Slashdot Mirror


Japanese Nobel Laureate Blasts His Country's Treatment of Inventors

schwit1 writes: Shuji Nakamura won the 2014 Nobel Prize in Physics (along with two other scientists) for his work inventing blue LEDs. But long ago he abandoned Japan for the U.S. because his country's culture and patent law did not favor him as an inventor. Nakamura has now blasted Japan for considering further legislation that would do more harm to inventors.

"In the early 2000s, Nakamura had a falling out with his employer and, it seemed, all of Japan. Relying on a clause in Japan's patent law, article 35, that assigns patents to individual inventors, he took the unprecedented step of suing his former employer for a share of the profits his invention was generating. He eventually agreed to a court-mediated $8 million settlement, moved to the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB) and became an American citizen. During this period he bitterly complained about Japan's treatment of inventors, the country's educational system and its legal procedures. 'The problem is now the Japanese government wants to eliminate patent law article 35 and give all patent rights to the company. If the Japanese government changes the patent law it means basically there would no compensation [for inventors].'"

There is a similar problem with copyright law in the U.S., where changes to the law in the 1970s and 1990s have made it almost impossible for copyrights to ever expire. The changes favor the corporations rather than the individuals who might actually create the work.

3 of 191 comments (clear)

  1. Works as designed by Znork · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Patent and copyright laws have never been about compensating inventors or creators. If they had been, they would be mandating actual payment to them.

    Their construction as monopoly rights in a market where few individual creators or inventors will be scarce resources ensures that the negotiating power will be entirely on those in control of markets and distribution networks. The middle man can easily just pick up another provider of materials, while the originator is forced to take whatever deal is offered or face being unable to reach customers at all. Modern technology has slightly improved the situation with better opportunities, but ultimately, the deck is stacked solidly against the creators.

    But that's working as it's designed. The purpose of monopoly rights has always been to provide stable market power and protection from free market competition for the friends of the crown. Creators are merely the convenient, powerless and easily replaceable excuse.

  2. Abroad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    I'm a bit confused. US law assigns no rights at all to inventors. How exactly is going abroad going to benefit Japanese inventors? Which countries are they supposed to go to?

  3. Re:Poor delusional old man by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 3, Interesting

    You are incorrect. Patents and copyrights done on your own time and not relating to company assets are yours.

    Only if they don't make money.

    I have signed paperwork from the first company I ever worked for that gives them the ownership of anything I ever invented. The next ones too. The wording is interesting, but as I read it, it leaves room for interpretation, the favorite tools of the patent trolls

    I haven't invented anything patented, but you can bet your bottom dollar that if I ever did, and it was a big moneymaker, I'd be hit with lawsuits of ownership, claims that I did the work on company time or used company resources, and then the winner would be sued by the others, until only one was left.

    --
    The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.