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- <text id=91TT1260>
- <title>
- June 10, 1991: Creativity:Whose Bright Idea?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- June 10, 1991 Evil
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 44
- CREATIVITY
- Whose Bright Idea?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Companies are cracking down on pirates who steal designs, movies
- and computer programs. The battle is getting hotter--and more
- important.
- </p>
- <p>By THOMAS MCCARROLL
- </p>
- <p> When Johnson & Johnson introduced a new fiber-glass
- casting tape for broken bones several years ago, executives at
- Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing flew into a rage. The tape,
- which sets fractures faster than plaster, was remarkably similar
- in design and function to a casting tape developed by 3M
- scientists. The St. Paul-based company quickly sued, charging
- J&J with violating four of its patents. Last month a federal
- court backed 3M and ordered J&J to pay $116 million in damages
- and interest--the fourth largest patent-infringement judgment
- in history.
- </p>
- <p> Although the verdict is subject to appeal, the award
- underscores the growing importance of protecting intellectual
- property. That phrase may seem entirely too grand to apply to
- a song like If You Don't Want My Peaches, You'd Better Stop
- Shaking My Tree, but it actually encompasses the whole vast
- range of creative ideas that turn out to have value--and many
- of them have more value than ever. From Walt Disney's Mickey
- Mouse to Upjohn's formula for its antibaldness potion, patents,
- trademarks and copyrights have become corporate treasures that
- their owners will do almost anything to protect.
- </p>
- <p> In an economy increasingly based on information and
- technology, ideas and creativity often embody most of a
- company's wealth. That is why innovations are being patented,
- trademarked and copyrighted in record numbers. It is also why
- today's clever thief doesn't rob banks, many of which are broke
- anyway; he makes unauthorized copies of Kevin Costner's latest
- film, sells bogus Cartier watches and steals the formula for
- Merck's newest pharmaceutical. That's where the money is.
- </p>
- <p> The battle is widening--U.S. companies filed more than
- 5,700 intellectual-property lawsuits last year in contrast to
- 3,800 in 1980--and the stakes can be enormous. In the biggest
- patent-infringement case to date, Eastman Kodak was ordered last
- October to pay $900 million for infringing on seven Polaroid
- instant-photography patents. In a $100 million trademark suit,
- Mirage Studios, creator of the hugely popular Teenage Mutant
- Ninja Turtles characters, is demanding that AT&T refrain from
- using such terms as turtle power and cowabunga in a 900-number
- telephone service for kids. In a far-reaching copyright case,
- book publishers scored an important victory in March when a
- federal court in New York City fined the Kinko's Graphics
- national chain of copying stores $510,000 for illegally
- photocopying and selling excerpts of books to college students.
- </p>
- <p> Yet thieves still reap a rich harvest. Inadequate
- protection of U.S. patents, trademarks and copyrights costs the
- U.S. economy $80 billion in sales lost to pirates and 250,000
- jobs every year, according to Gary Hoffman, an
- intellectual-property attorney at Dickstein, Shapiro & Morin in
- Washington. The computer industry loses upwards of $4 billion
- of revenues a year to illegal copying of software programs.
- Piracy of movies, books and recordings costs the entertainment
- business at least $4 billion annually.
- </p>
- <p> With intellectual property now accounting for more than
- 25% of U.S. exports (compared with just 12% eight years ago),
- protection against international piracy ranks high on the Bush
- Administration's trade agenda. The U.S. International Trade
- Commission, the federal agency that deals with unfair-trade
- complaints by American companies, is handling a record number
- of cases (38 last year). Says ITC Chairman Anne Brunsdale:
- "Conceptual property has replaced produce and heavy machinery
- as the hotbed of global trade disputes."
- </p>
- <p> One reason is that many countries offer only feeble
- protection to intellectual property. Realizing that such laxness
- will exclude them from much world trade as well as hobble native
- industries, nations everywhere are revising laws covering
- patents, copyrights and trade names. Malaysia, Egypt, China,
- Turkey, Brazil and even the Soviet Union have all recently
- announced plans either to enact new laws or beef up existing
- safeguards. In an effort to win U.S. congressional support for
- a proposed free-trade pact, Mexico last month revealed plans to
- double the life of trademark licenses to 10 years and extend
- patent protection for the first time to such products as
- pharmaceuticals and food.
- </p>
- <p> Countries that don't get with the program are asking for
- trouble. The Bush Administration in April placed India and
- Thailand on the Commerce Department watch list for possible
- retaliation because of those countries' casual treatment of
- property rights. In Thailand, cited as the most flagrant
- violator, copycat versions of Lotus 1-2-3 spreadsheet software
- sell for the equivalent of $50 instead of the $500 U.S. price.
- New movies like David Lynch's Wild at Heart, not yet available
- on video in the U.S., go for $4 a tape.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. may offer the world's strongest protection of
- intellectual property, reinforced by more than a dozen laws
- passed since 1980. The most significant by far was the 1982
- overhaul of the patent and trademark courts. Previously divided
- into 12 separate districts, each with its own interpretation of
- the law, they made defending inventions and creative works
- almost impossible. Infringers could go "forum shopping" for the
- most favorable court district and operate with near impunity.
- The reorganization ended the legal hodgepodge by creating a
- single Court of Appeals that has tended to favor patent holders,
- who now win 80% of all infringement cases, vs. 25% before the
- reforms. Says Roger Smith, chief intellectual-property attorney
- at IBM: "There is more confidence in the courts and greater
- confidence in patents than ever before."
- </p>
- <p> The courts have increased the use of juries, which tend to
- side with plaintiffs and award big monetary damages. Last year
- a Detroit jury awarded inventor Robert Kearns a $10 million
- judgment against Ford for violating Kearns' patents on
- intermittent windshield wipers. A San Francisco jury two months
- ago ordered Intex Plastics to pay inventor Charles Hall $5
- million in damages for violating his patent on the water bed.
- </p>
- <p> Copyright laws also carry more weight. The U.S. in 1988
- became party to the Berne Convention for the Protection of
- Literary and Artistic Works, which allows a U.S. copyright
- holder to enter the court system of other nations subject to the
- convention to seek restitution for infringement. The treaty
- strengthened copyright protections, although the U.S. did not
- sign on to controversial provisions concerning "moral rights,"
- which allow artists and authors to maintain control over
- revision of their works.
- </p>
- <p> As intellectual property becomes more valuable and secure,
- people naturally create more of it. Evidence: filings for
- patents, trademarks and copyrights are hitting record highs.
- Last year some 174,700 patents were filed in the U.S., a 39%
- jump over 1985. The number of copyrights registered soared to
- 643,000 last year, in contrast to 401,000 in a five-year period
- ending in 1975. Overseas filings are also up. In Japan the
- number of patent applications nearly doubled between 1980 and
- 1988 as that government signaled its intention to enforce
- property laws more strictly. After a 29-year delay, Texas
- Instruments recently received a basic patent on integrated
- circuits in Japan that could bring the U.S. company an extra
- $500 million in annual revenues from Japanese chipmakers.
- </p>
- <p> Protecting intellectual property has become a growth
- industry in itself. New York City's Weil, Gotshal & Manges two
- years ago became the first major law firm to establish a
- separate group specializing in patents, trademarks and
- copyrights. It has some 35 intellectual-property attorneys on
- staff. Fish & Neave, also in New York City, runs the biggest
- intellectual-property practice, with some 110 attorneys
- specializing in the field. General Electric, America's biggest
- exporter and No. 1 patent holder, has added some 25 patent
- attorneys to its staff since 1985, for a total of 125. It still
- ranks second to IBM, which employs 140.
- </p>
- <p> Inventors and companies too small to hire big-time
- attorneys can find advice in a growing number of how-to books
- and videos. Accounting firms hold seminars and give private
- counseling. Insurance companies, such as HLPM in Louisville, are
- even beginning to carry policies to protect intellectual
- property from infringers and legal challenges by insuring a
- patent for up to $1 million.
- </p>
- <p> With the cost of litigation soaring--defending a patent
- in court can cost $250,000 to $2 million--entrepreneurs are
- financing lawsuits for inventors in exchange for a piece of
- future royalties. A New York City company, Refac Technology, has
- sued more than 2,000 companies, including IBM, Kodak, Sears,
- Exxon and Sony, on behalf of small inventors. Refac raised more
- than $3 million from investors to finance a series of suits by
- Gordon Gould, inventor of the laser, against the likes of AT&T
- and Xerox. The companies settled. Refac's revenues last year,
- mainly from royalty fees, exceeded $10 million. The courts last
- year limited such investor-funded suits by restricting third
- parties from buying an interest in a patent solely for the
- purpose of pursuing infringement lawsuits.
- </p>
- <p> Can intellectual-property protection be too stringent?
- Maybe. The computer software industry, which thrives on the
- rapid exchange of ideas and incremental improvements, fears that
- vigorously enforced patents could chill innovation and stifle
- growth. Earlier this year, Hayes Microcomputer, the largest
- supplier of computer modems, won $11 million in damages from
- three Silicon Valley firms that copied Hayes' software for
- sending and receiving data. The ruling alarmed programmers, who
- fear their own software could land them in court if it merely
- resembles someone else's too closely. The industry also worries
- about the breadth of coverage. Can copyrights and patents be
- used to protect the display-screen appearance, the "look and
- feel" of software? Such questions are at the heart of Apple
- Computer's intently watched copyright suit against Microsoft and
- Hewlett-Packard, which Apple says copied its Macintosh software.
- </p>
- <p> Time was when such fights over intellectual property were
- legal esoterica. No longer. Get used to them because they are
- sure to command ever more attention. Says Lisa Raines, general
- counsel and director of the Industrial Biotechnology Association
- in Washington: "A patent is the single most important item in
- the industry today. Without it, no company would invest or
- invent." As global enterprise relies less on physical materials
- and more on human creativity, reliable protection of
- intellectual property will become central to world commerce.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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