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Empirical Research Reveals Three Big Problems With How Patents Are Vetted (arstechnica.com)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: If you've read our coverage of the Electronic Frontier Foundation's "Stupid Patent of the Month" series, you know America has a patent quality problem. People apply for patents on ideas that are obvious, vague, or were invented years earlier. Too often, applications get approved and low-quality patents fall into the hands of patent trolls, creating headaches for real innovators. Why don't more low-quality patents get rejected? A recent paper published by the Brookings Institution offers fascinating insights into this question. Written by legal scholars Michael Frakes and Melissa Wasserman, the paper identifies three ways the patent process encourages approval of low-quality patents:

-The United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) is funded by fees -- and the agency gets more fees if it approves an application.
-Unlimited opportunities to refile rejected applications means sometimes granting a patent is the only way to get rid of a persistent applicant.
-Patent examiners are given less time to review patent applications as they gain seniority, leading to less thorough reviews.

None of these observations is entirely new. But what sets Frakes and Wasserman's work apart is that they have convincing empirical evidence for all three theories. They have data showing that these features of the patent system systematically bias it in the direction of granting more patents. Which means that if we reformed the patent process in the ways they advocate, we'd likely wind up with fewer bogus patents floating around.

3 of 94 comments (clear)

  1. A solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Eliminate patents and copyrights. Get rid of them altogether. This also has the benefit that IBM can no longer bully open source opponents with patent litigation, plus onerous licenses like the GPL are invalidated. No more low quality patents, plus many other issues get fixed.

    1. Re:A solution by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Many corporations use patents defensively, as weapons against other corporations suing them. It is very common for companies to form "patent pools" to share technology among themselves while excluding outsiders.

      This indicates that most companies see little or no inherent value in patents, and consider them more of a Prisoner's Dilemma. They are forced to collect patents because others are collecting, but they could be collectively better off if patents didn't exist.

      There is little reason to believe that the patent system is a net contributor to innovation. For every inventor that is protected, there are many more that are stifled. You can't improve and extend what you aren't allowed to use.

      Also, copyrights and patents are very different, and should not be lumped together.

  2. 99% by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 3, Insightful

    99% of all software patents are obvious solutions to trivial problems that have already been invented. I'd call that a problem.