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- Xref: sparky misc.int-property:1406 comp.unix.bsd:8599
- Newsgroups: misc.int-property,comp.unix.bsd
- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!udel!louie!huey.udel.edu!berryh
- From: berryh@huey.udel.edu (John Berryhill, Ph.D.)
- Subject: Re: Patents: What they are. What they aren't. Other factors.
- Message-ID: <1992Nov8.064806.27926@udel.edu>
- Sender: usenet@udel.edu (USENET News Service)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: huey.udel.edu
- Organization: little scraps of paper, mostly
- References: <1992Nov3.031010.17641@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU> <1992Nov4.035758.1767@netcom.com> <1992Nov5.163922.2616@zip.eecs.umich.edu>
- Distribution: usa
- Date: Sun, 8 Nov 1992 06:48:06 GMT
- Lines: 33
-
-
- It is precisely the small-time operators without large financial
- backing that benefit the most from patent protection.
-
- First off, you make it sound as if it costs a fortune to obtain
- a patent. That is simply not true. Even pricey patent law firms
- would charge you somewhere from a couple of grand to somewhere in the
- mid to high teens. If that is a lot of money, then the invention
- must not be worth all that much in the first place.
-
- And where do you get a couple of grand in the first place? You have
- a full year from the first day you sell your invention until the day
- you file your patent application. Again, if you don't make enough
- to pay a few grand for a patent, then what's the gripe? If you need
- money in order to produce your product before you can sell the product
- in order to get the money to obtain the patent, you can license it
- even before you get the patent. In fact, if a prospective licensee wants
- to see you get a patent before he will cough up the cash so that you
- can manufacture the invention, then you are in one of the few situations
- in which the PTO will grant your application special status and expedite
- examination of your application.
-
- Most of the patents filed in this country are filed by small businesses.
- That's where the innovation is. Large organizations tend to stifle
- innovation (yes, there are a few exceptions), and whenever possible
- large organizations are able to knock-off and more effectively market
- the little guy's product unless the little guy has some way to stop
- them. Heck, if any company with less than 500 employees gets a 50%
- discount from the PTO on most of the fees relating to obtaining a
- patent. I can't see where there is any great financial barrier to
- anyone obtaining patent protection on a worthwhile invention.
- --
- John Berryhill, Ph.D.
-