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US Patent Trolling Costs $29 Billion a Year

New submitter Bismillah writes "This piece of research from Boston University seems to put an end to claims that patent trolling is 'socially valuable,' and instead is a social loss. 'We estimate that firms accrued $29 billion of direct costs in 2011. Moreover, although large firms accrued over half of direct costs, most of the defendants were small or medium-sized firms, indicating that [non-practicing entities] are not just a problem for large firms.' The total cost to society could be around $80 billion, according to the researchers. What's more, the costs have gone up fourfold since 2005."

4 of 130 comments (clear)

  1. Now he gets to be the bully by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Former Microsoft executive Nathan Myhrvold, who now heads up the controversial Intellectual Ventures patent rights company, told the All Things Digital conference two weeks ago that "I was never a popular kid in class".

    "I'm not going to be popular in this class."

    translation: back in school he was beaten up on a daily basis. Now he's armed with patents and lawyers and is going after everyone else's lunch money.

  2. Re:How many small businesses don't start... by Theaetetus · · Score: 3, Informative

    Right. They wait until you're making money, and then they come take it. Half a million? No. The damage can be your entire company. What would RIM look like right now if they hadn't suffered a half a billion dollar patent tax on push email?

    Probably no different. The RIM v. NTP settlement was in March 2006, at which point their stock price was at $27. 16 months later, they were at $85 and did a 3:1 split... at which point it then went up to a peak of $144... So one share of $27 stock when that half billion dollar "tax" (really? taxes go to the government, this was to the patent owner) was then worth $432, or a 1600% increase.

    No, what killed RIM (aside from the 2008 recession, but that hurt everyone) was the fact that they rested on their Blackberry laurels and never innovated further, believing themselves to have a lock on the enterprise market, and iOS and Android shot past them.

  3. Re:How many small businesses don't start... by Yvanhoe · · Score: 3, Informative

    I stay in France.

    True story.

    --
    The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
  4. Re:You are both idiots then by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Ya wanna see an idiot, look in the mirror.
    Yeah, trolls don't sue small buisinesses. They get their lawsuit money from threatening to sue small businesses. $100k here, $200k there, and before long they can finance a lawsuit against the big fish.
    The settlements, of course, are not trackable, and therefore do not figure into the $29 billion.