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Patent Reform Favors Corporations, Multinationals
Epoch Times ^ | July 5, 2011 | Andrea Hayley, Epoch Times Staff

Posted on 07/11/2011 5:00:30 PM PDT by ex-Texan

America’s 200-year-old patent system is about to be reformed, and the changes will cut out the very heart of innovation in this country, warn many independent inventors, small business owners, and manufacturers, angel investors and venture capitalists.

“We are playing Russian roulette with the basis of the American economy, which is innovation,” said Kevin Kearns, president of the U.S. Business and Industry Council (USBIC).

Critics say the reforms will devastate opportunities for the disruptive innovators of the future—the start-ups and independents who could invent the next iPhone challenger, for example. It will also promote the domination of patents, and patent license ownership, by larger companies, while small business operations decline.

Favored are large companies that have engineers and management teams in house, and patent lawyers on the payroll who can bring applications to the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) frequently, and quickly. The model supports incremental innovation, meaning the continuous updates to existing technologies, such as bi-yearly releases of the iPhone, the iPhone3G, the iPhone 3GS, the iPhone 4, and so on.

With each patent application requiring time and attention away from the creative process of innovation, thousands in lawyer’s fees, sufficient documentation to prove that an idea is original, and a potential legal defense against challengers to the patent, a key change in the law will push the little guy out of the field a lot more than those who crafted the law intended, critics say.

“It is no problem for [large companies] to pull over a couple of guys to get applications down to the office, but for the rest of us Americans who depend on university spin offs, little research centers, and just individual brilliance, I think its a massive problem,” Kearns said.

The biggest flashpoint centers on a proposed shift away from the current “first to invent” system, to a “first to file” model similar to that used in Europe, and how the change will affect the creative innovation process.

Until now, a one-year grace period has protected inventors like Eli Whitney, inventor of the cotton gin, the Wright brothers, Alexander Graham Bell, and Thomas Edison—men who revolutionized their respective industries.

What the grace period allows is the ability of inventors to publicly display their inventions, and use the exposure to attract investors who can help commercialize the product—all before having to file for a patent. First to invent protects the inventor during this grace period and gives struggling inventors a leg up. Some inventors may opt to keep their innovation secret to protect it, and then still use the grace period to claim first to invent.

If someone else tries to file with the same invention, as long as the inventor can prove the date of conception of the original idea, and it is within a year, the patent goes to him. This is what is called the first to invent system, and this process has guided the nation for two centuries, spurring innovation and the dynamism of the current economy.

Todd O. McCracken, President of the National Small Business Association wrote in a letter to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, the “grace period patent system has been a major mechanism for the dynamism of small-business innovation,” guaranteeing that “only carefully and well-developed inventions are patented and at much less expense to the applicant than in first-to-file countries.”

Most other industrialized nations use the “first to file” model, meaning whoever wins the race to the patent office, gets the patent. Supporters of the bill argue that harmonization on a global scale is preferable, and makes it easier for companies to compete on a level playing field.

The NSBA suggested in a letter that other nations should harmonize with the United States, not the other way around.

“It is clear that the weak or (entirely absent) grace periods used in the rest of the world's first-to-file patent system throttles small-business innovation and job creation,” said McCracken.

“Some small firms will lose their patent protection altogether, as they will be unable to afford a doubling of their application filing rate,” he added.

Bill Mashek, spokesperson for the Coalition for 21st Century Patent Reform, which is a coalition of multinational companies, said the first to invent system “is not a real clear system, and it causes conflict, and delays.”

“If you move the country to a first inventor to file, it provides greater clarity. It is pretty clear who gets to the office and makes a filing,” he said.

Big Versus Small

H.R. 1249, the Leahy-Smith America Invents Act, has a tremendous amount of support in Congress and the administration. In a recent press conference President Obama called the bill a job creator, and asked Congress to bring the bill to his desk so he could sign it.

The current legislation and variations of it have been worked on for over six years. It passed in the House 304-117 on Jun. 23. It has been unanimously approved by the Senate Judiciary Committee, and Reid is expected to put the bill up for a Senate vote some time this week. An earlier version of the legislation passed in the Senate in March in a 95-5 vote.

“Reforming our patent system is a critical priority whose time has more than come. It is essential to growing our economy, creating jobs and promoting innovation in our nation,” said co-sponsor Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), in a statement.

The legislation is supported by business heavyweights, such as General Mills, GlaxoSmithKline, Dow Chemical Company, IBM, Intel, the U.S Chamber of Commerce, and the Financial Services Roundtable, all of whom have been closely involved in lobby efforts and in influencing its direction.

NSBA’s McCracken, who represents 150,000 small businesses across the nation, says they, and a number of other concerned organizations, including the American Innovators for Patent Reform, have not had a seat at the negotiating table in the last four Congresses.

These organizations say that U.S. politicians simply do not understand how innovation in the country works. Small businesses are responsible for five times as many patents as large companies, and 20 times more than universities. Small businesses also boost higher rates of commercialization and are more likely to bring emerging technologies to market.

“Large patenting firms have very little expertise in how small-business patenting firms operate, set priorities, balance resources, and file patent applications. On these matters, the Senate ought to defer to the innovative, small firms and independent inventors that are supplying the U.S. with its most important breakthrough technologies and new jobs, and not the large, multinational firms that are trying to gut the American grace period,” wrote McCracken.

One of the few voices of dissent coming out of Congress, Rep. John Conyers Jr. (D-Mich.), has begun a Dear Colleague’s letter opposing the proposed patent reform. Conyers characterizes the legislation as a “special interest bill” that will “cost jobs, harm small start-up inventors, and stifle innovation and investment here in the United States.”

The letter lists over 80 organizations against the legislation, including a number of universities and research-related interests, civil rights groups, conservative and religious groups, the U.S. Business and Industry Council, the National Association of Realtors, the American Bar Association, and Breast Cancer Action.

If the legislation passes, Kearns and others predict a series of legal challenges to the constitutionality of three key provisions. One of them is the first-to-file. The second relates to a rule expanding the scope of allowable submissions of artwork, which applies to challenges of new applications. The third is Section 18, a provision authored by Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) that gives special preference to Wall Street to make legal challenges to previously litigated patents.

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* Concern About the US Economy

Kearns predicts that rather than create jobs, the legislation, which would not go into effect until 2013, will lead to “massive legal uncertainty.”

Who would want to spend tens of thousands of dollars to file an application when the rules and regulations, and future of the patent system, are in flux? Kearns said.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Editorial; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: freetrade; patents; reform
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This law favors large multinational corporations and especially Chinese corporations -- over U.S. based businesses. The days of creative innovation by very bright people working in their own homes and garages is almost over -- forever -- in America.

Obama and the Democrats and RINOS must be proud as punch.

It would be very enlightening to discover who the powerful people behind the scenes are and how much campaign bribe money they were spreading around D.C.

It is not very strange that the U.S. was being encouraged to adopt the European model of 'patent reform' -- based on what the Bilderbergers, Trilateralists, CFR and Bohemian Grove demon worshipers were urging

1 posted on 07/11/2011 5:00:38 PM PDT by ex-Texan
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To: M. Espinola; investigateworld; stephenjohnbanker; Sun; B4Ranch; Alas Babylon!; Quix; Joya; ...

*Ping* !


2 posted on 07/11/2011 5:03:22 PM PDT by ex-Texan (Ecclesiastes 5:10 - 20)
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To: ex-Texan

” This law favors large multinational corporations and especially Chinese corporations “

And, this would be a surprise to whom???


3 posted on 07/11/2011 5:04:58 PM PDT by Uncle Ike (Rope is cheap, and there are lots of trees...)
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To: ex-Texan

Globalism strikes again.


4 posted on 07/11/2011 5:15:43 PM PDT by Quix (Times are a changin' INSURE you have believed in your heart & confessed Jesus as Lord Come NtheFlesh)
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To: ex-Texan

As a patent attorney with decades in practice, I can tell that this terrible reform has one teensy-weensy little problem:

The US Constitution.

Article 1, Section 8 - Powers of Congress

The Congress shall have Power...
To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and ***Inventors*** the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries....

You see, that pesky word “inventors” makes this “first to file” scheme unconstitutional. An inventor is defined under the law as the FIRST person to come up with something. Congress has no power to grant exclusivity to “filers.”

Maybe SCOTUS will find a way to allow this, but this will NOT be implemented for years, until SCOTUS rules.


5 posted on 07/11/2011 5:17:51 PM PDT by Atlas Sneezed (Government borrowing is Taxation without Representation)
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To: ex-Texan

“This law favors large multinational corporations and especially Chinese corporations — over U.S. based businesses. “

I don’t understand how this relates to Chinese corporations in anyway.

Current first to invent is also very expensive and litigation-inviting approach (people can fabricate lab notes to “prove” they invented something in the past, then jury decides it etc).

First to file change should be ok. You can file freely by submitting provisional application (no fees involved).

I don’t think this issue has any ideological conservative vs liberal angle, so freepers should not try to make it look like that.


6 posted on 07/11/2011 5:23:43 PM PDT by heiss
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To: All

Help Keep FR The #1
Conservative Site
On The Web

7 posted on 07/11/2011 5:31:08 PM PDT by musicman (Until I see the REAL Long Form Vault BC, he's just "PRES__ENT" Obama = Without "ID")
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To: ex-Texan

The only purpose of modern patents is to grant the government/corporate-complex ownership of everything, forever.


8 posted on 07/11/2011 5:32:14 PM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum ("A society of sheep must in time beget a government of wolves." - Bertrand de Jouvenel des Ursins)
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To: ex-Texan

the time is coming...for the Fifty to Secede form DC.


9 posted on 07/11/2011 5:35:42 PM PDT by mo ("If you understand, no explanation is needed; if you do not, no explanation is possible")
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To: ex-Texan; Beelzebubba
This is so overblown. The last number I saw, in 2007 there were something like 350,000 patent applications filed. During that same year, the Patent Office awarded priority to a junior party (the party who filed second) 7 times. If those numbers are right, 99.998% of patents are awarded to the first to file. We practically have a first-to-file system already, and it certainly isn't killing American business.

And I'm not entirely sure the law would be rejected by SCOTUS. The law already says you can get a patent even if someone else invented the same thing first (if that person abandoned, suppressed, or concealed it).
10 posted on 07/11/2011 6:02:20 PM PDT by DTxAg
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To: Quix; ex-Texan

” Globalism strikes again. “

Obama


11 posted on 07/11/2011 6:08:02 PM PDT by stephenjohnbanker (God, family, country, mom, apple pie, the girl next door and a Ford F250 to pull my boat.)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum
"The only purpose of modern patents is to grant the government/corporate-complex ownership of everything, forever."

Nope. Not true of patents. Copyright, OTOH is exactly as you describe. (Personal note, my issued patent count is approaching thirty, so I do have some idea of what I'm talking about). The "reform" is a VERY bad deal for the individual inventor and small business.

It should give you a clue that this change is emulating the law in socialist Europe. Emulating Europe is a BAD idea.

12 posted on 07/11/2011 6:18:36 PM PDT by Wonder Warthog
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To: DTxAg

To correct myself, the Patent Office issued 157,282 patents in 2007. So the correct percentage of “first to file” patents that issued in 2007 would be more like 99.996%. Just for the statisticians out there. ;)


13 posted on 07/11/2011 6:29:15 PM PDT by DTxAg
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To: heiss

How many “disruptive” patents (to use Christiansen’s term) a la Chester Carlson’s Xerox patent can you name that have come from large corporations that support this bill? Is not what the small company groups and other groups opposing it true?


14 posted on 07/11/2011 7:10:12 PM PDT by AmericanVictory (Should we be more like them or they more like we used to be?)
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To: DTxAg

This is so overblown. The last number I saw, in 2007 there were something like 350,000 patent applications filed. During that same year, the Patent Office awarded priority to a junior party (the party who filed second) 7 times. If those numbers are right, 99.998% of patents are awarded to the first to file. We practically have a first-to-file system already, and it certainly isn’t killing American business.


The point you miss is that IBM et al. don’t bother try to steal the inventions of first inventors when the law is as it is. If the law changes, the motivation for the players will change.


15 posted on 07/11/2011 8:19:16 PM PDT by Atlas Sneezed (Government borrowing is Taxation without Representation)
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To: ex-Texan
(Article) The legislation is supported by business heavyweights, such as General Mills, GlaxoSmithKline, Dow Chemical Company, IBM, Intel, the U.S Chamber of Commerce, and the Financial Services Roundtable, all of whom have been closely involved in lobby efforts and in influencing its direction.

This is access capitalism, crony capitalism, at its worst. Behind it lies the old exploitive imperial model of Enlightenment Europe, when gentlemen of means had the leisure and money to exploit opportunities while the cotters and toilers were grinding away at their mind-numbing jobs.

It is not very strange that the U.S. was being encouraged to adopt the European model of 'patent reform' -- based on what the Bilderbergers, Trilateralists, CFR and Bohemian Grove demon worshipers were urging

No, not at all, and here in the States I would expect to see a happily ruthless crew centered on the Bush family and similar Bonesmen and Porcellians and Bohemian Club scions of ancient, rich families like the Rockefellers to have been behind this from the very first moment.

16 posted on 07/12/2011 2:43:47 AM PDT by lentulusgracchus (Concealed carry is a pro-life position.)
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To: lentulusgracchus; M. Espinola; investigateworld; stephenjohnbanker; Sun; B4Ranch; Alas Babylon!; ...
Here are two other issues to consider:

Video: Evidence Big Pharma Owns The U.S. Government

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zr7W07nMiDY&feature=player_embedded

Our elected officials are totally corrupt and depend on campaign bribes to stay in office. The system is broken. We are nearly at the stage our forefathers were in 1776 when vast dishonesty by the English political system caused the American revolution. Then in 1913, a foreign banking cartel took over our monetary system with a corrupt debt as currency system that eventually destroyed our economy.

Anonymous Calls For Occupation of Bohemian Grove Entrance:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fcSTF352cEc&feature=player_embedded

Ritual Demonic Idol Worship by elites is set to begin on July 13th

17 posted on 07/12/2011 4:15:02 AM PDT by ex-Texan (Ecclesiastes 5:10 - 20)
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To: ex-Texan; B4Ranch; All

REFORM means plunder....

“comprehensive immigration reform” = end of US.


18 posted on 07/12/2011 6:20:22 AM PDT by stephenjohnbanker (God, family, country, mom, apple pie, the girl next door and a Ford F250 to pull my boat.)
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To: ex-Texan

How’s that “free trade” thing working, America?


19 posted on 07/12/2011 6:23:47 AM PDT by Cringing Negativism Network (SOAK THE GLOBALISTS. Globalists destroy US jobs.)
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To: ex-Texan

Getting interesting . . . in the classical Chinese sense.


20 posted on 07/12/2011 8:22:02 AM PDT by Quix (Times are a changin' INSURE you have believed in your heart & confessed Jesus as Lord Come NtheFlesh)
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