Patent Examiners Do Not Scale

It's a refrain we've been repeating year after year: patent examiners don't scale. While some patent system supporters continue to insist the only problem with the patent system is not enough examiners, that's simply incorrect.
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Fast-Track US & Canadian Patents

The Canadian Intellectual Property Office has announced its participation in the Canada-U.S. Patent Prosecution Highway (PPH) pilot project. This experimental program, which has been in the works for some time, is designed to help fast-track patent examination in both Canada and the U.S. and increase efficiency in the patent examination process.
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Costs of Patent Prosecution

When people decide to patent, the inevitable question of "how much will it cost?" comes up. While not everyone has a handy copy of each AIPLA cost survey, Alan Kasper, First Vice-President of the AIPLA, provided a brief glimpse into the costs involved in his testimony before Congress.
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Dudas and Others Testify

The U.S. House of Representatives Committee on the Judiciary Subcommittee on Courts, the Internet, and Intellectual Property Oversight held a hearing on the USPTO. Highlights on Peter Zura's 271 Patent Blog.
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US Patent Backlog

Even with its increased hiring estimates of 1,200 patent examiners each year for the next 5 years, the US Patent and Trademark Office patent application backlog is expected to increase to over 1.3 million at the end of fiscal year 2011 the Government Accounting Office reported today.
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Bluetooth Wireless Laptop Security

There are many occasions when security is very important in the corporate environment, but lapses in security will happen because of human error. This invention addresses the problem of security lapses with locking down laptops while the user is away.
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Chinese Patent Law Revisions Expected in 2008

Thanks to the IP Dragon on February 22, 2008 for pointing to Charles and Jeanne Liu's four part, English-language series on the third revision of the Chinese Patent Law (“Patent Law Draft Revision 2006)”) that is expected to be finalized in 2008 after the current 2000 version has been effective for eight years. Bill Heinze at I/P Updates highlights some of the proposed changes.
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The Morph, A Flexible Wearable Phone From Nokia And University of Cambridge

Nokia Research Center and the University of Cambridge are Morphing into the future with a concept cell phone called Morph. The Morph is featured in an online display presented in conjunction with "Design and the Elastic Mind," (which itself is a new experience to watch over the net).
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WikiPatents Review

The WikiPatents Community contributes to the US patent system by reviewing issued patents and pending patent applications. WikiPatents features a wiki-like interface to review, rate, and discuss patents -- plus free patent PDF downloads, file histories, and advanced patent searching. According to sources at WikiPatents, they now have over 30,000 registered users. "Do any of our readers have experience with the WikiPatents and/or Peer-to-Patent websites that they are willing to share?" asks Jake Ward at Anticipate This!
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5 Reasons You Should No Longer Bother Getting U.S. Patents

1. No Longer Any Guarantee Of Exclusive Patent Protection
2. No Current Assurance Of Reliable Patent Licensing
3. Cannot Seek Patent Protection For Mere Combination Of Old Elements
4. No Increased Damages Sanctionable Against Willful Infringers
5. And It Is Getting Even Worse For Patent Proponents...
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USPTO Office Actions and Early Peer-to-Patent Results

As of today, the USPTO has examined 10 applications from Peer-to-Patent. The assignees for these patent applications are as follows:
3 from IBM
2 from Intel
1 from HP
1 from Red Hat
1 from Sun Microsystems
1 from Microsoft
1 from GE
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Universities: An Entrepreneur's Ecosystem

Many great companies have been built on licensed technologies, so even if the university owns the IP, there is still often an opportunity to start a new venture with the technology. For example, Google’s PageRank patent was licensed from Stanford University, and Akamai licensed its technology from MIT. In addition, many technology transfer offices have experts knowledgeable about entrepreneurship and can connect entrepreneurs to the outside community, including external technical and management experts, industry leaders, investors, and potential mentors.
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Mike Dillon, General Counsel at Sun Microsystems [LexBlog Q & A]

LexBlog Q & A guest today is Mike Dillon, General Counsel at Sun Microsystems and executive vice president in the company's legal department. Oh, and he's also a blogger.
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Unmasked: The Patent Troll Tracker Steps Forward

Less than 6 months after having a bounty placed on his identity (recently upped to $15k) by Ray Niro, the Patent Troll Tracker has stepped forward and revealed himself - he is none other than Rick Frenkel, Director of Intellectual Property at Cisco Systems, Inc.
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IP Think Tank Global Week in Review - 22 February 2008

IP Think Tank’s weekly selection of top intellectual property news breaking in the blogosphere and internet. Lots of great links!
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The Patent Reform Act of 2007

Ted Frank's latest Liability Outlook is on the Patent Reform Act of 2007. Check it out.
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IP Business Congress

The CIPO Summit, organised by Intellectual Asset Management magazine, will explore the role of the Chief Intellectual Property Officer in today's business environment. This will be followed by the second European Live IP Auction hosted by Ocean Tomo LLC. Over 200 delegate places now secured from a maximum of 450, including IP professionals from world-class companies such as ALSTOM, DSM, Fujifilm, Microsoft, Nokia, Pirelli, SABMiller, Shell, UTStarcom and Yahoo!
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University of Virginia Professor Receives Innovation Award

James Landers, professor of chemistry and mechanical engineering and associate professor of pathology, was recently recognized with the 2008 Innovation Award from the Association for Laboratory Automation for his novel microfluidic genetic analysis technology.
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Intellectual Property Information for Small Business

...check out the US Patent Office’s site on small business IP. The site explains patents, trademarks, and copyrights in clear terms, along with methods for filing or protecting each.
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IP Surprise: IP in Unconventional Industries

Music, movies, book publishing, computer software, pharmaceuticals. Everyone knows what the “intellectual property industries” are—or do they? Intellectual property today plays a leading role in some unexpected areas.
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Federal Circuit to Review Business Method Patents

If you spot a patent partner doing backflips past your office this afternoon, turn to your office-mate and say, “Did you hear? The Federal Circuit decided to review business method patents!”
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IBM leads from the front and puts green patents on the side of the angels

Of course, for a patent-owning giant like IBM there is also another considerable benefit to the eco-patent commons.
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Court Shutdown Wikileaks.org

A federal district court judge in San Francisco issued a stunningly broad injunction that brought down Wikileaks, a site that is developing what it describes as an "uncensorable Wikipedia for untraceable mass document leaking and analysis."
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New Applications on Peer-to-Patent

Peer-to-Patent is hosting a number of applications that need your expertise! The success of Peer-to-Patent depends upon participation from a knowledgeable, diverse community.
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Don't Play Mind Games With Trade Secrets

The Ohio Supreme Court has ruled that a company’s confidential customer list is a protected trade secret even if a former employee retains the information purely from memory.
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Historical MPEP Now Online

USPTO has created an online archive containing editions from 1948-2006. The archive provides an opportunity for researchers to locate historical information about patent laws and regulations and prior art searching.
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Harvard votes to free its research

This move is being promoted by the Open Access movement, which wants universities of all kinds to make their research freely available. The author still retains the copyright, and is free to submit his or her work to any academic journals, but the paper is also provided for free on the Web.
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Open Innovation gaining momentum?

The idea that companies will succeed in the 21st century by drawing in the brightest minds from everywhere, not just within their own four walls, has gathered momentum over the last five years. The time when ideas were locked up in ivory towers and worked on by a handful of research and developers in white coats has passed. That approach may work well enough in an industrialising world, but it’s slow, insular, and wrecked by bottlenecks in this world, where knowledge is king.
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Freeing Intellectual Property for the Good of the Planet

With the launch of the Eco-Patent Commons earlier this week, four companies -- IBM, Nokia, Pitney-Bowes and Sony -- joined with the World Business Council on Sustainable Development to do something almost unprecedented: they agreed to relinquish their control over inventions that could benefit the planet in order to spur innovation for the greater good.
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Federal Case Law Archive Now Online and Free

Public.Resource.Org and Creative Commons announced that they've released the first batch of case material in their free case law archive. Yesterday's release encompases over 1.8 million volumes of federal case law, including all Courts of Appeals decisions from 1950 to the present and all Supreme Court decisions since 1754.
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Does Fair Use Matter?

There’s nothing like a juicy fair use lawsuit to get copyright lawyers all wound up.
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Blawg Review #146

On the Invent Blog, patent attorney Stephen Nipper is hosting this week's Blawg Review on  National Inventors Day in honor of the anniversary of the birth of  inventor Thomas Alva Edison on February 11th.
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Intellectual Property Infringement?

Here’s a case to watch. The University of Wisconsin in Madison is accusing processor giant Intel of stealing their intellectual property.
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US Patent Reform Legislation On Bumpy Road To Completion

“We recognise our patent system in the United States is the envy of the world … but it can be improved,” Jon Dudas, Commerce undersecretary and head of the US Patent and Trademark office, said Tuesday, adding that the administration has argued that innovation and competitiveness must be preserved in any reform bill. Manufacturing, biotechnology and pharmaceutical industries, as well as venture capitalists, universities and small inventors and businesses are concerned about the measure, Dudas added.
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Getting intellectual about intellectual property

...so much of what is protected is something quite undeserving of being associated with the lofty concept of intellection.
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Hunting trolls: USPTO asked to reexamine broad image patent

In an attempt to strike back at what he feels is an abuse of the patent system, an anonymous sponsor has filed a Request for Ex Parte Reexamination of a patent that purports to lay a broad claim to the displaying of compressed graphic images over the World Wide Web.
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Patent attorneys: perfect?

" What are the most common failings or weaknesses in patent attorneys?" is a question being discussed at Linkedin Answers.
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The best offense...is a good defense.

Mike Dillon, General Counsel at Sun, shares insights about patent litigation and how not to settle.
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Bush Administration Calls For "Tech Neutral" Patent Reform

After the Department of Commerce sent a letter to the Committee on the Judiciary, on the views of the current Administration on S. 1145, the Patent Reform Act of 2007 – specifically, its beef with Section 4 on Damages, the Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property held a conference to explain the Bush Administration’s views regarding the Patent Reform Act.
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Blawg Review #145

The Super Bowl of blawg reviews is hosted this week by Dan Hull at What About Clients? This week's host of the best of law blogs was recognized by the ABA Journal as the Best All Business Blog 2007. Check it out.
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Innovation Business Machine

From Eco-Patents to Big Green Innovations, IBM is building on its technology portfolio to capitalize on social needs.
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Coca Cola's New Corporate Blog

This means we are up to 49 of the Fortune 500 are blogging, or 9.8%.
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Do Not Blame Patent Trolls

A lot of companies are sitting on IP that is not subject to active value creating strategies, but rather used as defensive (and passive) “freedom-to-operate” thinking. One can hardly blame parties for looking to find "Rembrandts in the attic"; and come up with a viable value extracting enforcement strategy for pursuing financial rewards from intangible assets, where the original owners did not.
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