Government

Obama Takes a Swing at Patent Trolls

The Obama administration on Tuesday targeted patent trolls with a number of initiatives aimed at curbing activity it blames for stymieing innovation in America.

The initiatives include five executive orders and seven legislative recommendations that will “protect innovators from frivolous litigation and ensure the highest-quality patents in our system,” according to the administration.

Obama administration takes on patent trolls

The Obama administration maintains that patent trolls cost the economy billions of dollars and undermine American innovation.

Patent trolls have been accused of abusing the system to squeeze money from just about anyone using technology containing their intellectual property. However, they’ve also been praised for protecting small inventors from being crushed by corporations.

“One person’s troll is another person’s innovator,” David Mixon, a patent attorney with Bradley Arant Boult Cummings, told the E-Commerce Times.

Draconian Consequences

Patent trolls are creating problems in the system, but caution must be exercised when addressing the problem, Mixon advised.

For example, one congressman has proposed barring patent holders from exercising their patent rights unless they’re using the patent in a product.

“That kind of Draconian approach would backfire in a large way,” Mixon said.

One way it could backfire is by hurting the people it’s designed to help by removing a means of legal recourse.

“If inventors cannot get their day in court, then our nation will suffer,” Raymond Van Dyke ofVan Dyke Law told the E-Commerce Times.

Patent abuse isn’t new, but it has become increasingly attractive, observed Charles Gorenstein, an intellectual property attorney with Birch, Stewart, Kolasch & Birch.

“I’ve been litigating against patent trolls for at least 30 years,” he told the E-Commerce Times. “It’s just a model that’s caught on, and more people are jumping on the bandwagon.”

No Accountability

Money is big contributor to the practice’s popularity.

“It’s a very lucrative undertaking with relatively little risk for the troll that files suit,” Gorenstein said.

“The problem isn’t with the patent system. The problem is it’s too easy to bring a suit, knowing full well it’s nonsense, but expecting to get away with it anyway,” he maintained.

“There are mechanisms in place for punishing people who litigate in bad faith,” added Gorenstein, “but courts aren’t frequently using them.”

Accountability is a key concern when dealing with patent trolls, noted Jonathan Rothwell, an associate fellow at the Brookings Institute.

“They really can’t be punished by consumers,” he told the E-Commerce Times.

If a corporation abuses its patents, it will be publicized in the media and consumers will become aware of it.

“People can stop buying that company’s products, and that will act as a deterrent against that abusive behavior,” he explained. “But with these patent assertion entities, they’re not selling anything, so there’s no accountability for abusive behavior — other than the legal system itself, which they’re expert in navigating.”

Initiatives Advanced

Actions implemented by the administration designed to address perceived problems created by patent trolls include the following:

  • Ordering the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office to adopt rules that require the ultimate owner of a patent to be identified to the agency;
  • Reducing broad claims in patents granted by the USPTO through better training of patent officers;
  • Educating consumers and others about what to do when targeted by a patent toll;
  • Expanding outreach programs to develop new ideas and a consensus for changes in patent policies and laws; and
  • Reviewing the procedures used by U.S. Customs and Border Protection and the U.S. International Trade Commission to determine the scope of orders used to exclude infringing products from entering the United States.

Call for Legislation

The administration also proposed the following legislative actions as part of its war on patent trolls:

  • Allowing the USPTO and district courts to impose sanctions on patent-asserting entities that refuse to identify the original holder of a patent;
  • Permitting more discretion by courts in awarding the payment of attorney’s fees as a sanction against frivolous lawsuits;
  • Providing better legal protections for consumers and businesses against lawsuits from patent trolls; and
  • Changing the standard by which the ITC issues injunctions against infringing products.

1 Comment

  • this guy dont care about the AM erican people,

    he cares about winning the election and bending everyone over or having them investigated…………

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