The public will get a chance to review patents before they are approved by the USPTO
The US Patent and Trademark Office has received praise for officially launching the Peer to Patent program
-- the purpose of Peer to Patent is to find patents that have been
issued for already made products or items that don't properly qualify
for a patent. Because the USPTO usually does not have the
manpower and time to thoroughly check every patent that comes into the
office, many are unjustly rubber stamped. A New York law school
helped develop the Peer to Patent program that will help ease the
workload of "underpaid and overwhelmed" patent examiners. The
pilot program will officially begin on May 12.
One of the goals of the
program is to excessively scrutinize inventions while increasing
certainty and stability in the patent program. To get some more
information about the Peer to Patent program, please look around this website,
which also includes a very extensive FAQ section. An interesting
policy is the project's response on companies or individuals that may
attempt to game the system:
Competition will drive more information into the process. So long as people make valid arguments as rated by their peers, their personal agenda is irrelevant. Having many participants in the process dilutes the effect of any bad apples or unconstructive participants. Within
any social reputation system, norms evolve to safeguard the quality of
participation and we can expect something similar here.
Certainly,
there are some interesting connotations with this idea. Imagining IBM,
AMD and Intel validating or invalidating each other's patents would
solve dozens, if not hundreds of fringe IP law suits before they even occur.
"If they're going to pirate somebody, we want it to be us rather than somebody else." -- Microsoft Business Group President Jeff Raikes
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