scholarly journals Missing the Forest for the Trolls

2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Lemley

Trolls are a significant feature of the patent system. They account for alarge number of suits, now a majority of all patent assertions in thecountry and an even higher percentage in the information technology (IT)industries. They win both larger judgments and larger settlements than do“practicing entities” (“PEs”) -- those that practice patents and are notprincipally in the business of collecting money from others that practicethem. And they do so despite complaints that trolls assert weak patents andsome evidence that troll patents are more likely to lose in court.Nonetheless, we think the focus on patent trolls obscures a more complexset of challenges confronting the patent system. In this paper, we makethree points. First, patent trolls are not a unitary phenomenon. We see atleast three different troll business models developing, and those modelshave different effects on the patent system. Second, patent assertions bypracticing entities can create just as many problems as assertions bypatent trolls. The nature of many industries obscures some of the costs ofthose assertions, but that does not mean they are cost-free. In addition,practicing entities are increasingly engaging in “patent privateering,” inwhich product-producing companies take on many of the attributes of trolls.Put differently, while trolls exploit problems with the patent system, theyare not the only ones that do so. Third, many of the problems associatedwith trolls are in fact problems that stem from the disaggregation ofcomplementary patents into too many different hands. That in turn suggeststhat groups like Intellectual Ventures might be reducing, not worsening,these problems (though, as we will see, the overall effects are ambiguous),while “patent privateers” that spin off patents in order for others toassert them might make things worse. For this reason, patent reformers andantitrust authorities should worry less about aggregation of patent rightsand more about disaggregation of those rights, sometimes accomplished byspinning them out to others.Understanding the economics of patent assertions by both trolls andpracticing entities allows us to move beyond labels and the search for “badactors,” focusing instead on aspects of the patent system itself that giverise to the problems and on specific, objectionable conduct in which bothtrolls and practicing entities sometimes engage. Patent trolls alone arenot the problem; they are a symptom of larger problems with the patentsystem. Treating the symptom will not solve the problems. In a very realsense, critics have been missing the forest for the trolls. Exposing thelarger problems allows us to contemplate changes in patent law that willactually tackle the underlying pathologies of the patent system and theabusive conduct they enable.

1969 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Scott Parker ◽  
Kevin Mooney

A number of fundamental principles (and misconceptions) of patent law and of the system for granting and enforcing patents lie at the heart of the so-called 'evergreening' debate on patent protection for pharmaceutical products. The purpose of this paper is to consider 'evergreening' from a legal perspective and to evaluate the extent to which the patent system operates to safeguard against the claimed abuses. In the authors' view the allegation that pharmaceutical companies have been able to delay substantially the entry of generic competition by 'evergreening' many of their patents simply does not reflect the reality and mischaracterises how the patent system operates in the context of technological innovation. A patent over an improvement does not restrict a generic company from launching a competitor of the originator product and, in the UK at least, the procedure and attitude of the court is conducive to the speedy and cost-effective challenge of 'weak' patents.


2008 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ana Celia Castro ◽  
Maria Beatriz Amorim Bohrer

TRIPS as it stands is against the interests of developing countries, and needsreform. In developing their own patent law, developing countries need to recognizethat there is now near consensus among informed observers that patentlaw and practice have, in some cases, overshot, and need to be reformed. Thatis the burden of the recent NAS/NRC report on “A Patent System for the 21stCentury.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 26-30
Author(s):  
Prabodh M. ◽  
Chaitanya Prasad K. ◽  
Ashish S. ◽  
Suthakaran R. ◽  
Abhijit K.

Intellectual property protection is a one type of protection to the innovator from their creative efforts. On November 1, 1991, the Indonesian Parliament passed Law No. 6/1989 on Patents. The new law came into effect on August 1, 1991. The patenting system in Indonesia is discussed using some recent statistics and their fees, patent exclusivity, litigation, grace period. As of 1989, there have been over 13,000 applications for temporary patent registration, 96% of which were of foreign origins. None of the applications were denied, were ever granted because no patent Law existed. In this paper discussed brief introduction about Indonesia patent system.


2015 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 17-28
Author(s):  
Renée Ridgway

‘Cybercapitalism’, commonly termed ‘digital capitalism’, refers to the Internet, or ‘cyber- space’ and seeks to engage in business models within this territory in order to make financial profit. Cybercapitalism is structured by a highly intricate series of communication networks, which connect us through our participation on social platforms, but outside of these platforms how do we navigate and explore this information superhighway? We do so predominantly through search requests. Algorithms ostensibly know what we want before we even type them, as with Google’s ‘autocomplete’. Thus search is not merely an abstract logic but a lived practice that helps manage and sort the nature of information we seek as well as the direction of our queries. Nowadays it has become clear that users pay for such services with their data, which is increasingly the means to finance various corporations’ growth as they sell this data to third party advertisers. It is a transaction and in the exchange we get relevance. But is this really true? 


2017 ◽  
pp. 1414-1426
Author(s):  
Debarati Das ◽  
Prasenjit Maji ◽  
Goutami Dey ◽  
Nilanjan Dey

E-health is a rising star that marks the collaboration of medical science and information technology, a ray of hope promising a glorious future of health and prosperity, an easy solution to rely on when in need of medical assistance. But the question arises is E-health an absolute spotless option? In this paper we question the integrity with which e-health is being practised, is the code of ethics being diligently followed? And if not then is ethical e-health entirely impossible? It is of utmost importance to encourage the motivational thinkers who have taken the initiative to provide a better and quicker solution to all health problems by integrating health services and information technology. To do so it becomes necessary to remove the barriers in the way of ethical E-health.


2012 ◽  
pp. 1609-1620
Author(s):  
Anette Weisbecker

Cloud Computing has become the predominant paradigm in information technology for the use of distributed resources. It enables the Internet of Services where different provider offer services and compose services to new value added services. For the emerging service value chains the quality the services plays an important role. Therefore, beside software engineering methods aspects like quality of services, business models, and the interaction with the customer have to be considered during the development of cloud services. This chapter describes how these aspects can be integrated in the development process by combining software and service engineering methods and considering quality as a critical success factor in the design time.


Author(s):  
Luis Felipe Luna-Reyes

Contemporary organizations face the challenge of growing and advancing in a complex and changing environment (Johannessen, Olaisen, & Olsen, 2001; Malhotra, 2000). In order to accomplish this objective, private organizations continuously innovate to attract customers (Johannessen et al.). Competition has been accelerated by information technology, which allows the appearance of new business models, introducing new competitors in the business arena (Rayport, 2001). Under these circumstances, it appears that innovation is one of the most valuable activities for any organization (Nonaka, 1996). Furthermore, the management of intangible assets such as knowledge is one of the critical factors to promote innovation and sustainable competitive advantage (Davenport, 2001; De Long & Fahey, 2000; Malhotra; Nonaka).


Author(s):  
Tasneem Aamir

Digital enterprise transformation focuses on alignment of processes, products, services, business models, and technologies to perceive business value. Digital business integration in an organization utilizes information technology and its tools to drive and manage the life cycle of digital enterprise transformation. It utilizes the practices and approaches of IT governance with modern application tools and APIs. The millennium brought many technological advancements over internet technologies and these technologies operate numerous applications and business services. The span of digital enterprises is expanding and continues to grow with their evolution on a web scale. This chapter is an effort to present understanding about machine learning and automation around businesses intelligence and analytics on a web scale. The chapter provides a brief summary of technologies used in digital enterprise transformation for all the domains of an organization.


Author(s):  
Cheng Thomas K

This chapter focuses on the interface between intellectual property and competition laws. The interface is the most complex between competition law on the one hand and patent law on the other hand. Developing countries only engage in what can be called laggard innovation, which includes acquisition of tacit knowledge, imitation, and process innovation. This may call for a reconsideration of the appropriate approach to the patent–competition interface in developing countries because laggard innovations, with the exception of process innovation, are not the subject of protection of the patent system. If laggard innovations are not the subject matter of protection of the patent system, the patent-competition rules should have little relevance for the quest for innovations in developing countries. In fact, one can argue that the patent system is an impediment to one of the main sources of laggard innovation, imitation, and that the patent-competition rules should be adjusted in a way to facilitate it if one were serious about adopting a pro-growth approach to competition law enforcement in developing countries. This implies that for developing countries that do not produce patentable innovations, there is no need to balance between patent and competition policies. There is in fact no conflict between these two policy objectives. Intellectual property rights and Market-sharing and customer allocation Enforcement and procedure


Author(s):  
Debarati Das ◽  
Prasenjit Maji ◽  
Goutami Dey ◽  
Nilanjan Dey

E-health is a rising star that marks the collaboration of medical science and information technology, a ray of hope promising a glorious future of health and prosperity, an easy solution to rely on when in need of medical assistance. But the question arises is E-health an absolute spotless option? In this paper we question the integrity with which e-health is being practised, is the code of ethics being diligently followed? And if not then is ethical e-health entirely impossible? It is of utmost importance to encourage the motivational thinkers who have taken the initiative to provide a better and quicker solution to all health problems by integrating health services and information technology. To do so it becomes necessary to remove the barriers in the way of ethical E-health.


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