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● 05.02.17

●● The Patent Microcosm and Its Ludicrous New Narrative/Tale That Patent Reform is a Plot of Large Corporations

Posted in America, Deception, Patents at 8:51 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

An inversion of narratives in patent reform

I’m going to keep tweeting this table to remind people how untrue these 5 sound when they cry injury and the need for more #patent reform pic.twitter.com/i5ojq8ZY4g— Will (@patentsales) April 28, 2017

Summary: Tackling the misconception that it’s somehow the billionaires and oligarchs/megacorporations who are pursuing patent reform in the United States, rather than many small companies that are suffering from patent trolls (whom they cannot afford to defend against in a court of law)

THE US COURTS, unlike the USPTO, are eager to be tough on patents. They demand proof that patents granted by the USPTO are in fact eligible and they put the burden of proof increasingly on plaintiffs (or petitioners in the case of PTAB).

=> ↺ USPTO

“A lot of that boils down to pure nonsense and gossip, not facts.”The above tweet matches a pattern that we’ve observed for a number of months. Patent maximalists try to paint their side as the “small guy” and in doing so they create conspiracy theories about Michelle Lee and Google, about corporate ties to reform, and so much more. A lot of that boils down to pure nonsense and gossip, not facts. The above person, who obviously does not want his/her (sur)name known, seemingly pretends that only those 5 companies call for patent reform (they don’t). That’s pure nonsense. The text of the above is reproduced as follows (in case the original tweet gets deleted): “I’m going to keep tweeting this table to remind people how untrue these 5 sound when they cry injury and the need for more patent reform”

=> ↺ above tweet

I’ve already argued with him/her about it, but it seems pointless. S/He maintains his/her position on this and so do sites like Watchtroll. They pretend they stand for inventors — the very thing their stance keeps harming the most.

“They pretend they stand for inventors — the very thing their stance keeps harming the most.”The account above is called “patentsales” — the very same thing that large corporations like doing. Recall IP3 for example [1, 2]; IAM blogged yesterday that “[t]he news, which was announced today, follows last year’s original IP3, which saw a group of companies from diverse industries come together to build on an initiative that Google had originally undertaken in 2015. This year’s version of the platform will only be available to AST’s 30 members, who include Ford, Google, IBM, Microsoft and recent joiner Uber.”

=> 1 | 2 | ↺ blogged yesterday

IAM’s report/blog is titled “Fixed-time patent-buying programme IP3 back again for 2017; but this time it’s different” (remember who’s behind IP3).

Meanwhile, over at Watchtroll, they promote the notion of “intellectual property as a driver of innovation” (that’s the headline) while leaving critical bits aside until late in the report. To quote:

=> ↺ promote the notion of “intellectual property as a driver of innovation”

In questioning, Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) decided to advance the patent troll narrative and found a perfect sounding box in Eron to do so. “Patent trolls can use weak patents to extract monies,” Klobuchar said. Eron assented, noting that, while she was not an expert in IP laws, her understanding was that low-quality patents hurt Intel’s resources, diverting them from innovative R&D and towards litigation defense. “We do have a problem with patent trolls,” Sen. Thom Tillis (R-NC) would later add. “I don’t buy this idea that big guys are trying to squeeze out the small guys, a lot of times they’re looking for those smaller guys to scale up,” Tillis said, noting that app stores are filled with services being brought to the market on platforms provided by larger developers like Google and Apple.

What do they mean by “larger developers like Google and Apple”? Or “those smaller guys”?

There is one main difference between those “larger developers” and “those smaller guys”; one group can afford taking the trolls all the way to the court and invalidate the patent/s in question, whereas the other group cannot.

“For those who allege that United for Patent Reform is some kind of front for Google, Apple etc. watch the complete list of companies they stand for.”United for Patent Reform, which recently defended Michelle Lee for her tough stance on trolls, is quoting Mytheos Holt as saying that “[p]atent trolls “exist purely to register patents and then accuse actual inventors of violating them”” (links to an article we mentioned 2 days ago). It later tweets (with photo) “I stopped innovating. I stopped creating.” –Small business owner Eric Rosebrock on the result of his fight with a patent troll” and also tweets: “Thanks to Darrell Issa for coming to the screening of The Patent Scam today, and for being a champion in the fight to fix patents every day” (we also mentioned “The Patent Scam” 2 days ago).

=> recently defended Michelle Lee for her tough stance on trolls | ↺ quoting Mytheos Holt | an article we mentioned 2 days ago | ↺ tweets | ↺ tweets

For those who allege that United for Patent Reform is some kind of front for Google, Apple etc. (that’s the new talking point), watch the complete list of companies they stand for. Here is a current screenshot from the front page (list of backers).

Yeah, those few massive companies… it’s only them behind patent reform. If anything, some of them are behind patent trolls (Microsoft for sure, in a big way) — the very opposite of patent reform. █

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