An idea whose time has come perhaps ?

Story: A new way to end the patent madnessTotal Replies: 2
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Ridcully

Jun 17, 2012
6:17 PM EDT
I sincerely wish Phipps idea could occur. It turns the "spears into plough-shares". Only one problem: getting it started. And which of the patent behemoths is going to be first to throw down their weapons and begin innovation not litigation ? But how I wish this idea can succeed. This really is a watch this space.......and hope like blazes it happens.
henke54

Jun 18, 2012
8:16 AM EDT
Quoting:Here's an ironic snip:

Oracle Corporation opposes the patentability of software. The Company believes that existing copyright law and available trade secret protections, as opposed to patent law, are better suited to protecting computer software developments.

Patent law provides to inventors an exclusive right to new technology in return for publication of the technology. This is not appropriate for industries such as software development in which innovations occur rapidly, can be made without a substantial capital investment, and tend to be creative combinations of previously-known techniques.

Even if patent law were appropriate for protection of software, due to the large volume of recently-granted software patents and the rising number of new applications, the current patent process would continue to be troublesome for the software industry. Software patent examinations are hindered by the limited capability of searching prior art, by the turnover rate among examiners in the Patent and Trademark Office, and by the confusion surrounding novelty and innovation in the software arena. The problem is exacerbated by varying international patent laws, which both raise the cost and confuse the issue of patent protection.

Unfortunately, as a defensive strategy, Oracle has been forced to protect itself by selectively applying for patents which will present the best opportunities for cross-licensing between Oracle and other companies who may allege patent infringement.
http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20100813112425821

more links :

http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2012/06/defensive-patent-...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Defensive_Patent_License

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ttB_mjcIKcY

Bill Gates in 1991 : http://groklaw.net/pdf/iowa/www.iowaconsumercase.org/011607/...
henke54

Jun 18, 2012
8:39 AM EDT
Jack Ellis, IAM Magazine | 15 Jun 2012 wrote:Earlier this week, the website of the Defensive Patent License (DPL) initiative went live. The blurb on the new website (replete with loaded language) reads as follows:

The Defensive Patent License (DPL) is a new legal mechanism to protect innovators by networking patents into powerful, mutually-beneficial legal shields that are 100% committed to defending innovation – no bullies, trolls, or other leeches allowed. It also helps prevent evildoers from patenting open technologies and pulling them out of the public domain.

The DPL is being created by a team led by Berkeley professors Jason Schultz and Jennifer Urban, whose paper on the concept can be downloaded here. It looks as if entities that sign up for the DPL will agree to offer all of their patents to other members on a royalty-free basis. Each DPL holder pledges not to initiate litigation against any other holder. However, those patent holders that do sign up to the DPL will be free to enter return-generating licence agreements with (or file lawsuits against) non-holders.

In many ways the DPL comes from the same play book that saw Twitter develop its Innovator's Patent Agreement (IPA). Essentially, the idea is for patent owners to group together to prevent their IP being owned in a way that might lead to exclusion. The problem, of course, is that for most companies the exclusionary potential that patents offer is one of the things that makes them so attractive in the first place. If you take that power away, all you are left with is counter-assertion in cases where you are being sued. For companies that build businesses on their ability to innovate that is not necessarily the most attractive of propositions. Why give up strategic flexibility and freedom in this way if you don’t have to? Obviously some, such as Twitter, believe there are positives in shackling themselves, but many more do not. On that basis, it is unlikely that we will see a host of key players rushing to sign up. What’s more, there may well be the potential for the DPL to be abused.

What is to stop a company with weak patents that protect nothing of importance signing up to gain access to the potentially valuable intellectual property of others, while offering nothing in return? It is not beyond the bounds of possibility that the freeloader in question might be funded by a much larger company from outside the collective and would therefore be in a position to compete unfairly against the other members. If the intention of the DPL is to empower small-time patent holders, then surely the agreement would require some form of quality threshold for aspirant licensees to avoid this scenario.

Furthermore, the type of entity that might find the DPL attractive is one that may well already have a sceptical view of the patent system and the benefits it could get from it; a view that means it has held back from obtaining patents in the first place. Therefore, there may already be little incentive for such entities to get involved.

But even those who don’t want to sign up for the DPL may have an interest in seeing it succeed if it means that potentially problematic patents remain out of the hands of NPEs and operating company competitors. So here is another scenario that may be worth contemplating: larger companies may use the DPL for spin-outs that do not own weak, uninteresting patents, but actually hold ones that others may want to use. It could be a means of getting others to adopt technologies whose use can be leveraged in other ways than monetisation.

We don’t yet know precisely how the DPL might work and the creators have been clear that this project is still in its development stage. But whatever its potential flaws or benefits, the DPL initiative is worth watching for one key reason: it is not an exercise in ignoring the patent system. Instead, it is about engaging with the system to find a solution to a problem that some perceive exists. On the basis that engagement is always more constructive than sticking your head in the sand, the DPL has to be viewed as a positive move. And if it does attract an active and significant set of licensees, then more power to its elbow.
http://www.iam-magazine.com/blog/Detail.aspx?g=f74bb6a0-1eb8...

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