'Balloon boy' dad launches new invention -- via YouTube

Infamous “balloon boy” hoaxer Richard Heene is at it again, hitting America right where it itches. The determined dad is trying to raise scratch for his wife and three sons by hawking his own “Bear Scratch” itching post in a YouTube commercial that makes him come across as an even more excitable version of late, leather-lunged pitchman Billy Mays.

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Documents in Danger of being Lost from National Archives

The National Archives is home to some of the nation’s most prized historical documents. But a new audit by the Government Accountability Office has found that it’s not doing a good job of keeping track of them. The audit was prompted in part by the loss of the Wright Brothers’ original patent for the flying machine. It was last seen in 1980 after being passed around multiple Archives offices, the Patents and Trademarks Office and the National Air and Space Museum. Maps for the bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki were also checked out by military representatives in 1962, and haven't been seen since.

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How Trademark Law Has Turned From A Consumer Protection Law, Into A Weapon To Hinder Competition

"Patent and copyright law come from the "progress clause" of the Constitution, and are there to create incentives for "promoting the progress." Trademark law, on the other hand, falls under the "commerce clause" of the Constitution and is really about protecting consumers from confusion and harm (such as believing a product is from one reputable source, when it's really from someone else). Unfortunately, after some lawyers successfully lumped them all together as "intellectual property law," there's been an ongoing effort to treat trademark law more and more like copyright law -- and that's a problem." Read the blog post on Techdirt at the link in the headline above.

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There is No Prior Art for My Invention

"While there are many reasons for not finding prior art, just because you do not find prior art does not mean that there is no prior art that needs to be considered. In fact, it would be extremely rare (if not completely impossible) for there to be an invention that does not have any relevant prior art. Said another way, unless you have invented something on the level of an Einstein-type invention there is prior art. Even the greatest American inventor, Thomas Edison, faced prior art for the vast majority of his inventions," writes Gene Quinn at IP Watchdog in a blog post you can read at the link in the headline above.

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Creating Scholarly Communities and Fostering Innovation

Gregg Gordon is one of the founders, the President and acting CEO of the Social Science Research Network . The concept behind this for-profit company is to provide an efficient means to distribute scholarly research; SSNR is funded by Greg Gordon and a small group of scholars. Their motto - Tomorrow’s Research Today, drives what we do every day. Read the entire post at the blue link in the headline above.

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Oops! That Facebook Location Patent Forgot To Mention Crowley's Earlier Dodgeball Patent

TechCrunch reports that earlier this week, Facebook was granted a broad patent on mobile location-based social networks. It seems to cover everything from members of a social network sharing their location with each other through their mobile phones to manual checkins. In other words, it sounds like Facebook just patented Foursquare’s main product. Read the post on TechCrunch at the link in the headline above.

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Patent Searches: A Great Opportunity to Focus on What is Unique

"Not only does a patent search allow for focus to be placed on what is different and most likely patentable, but if knock-out prior art is found then the expensive a patent application has been saved," writes Patent Attorney Gene Quinn on the IP Watchdog blog. Click on the link in the headline above to read more of what Gene has to say about patent searching.

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