I was very surprised by the response from some industry segments to the PTOs proposed changes to prosecution and continuation practice, to the KSR petition for cert, and to some extent by the support for legislative reform. It increasingly seems that at least some players are coming around to positions regarding the patent system that the open source crowd has been advocating for years.
It is not so surprising Issac. Companies like MSFT and Cisco built their businesses largely without patents and for them patents present more of a threat than a promise. They do not want to pay to use technology that they have been using for free.
On the other hand, they also don't want others (namely free and open source software) to use THEIR technology for free which is why MSFT, as one example, is massively increasing the number of patents they obtain.
The problem is not with patents; it is with patents and massively complex systems. CNET news ran an article back in 2002, which summed up the situation quite nicely:
"The laptop computer you may be reading this on most likely contains between 500 and 5,000 patentable inventions from different companies. If you also happen to be taking a certain prescription drug, that drug is more than likely covered by a single patent."
I use the terms discrete and complex. Products covered by one patent (or a few patents) are owned by the same entity are discrete. Products covered by hundreds or thousands of patents owned by dozens of different entities are complex.
The thing is this, the patent statute is, presently, one-size-fits-all and the strong absolute exclusionary protections needed for discrete technologies don't really work in complex technologies. The pharma companies push for stronger patent protections while others want to see it weakened.
The problem is not patents, per se, I believe the problem that has to be solved is what it means to have a patent. Should a patent owner be able to gain an injunction, or make an infringer pay a royalty on every copy of Vista because he or she might have a patent covering some very small portion of the whole? KSR might have to pay a royalty on the foot pedals it sells to Ford, but should Ford have to pay a royalty on the whole car because one part infringes a patent?
In software in particular, the courts don't make this distinction. Frankly very hard to determine the percentage of Vista's value attributable to any one patent so a royalty is generally paid on the whole.
(As an aside, if MSFT bought components from parts suppliers, the royalty base would be much easier and much fairer to determine. This is where a company like Intellectual Ventures could make a huge impact. Sourcing software "components" to large integrators - like Ford and its vendors - is one model of the future. I don't think this is IV's plan, but it might very well should be.)
Moreover, in a dispute between a patent holder and an infringer, the courts can't take into account that there may be hundreds of other patents for which a license might be paid. They treat every patent case as if the patent in question was the only patent and award penalties accordingly.
Consider, if you will, the 3G cellular technology. There are 40+ companies that claim to have essential patents on the WCDMA standard. As Ilkka Rahnasto from Nokia observed in his outstanding book Intellectual Property Rights, External Effects, and Anti-Trust Law: Leveraging IPRs in the Communications Industry, Oxford University Press, p. 175:
”As some commentators have estimated that royatly rates as high as 2% would be paid in the communications industry, the use of such royalty rates by each patent owner would cause the business to be unattractive to any company.”
Typical Finnish understatement, but the point is clear enough. This is the problem. It's not patents - it is what it means to have a patent.
As this problem is easily solved by doing away with patents entirely, increasingly this is being offered as a solution. This is, of course, not a good solution.
The good solution, however, is very, very, very hard to find. And it is even harder if we in the professional patent community do not make the effort to look for it, but throw our heads in the sand and pretend the problem does not exist.
Sorry for the derail.
So again, I am extremely encouraged by this program from USPTO. It does not solve THE problem, but it does address A problem in an innovative and forward looking manner. We need more of that kind of thinking if we are to solve the larger problems.
Regards,
Eric Stasik