this reasoning but it would be worth a try. And it would ce
  50. gaming the patent system by Device666 · · Score: 1

    Patent offices have loads of work because of all these patents. Where two dogs fight over a bone the third one takes it. In this case thats the patent office. So to game the system, look to business processes as they can be patented too. Some small patent office, only setup for the sole purpose to spoil the patent industry, should patent patent-processes and sue every patent office that can be found. Also patent useless stuff of certain software parts that happen to be used also on the average patent office website. And gather funding of some small software companies behind a smokescreen. Than we sure see how the patent industry benefits from the thing called software patents and business process patents.It is ofcourse big news if a patent office loses suits on patents. Than put the news on Slashdot with some links to several patent office websites and than they have enough PR like there is no tomorrow...

  51. Interview by Nature... by mathfeel · · Score: 1

    I just would like to point out the irony that their paper on the initial Quantum Hall Effect measurement, one that verified that they did have a single layer graphene since it has a distinct QHE signature, was rejected by Nature and they have to "settle" for Science...

    Now Nature is doing the interview...

    --
    The only possible interpretation of any research whatever in the 'social sciences' is: some do, some don't
  52. As a Mathematician... by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

    Almost 6 years ago I developed a somewhat fundamental technique in computer animation, ....

    In other words you discovered a mathematical algorithm, and proceeded to patent it.

    I have absolutely no sympathy for your difficulties in attempting to monopolise mathematics and in all honesty for the good of wider society I would hope that your attempt fails. Unfortunately, it may very well succeed. And while that will probably not result in benefit to you personally, it will further damage the freedoms of intellectual thought and scientific inquiry in many countries across the world.

    The benefits of rewarding you for your discovery are far outweighed by the costs to wider society. Neither you, nor anyone else should be receiving these patents.

    --
    May the Maths Be with you!
  53. Re:"Maybe I'm going down, but he's coming down too by Anpheus · · Score: 1

    Well it's not even MAD. If you're a patent troll you have nothing to lose, so it's like terrorists can just run up to regular companies and hold the secretary at gunpoint and threaten to shoot, and that's sometimes enough for a "go away" settlement. And then of course the venue is the East Texas Court, and more often than anyone would like to admit, the troll extorts millions or hundreds of millions of dollars for an invention no one would consider remarkable.

    So I guess if we're going to make a cold war analogy, the Afghanis are running wild and kicking ass, the superpowers are tiptoeing around each other and the regular people are scared or powerless to do much about it.