September/October 2007
Patent Law Gets Saner
The Supreme Court sent a message to "patent trolls": your paydays are numbered.
By Scott Feldmann
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Over the course of one year, the U.S. Supreme Court has heard three cases involving patent law. That’s unusual.
Credit: Tom Brakefield/Getty Images |
The U.S. Supreme Court rarely weighs in on patent law, so three of its recent decisions are noteworthy--and may even be historic. In effect, they address some unintended consequences of the 1982 act of Congress that created a new patent appellate court, the Federal Circuit, which brought uniformity to patent law and reduced the likelihood that a patent would be found "invalid." Before 1982, there was always the risk that a prospective licensee would make a preëmptive strike, filing suit in a jurisdiction that routinely found patents to be "obvious" and therefore invalid. This correction spurred investments in technology and an increase in patenting to protect them. But over the past several years, the patent system's high transaction costs have threatened to offset its benefits.
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