Archive for the ‘News’ Category

FTC sues patent reformer Intel for damage done to innovation and consumers

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

Microchip ProductionThe Federal Trade Commission sued Intel today, accusing the company of using its dominant market position to stifle competition. The agency’s complaint alleges that Intel used a variety of anticompetitive tactics “to put the brakes on superior competitive products that threatened its monopoly….”

Specifically, the Commission claims that Intel used threats to coerce computer manufacturers into buying Intel chips instead of those of rival manufacturers, and to block the marketing of machines that contained non-Intel chips.

What has been the impact of Intel’s behavior? According to the Commission, the company’s actions over the last decade have damaged “competition, innovation, and, ultimately, the American consumer.”

Intel, of course, has been a vocal leader in the patent reform debate over recent years. The company is a member of the computer/software industry’s Coalition for Patent Fairness and has publicly called  for changes that would curb litigation it views as “abusive.” A Promote the Progress reader has even speculated that Intel was the invisible hand behind several letters offering support for the failed rules package that would have placed arbitrary limits on an applicant’s ability to file continuation applications.

The company’s policy blog assures us that its efforts to change the patent laws are aimed at encouraging innovation and helping consumers:

…we believe that good faith manufacturers should be able to innovate and develop new products for consumers without having to worry whether they are going to lose the “patent lottery”, where speculative companies that do not produce or sell anything are able to reap large rewards in court for small sums invested in buying up patents and suing on them.

Today’s lawsuit reveals an interesting dichotomy. On one hand, the company appears willing to use its own monopoly power to block competition and protect its position. On the other hand, as its patent reform efforts show us, the company objects when others assert against it the monopoly power provided by patents.

The first half of that dichotomy is illegal, which explains the Commission’s lawsuit against the company. The second half, however, is not. A patent owner, whether she be the original inventor, a speculator, or even the fabled patent troll, has an exclusive right to practice the claimed invention. And, yes, she can sue a company, even a “good faith manufacturer,” that she believes is infringing her patent. Perhaps this explains the company’s efforts to change the patent laws.

That dichotomy also leaves Intel in a difficult position. The company must now reconcile its assurances that it seeks patent reform in order to foster innovation and to protect consumers with its alleged anti-competitive tactics, which the FTC claims has had precisely the opposite effect.

Color me skeptical.

Kappos on patent reform – legislation will absolutely reduce application pendency

Monday, December 14th, 2009

kapposLooking at the recent decline in patent applications from US businesses, this CNNMoney article claims that innovation is the latest victim of the recession.

The article examines several peripheral issues related to the decline in filings, including the application backlog at the Patent and Trademark Office. Calling it a “vicious cycle,” the article notes that the backlog operates to “further discourage patent filers.”

Pointing to the pending patent reform legislation, USPTO Director David Kappos offers a fix:

“If we’re able to get patent reform through, we absolutely can take processing times way down and get innovations through to the marketplace.” (emphasis mine)

The article even notes the Director Kappos thinks the legislation could “help reduce the average wait time to as little as one year.”

Google’s sea-based data center patent highlights the narrow focus of the company’s call for patent reform

Monday, May 4th, 2009

Last week, Google restated its call for patent reform in an editorial published in the Detroit Free Press. The content of the message was not a surprise – clearly playing to the Michigan audience, the company added a “jobs” twist to the familiar rant about litigation costs, dubious claims, and “patent trolls.” The timing of the article was just as predictable – the House Judiciary Committee, chaired by Representative Conyers from Michigan, was set to hold a hearing on its version of the Patent Reform Act of 2009 on the next day.

But something that happened the day before the editorial hit the press is very surprising, perhaps even to Google.

On Tuesday, the Patent and Trademark Office granted US Patent No. 7,525,207 to the company for a Water-Based Data Center.

7525207_fig2

Big deal, right?

That’s what I thought, until a Twitter friend (@elosf) had me looking at claim 1 of the ‘207 patent:

1. A system, comprising:

a computer data center proximate to a body of water comprising a plurality of computing units;

a sea-based electrical generator in electrical connection with the plurality of computing units; and

one or more sea-water cooling units for providing cooling to the plurality of computing units.

Whoa.

Now I’m interested. As a geek in every sense of the word, the subject matter intrigued me. But, as a patent attorney, the breadth of the claim left an impression.

My curiosity led me to Public PAIR, where I learned the following about the ‘207 patent:

  • the patent issued in 26 months (certainly not break-neck speed, but quick nonetheless)
  • the Office allowed the application in the first substantive action (along with a restriction requirement, which was addressed solely by Examiner’s Amendment in the same paper)
  • the applicant made no substantive prosecution comments;
  • the Notice of Allowance includes the following reasons for allowance: “There are inventions in the field that provide similar functionality and/or have similar features, as prior art of record shows. Applicant(s) invention differs from the prior art of record by the combination of its functional features, which include water motion generator, cooling arrangement and computer data center, which in combination are performing as disclosed and claimed, and which the examiner search failed to find.” (emphasis added)

(you can download a .pdf of the patent here, and a .pdf of the entire prosecution history here).

I’m not familiar with either the data center art or the “sea-based electrical generator” art, so I don’t know if that claim is patentable or not. But, in the post-KSR world, it’s incomprehensible that the Office would allow such a claim in a first action on the merits. Basing the allowance on grounds that the claim differs from the prior art by “a combination of…functional features” that, individually, are known in the art only confounds the problem.

Besides the obvious indefiniteness problem (the specification doesn’t mention the claim term “proximate,” making me wonder if land-based data centers with pipes reaching to the sea are covered), a simple Google book search reveals a 1997 publication stating that “the Unisys UYK-43 is the standard US Navy shipboard mainframe” that weighs 1795 lbs “when water-cooled.”

Surely the Office, in applying KSR and the broadest reasonable interpretation of the claim language, should have addressed these issues during examination. But, it didn’t and now Google is the proud owner of this incredibly broad patent.

For Google, the timing of this embarrassment of riches couldn’t be worse. The issuance of the ‘207 patent presents a troubling irony – the company was granted a very dubious patent claim the day before it stepped into the pulpit and lectured about “dubious infringement claims” and the need for reform.

It also highlights a fundamental problem with the narrow focus of the company’s (and industry’s) call for patent reform:

By focusing on the “expenses” and “problems” associated with so-called “bad patents,” reformers are abandoning the broader issue of patent quality – which, just a few short years ago, was the driving force behind the current patent reform movement.

Intentional or not, this is a sad development. While the Googles of the world call for patent reforms that devalue all patents in an effort to address the dubious ones in the herd, the Patent Office has been reduced to what Professor Mark Lemley recently termed “an assembly line type of operation.” That the outputs of such an operation are sometimes troubling – as exemplified by the ‘207 patent – should come as no surprise.

Patent reform efforts that continue to focus narrowly on the outputs, such as those called for by Google, will only make the overall system weaker. Patent quality is the basal problem that simply must be addressed.

It’s time we built a Patent Office and a patent examination system that makes everyone – Examiners, attorneys and agents, companies, and even the Office itself – proud. A fully funded Office capable of efficiently and thoroughly examining patent applications would go a long way, I think, to addressing the so-called “bad patents” problem that has Google and others concerned. I suspect the same Office would do a better job of promoting innovation and creating the “jobs” of which Google speaks.