PatentReform

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  • Bloomberg via Getty Images

    The head of the US patent office just quit

    by 
    Daniel Cooper
    Daniel Cooper
    06.07.2017

    The head of the United States Patent and Trademark Office, Michelle Lee, has unexpectedly resigned from her position. Lee was officially appointed to the top job by President Obama in 2015*, but had affirmed both in November 2016 and March that she was open to staying on with the current administration. She was seen as a big ally of the tech industry, improving the quality of the patent process and earning praise from Amazon, Intel, Facebook, Google and Samsung, amongst others.

  • Supreme Court could produce meaningful patent reform in abstract software case

    by 
    Terrence O'Brien
    Terrence O'Brien
    12.06.2013

    The US Supreme Court is wading into the battle over software patents by agreeing to hear a case between two financial firms you've likely never heard of. This comes just as the legislative arm of the government is getting ready to address the problem of patent trolls. (There's not much Republicans and Democrats can agree on, but a hatred of trolls is apparently one of them.) The hope is that both the Supreme Court and Congress will address what many see as the largest problem with the American patent system: low quality patents and frivolous law suits. Alice Corporation, which runs a derivatives market, charges that foreign currency exchange firm CLS Bank Internation violated a number of its patents relating to computer-based trading systems invented in the 1990s. The defense has argued that four of the patents in the question are invalid, and twice lower courts have agreed with them, both in March of 2011 and in May of this year. The most recent ruling, handed down by a divided appeals court, found that Alice's claims were too vague to be protected under patent law.

  • Obama signs America Invents Act into law, makes patent reform a reality

    by 
    Michael Gorman
    Michael Gorman
    09.16.2011

    Patent reform's been bandied about on Capitol Hill for years now, and last week we finally got both houses of Congress to agree on the language to make it happen. Today, in what was a foregone conclusion, President Obama has finally made the thing official by signing the America Invents Act into law. In doing so, he made the dream of a first-to-file patent system in the US a reality. Of course, it won't go into effect for another 18 months, so we'll have to wait awhile before we find out if it can curb all those companies' litigious inclinations. Video recap of the patent reform process after the break.