Patent System Stifling Curiosity

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History

The patenting system has been around since the Greek Empire[1]. Created to protect and encourage innovation. Almost always under a certain time frame, no copying of said protected inventions.

Today

As all tools, the patenting system today has been overly and perversely used. We seem to hear more about Patent litigations rather than innovations.  Many patents are overly generic and all encompassing. A highly impacted area is in software. Many companies are filing the latter to protect themselves as they themselves are victims to Patent-trolls.

Impact on Curiosity

As all artists, designers, engineers and other such professions that use creativity know, innovation comes from inspiration and building upon previous discoveries. In fact, knowledge, is most often times not invented but discovered.

Today when you buy something, it is tightly packed and closed off. I wonder whether that is a contributing factor in the general population’s mounting levels of lack of interest in knowledge. The fact that every time companies release devices that carry the latest and greatest knowledge of our species, it is closed off to its owners. Instead of inspiring the flame of curiosity, we are instead muting it.

Final Thoughts

It’s kind of a chicken and egg problem as companies need to protect themselves from patent-trolls and because of that they need to close off their products. There are grass roots efforts starting to overhaul the patenting system and bring it to 21st century standards.

 

1 thought on “Patent System Stifling Curiosity

  1. “Patents make our product defensible.” The optimal number of times to use the P word in a presentation is one. Just once, say, “We have filed patents for what we are doing.” Done. The second time you say it, venture capitalists begin to suspect that you are depending too much on patents for defensibility. The third time you say it, you are holding a sign above your head that says, “I am clueless.” Sure, you should patent what you’re doing–if for no other reason than to say it once in your presentation. But at the end of the patents are mostly good for impressing your parents. You won’t have the time or money to sue anyone with a pocket deep enough to be worth suing.

    Guy Kawasaki

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