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30% More Patents Issued in 2010

An anonymous reader writes "The numbers are in, and the US Patent Office granted 219,614 patents last year, which is 31% higher than in 2009 and 27% higher than any year in history. This wasn't just a marginal increase in patents being approved, but a major leap. US Commerce Secretary Gary Locke and USPTO director David Kappos have both stated that one of their goals is to reduce the backlog in patent approvals, and it appears that the way they're doing so is by approving more patents, more quickly with less scrutiny — with a large percentage of them being software patents. This may decrease the backlog at the Patent Office, but seems likely to increase the backlog in the court system as lawsuits are filed over a bunch of these new patents."

18 of 77 comments (clear)

  1. It's a shame by Pojut · · Score: 2

    It's a shame "don't submit obvious patent trolls", "don't attempt to patent shit you obviously didn't create", and "don't waste the PTO's time by changing one line in your claim and resubmitting it" can't be followed. Seriously. WTF.

  2. IBM by santax · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Let's hope they get the Patent-patent and lock it away forever. People believing that there is only 1 inventor of an idea don't know shit about history. It's very very rare for 1 person to come up with something really unique. Patents, especially on obvious things like math (software) or a 1 click-to-buy (amazon) aren't a big problem today for the average citizen, but it won't be long before those lobbies will get a law that will also let them target the end-users. Mark my words. Patents as they are implemented have absolutely nothing to do with protecting design, but everything with locking out fair competition and maximizing profits for often very obvious things that at least another million people thought about but just dind't file for it, for the simple reason: duhhh obvious.

    1. Re:IBM by Znork · · Score: 2

      Patents... aren't a big problem today for the average citizen

      As patents (and other IPR) are effectively a form of taxation they can burden the economy with inefficiency until it becomes incapable of competing with other producers who aren't burdened with the same costs.

      The inability that western and other IPR heavy economies show at competing with less crippled economies certainly appears to be a rather significant problem for many average citizens.

      Of course, as long as IPR levies are hidden away as 'private' costs, rather than being regarded as parts of the tax burden, the system is unlikely to get corrected as there is no representation for the paying parties in the system or accounting for the actual costs to the economy.

    2. Re:IBM by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 2

      People believing that there is only 1 inventor of an idea don't know shit about history. It's very very rare for 1 person to come up with something really unique. Patents, especially on obvious things like math (software) or a 1 click-to-buy (amazon) aren't a big problem today for the average citizen, but it won't be long before those lobbies will get a law that will also let them target the end-users.

      Issac Newton and Gottfried Leibnitz both independently invented Calculus. Imagine if one or both of them patented it?

      School Teacher: "Hi! Welcome to Calculus class! Your books are on your desks. Please note that they are sealed. Please read the EULA on the cover before breaking the seal and opening them."

      --
      Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
  3. Thirty percent more what? by xednieht · · Score: 2

    30% more Shit from the USPTO

    There I fixed that for you.

    --

    Hope is the currency of fools
  4. Winner: US Patent Office by denis-The-menace · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The US Patent Office get its funding from patent applications fees.

    So the question is: WHAT THE #UcK DID YOU EXPECT!

    --
    Obama's legacy: (N)othing (S)ecure (A)nywhere and (T)error (S)imulation (A)dministration
    1. Re:Winner: US Patent Office by Arccot · · Score: 2

      The US Patent Office get its funding from patent applications fees.

      So the question is: WHAT THE #UcK DID YOU EXPECT!

      There's a lot of people bashing the USPTO, but I can't think of a way to manage them any better given the resources they do have. Its like blaming teachers for schools falling apart. Patent review is not exactly a prestigious job, so it requires at least average pay for its workers. The filing fee is, what now, about $350? That's about a days worth of work for a patent examiner, maybe a bit less once you include benefits. So unless I'm wrong, assuming the patent office is fully staffed with no waste, a patent examiner has to read a usually massive document from start to finish, review if the material is actually able to be patented, review past patents to see if any conflict, and make a judgment whether to approve or not. Denials need to make sense and stand up in court. All in a field the patent examiner likely has little to no experience in.

      The office isn't screwed up, the system we use to evaluate patents is.

    2. Re:Winner: US Patent Office by dgatwood · · Score: 2

      Won't work. Companies can't really file patents. The inventors technically file the patents and assign them to the company (by prior agreement). Therefore, get a large enough company and you can effectively file a whole lot of patents without the same person ever being the listed inventor.

      No, if you want to cut down on the number of junk patents, require that the people listed on the "Inventor" line pay for the patent by personal check and make reimbursement illegal.

      --

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

  5. Patent Trick by Demonantis · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My prof was talking about patents and using them as a resource for generating new ideas. The original intent of patents. He had to warn us though because companies will file multiple patents that vary slightly, but in the end don't work. They are there to hide the actual patent. Talk about side stepping the whole concept of why patents exist and is contributing to the backlog.

    1. Re:Patent Trick by operagost · · Score: 2

      No, Captain Cynic, they're not. In the US, the federal government was given the power to issue them so that inventors could be free to innovate without having to worry about their ideas being stolen as fast as they could be created. Without patents, the rich would actually ALWAYS have the upper hand once they get access to a new product or its design documents. The problem is not with patents themselves, but with the length of time they are in force. The duration is far too long with most things.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    2. Re:Patent Trick by Grond · · Score: 4, Informative

      He had to warn us though because companies will file multiple patents that vary slightly, but in the end don't work. They are there to hide the actual patent.

      Alas your professor must not know much about how patents work. There are several problems with this theory. First, filing multiple applications on slight variations is a good way to end up with an obviousness-type double patenting rejection. Basically, non-identical applications must also be 'patentably distinct.'

      Second, the inventors and the patent agents or attorneys are all under a legal obligation to "disclose information which is material to patentability." Lack of utility (i.e. the invention does actually work as claimed) is material to patentability and so must be disclosed. An attorney or agent that knowingly misrepresents a non-functional invention as functional is in jeopardy of losing his or her registration to practice before the PTO.

      Third, inventors must also "declare that all statements made herein of my own knowledge are true and that all statements made on information and belief are believed to be true; and further that these statements were made with the knowledge that willful false statements and the like so made are punishable by fine or imprisonment, or both, under 18 U.S.C. 1001 and that such willful false statements may jeopardize the validity of the application or any patent issued thereon." An application must make some claim to utility (and therefore functionality), so knowingly misrepresenting a non-functional invention as functional is illegal.

      Fourth, it's expensive as heck. Even if you only file in the US the filing fees, attorneys fees, and maintenance fees for a patent are in the tens of thousands of dollars. If you go international you can easily crack a few hundred thousand. If you file in every major jurisdiction you can easily get into the millions. That's per patent. The strategy you're suggesting is financially infeasible for such a minimal payoff, especially given the risks outlined above.

    3. Re:Patent Trick by delt0r · · Score: 2

      What are you smoking. What a lawyer can or can't do has nothing to do with what they should or should not do. Legal obligation or otherwise. ditto for patent applicants. When was the last time anyone got penalized for patenting something frivolous? There are no consequences to either the patent office, the patent applicant or the patent attorney for deliberately filling for something they all know is not patentable. Its gets through anyway. And if later, after costing a lot of people a lot of money the courts say it should not have been granted. There is no fine or fee or liability for it.

      So they keep on doing it.

      Its far more expensive to defend against a patent that is later ruled to be invalid that it is to get one. That is assuming your not bankrupt before its all over.

      --
      If information wants to be free, why does my internet connection cost so much?
  6. Calm down by Locke2005 · · Score: 2

    As the principle author of a patent application based on misuse of the DHCP protocol to do device discovery, I find your lack of faith in the US Patent system disturbing...

    --
    I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
  7. I've been waiting three years. by NicknamesAreStupid · · Score: 2

    Others with more complex patent applications wait up to eight years before getting awarded. Since patents are only good for 20 years after the date of application, their value is diminishing with these delays. Some cheer the idea that the patent process may become obsolete. Of course, some people have never had an idea or even a clue, and they need the playing field leveled.

    1. Re:I've been waiting three years. by Dachannien · · Score: 2

      Initial delays during prosecution are generally the fault of the USPTO, mainly because the application sits in a queue for a long time waiting for an examiner to get to them. That's why there's been a big push for the office to shorten the time to first action. But the longer prosecution takes, generally speaking, the more that delay can be placed on the applicant and/or their attorney.

      For instance, once you file a response to the first office action, the examiner has about two months to submit another office action in response to your response. But you can take up to six months to file that response (paying a fee if you take more than three months). Also, if you take only incremental steps in amending your claims, or you argue against a rejection in one response without amending and then amend in your subsequent response when the examiner doesn't buy your argument, then prosecution will take longer. Those delays are mostly generated based upon the applicant's/attorney's decisions in how to prosecute the application, and are sort of a trade-off between eventual issued claim scope and the quickness with which the application gets passed to issue.

      When you're talking about 8 years in prosecution, you're almost certainly talking about a long initial pendency (3.5 years is about the max right now) plus an appeal plus several office actions and responses. Half of that 8 years results at least indirectly from the applicant's decision to fight tooth-and-nail for every bit of claim scope that they're going for. (Note that there's a sizable backlog for appeals, but attorneys know about this, and they can advise their clients on the resulting delays from appealing rather than just amending the claims.)

      Also note that delays created by the office beyond a certain point get credited to the applicant with a patent term adjustment, meaning that the actual term of the patent is 20 years from effective filing date plus those extra days. There are numerous issued patents with patent term adjustments over 1000 days, most of which arises from the application working its way through the initial backlog.

      Finally, the complexity of an application doesn't necessarily cause an increase in time spent in prosecution. While applications are divided up by subject matter to be processed by different art units (essentially departments or workgroups covering one particular field), and different art units have different pendencies, those pendencies are dependent more on changes in the number of applications filed in those fields over the past several years compared to the amount of hiring that the managers in those art units have chosen (or have been permitted by their bosses) to do. What you see is that the hot areas of technology these days are also the more complicated ones, so lagging employment in the corresponding art units results in an increase in pendency for those applications.

  8. Misleading stats by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Those stats are misleading. USPTO also processed 24% more applications in 2010 than 2009, so more allowances are expected. The allowance rate has remained around 45% since 2008, which is actually a drop from being over 50% for 2006-7. This compares favorably with the 49% and 48% allowance rates for the Europe and Japan, respectively. Allowance rate is allowed patents divided by total disposals.

    The USPTO has many problems but the allowance rate is not one of them. Quality and scrutiny of granted patents are likewise a focus of the office, with much improvement over the situation from several years ago. Read about it in the USPTO PAR.

    Source: USPTO Performance and Accountability Report (PAR) FY 2010. Look particularly at the chart on page 125.

    USPTO makes all sorts of patent data available. Patentlyo.com for one does a good job analyzing this stuff. Techdirt is more interested in making headlines than objective analysis.

  9. The number of rejections is also up by Grond · · Score: 3, Informative

    The number of rejections is also at a record level. The Office is simply operating more efficiently after a couple of years of mismanagement. The rate of allowance is still somewhat low, historically-speaking.

    1. Re:The number of rejections is also up by trentblase · · Score: 2

      I suspected this may be true so I googled a bit for this number, but couldn't find it. An even better number would be the number of applications abandoned.