Patent troll

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Patent troll is a pejorative term used for a person or company that enforces its patents against one or more alleged infringers in a manner considered unduly aggressive or opportunistic. A related, less pejorative expression is non-practicing entity (NPE) which describes a patent owner who does not manufacture or use the patented invention.[1]

Contents

[edit] Definition and etymology

"Patent troll" is a controversial neologism, susceptible to multiple definitions. Among them is a party that:

  • "Purchases a patent, often from a bankrupt firm, and then sues another company by claiming that one of its products infringes on the purchased patent;"[2].
  • Enforces patents against purported infringers without itself intending to manufacture the patented product or supply the patented service;[3][4]
  • Enforces patents but has no manufacturing or research base;[5] or
  • Focuses its efforts solely on enforcing patent rights.[6]

The term was used as early as 1993 to describe companies that file aggressive patent lawsuits.[2] The Patent Troll was depicted and originally popularized in "The Patents Video" which was released in 1994 and sold to hundreds of corporations, universities and governmental entities. In "The Patents Video," an unsuspecting victim is surprised by the Patent Troll who strategically positioned himself to collect patent licensing revenue. [2];[7] Years later, it was again popularized in 2001 by Peter Detkin, former assistant general counsel of Intel,[8] who applied it to entities that purchase patents at low prices from inventors, rather than inventing or actively developing a technology themselves, then broadly assert the patents across an industry to encourage settlements.[9] Patent trolls may buy patents cheaply from entities not actively seeking to enforce them. For example, a company may purchase hundreds of patents from a technology company forced by bankruptcy to auction its patents.[10] By another account, patent trolls stake out technologies they have not yet developed then wait for independent inventors to create and market the products, suing only after the newcomers are locked into the technology. This practice is criticized as rent seeking behavior.[11]

At core, the criticism of patent trolls is that "they are in a position to negotiate licensing fees that are grossly out of alignment with their contribution to the alleged infringer’s product or service",[12] not their non-practising status or the possible weakness of their patent claims. The risk of paying high prices for after-the-fact licensing of patents they were not aware of, and the costs for extra vigilance for competing patents that might have issued, in turn increases the costs and risks of manufacturing.

[edit] Mechanics of patent trolling

Patent trolls operate much like any other company that is protecting and aggressively exploiting a patent portfolio. However, their focus is on obtaining additional money from existing uses, not from seeking out new applications for the technology. They monitor the market for possibly infringing technologies by watching popular products, news coverage and analysis. They also review published patent applications for signs that another company is developing infringing technology, possibly unaware of their own patents. They then develop a plan for how to proceed. They may start by suing a particularly vulnerable company that has much to lose, or little money to defend itself, hoping that an early victory or settlement will establish a precedent to encourage other peer companies to acquiesce to licenses. Alternately they may attack an entire industry at once, hoping to overwhelm it.

An individual case often begins with a perfunctory infringement complaint[13], or even a mere threat of suit, which is often enough to encourage settlement for the nuisance or "threat value" of the suit by purchasing a license to the patent. In the United States, suits are often brought in United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, known for favoring plaintiffs and for expertise in patent suits.[14] The cost of defending such a suit as of 2004 is typically $1 million or more before trial, and $2.5 million for a complete defense, even if successful.[13]. Because the costs and risks are high, defendants may settle even non-meritorious suits they consider frivolous for several hundred thousand dollars.[13]

The uncertainty and unpredictability of the outcome of jury trials also encourages settlement.[15]. If it wins, the plaintiff is entitled as damages an award of at least a "reasonable" royalty determined according to the norms of the field of the patented invention.[16]

Patent trolls are at a disadvantage in at least two ways. First, patent owners who make and sell their invention are entitled to awards of lost profits. However, patent trolls, being non-manufacturers, typically do not qualify.[citation needed] Further, patent owners' rights to bar infringers from manufacture, use, or sale of technologies that infringe their patents has recently been curtailed in the court decision eBay Inc. v. MercExchange, L.L.C.. Rather than automatically granting an injunction, the US Supreme Court stated that Courts must apply a standard reasonableness test to determine if an injunction is warranted. Writing in Forbes magazine about the impact of this case on patent trolls, writer Jessica Holzer concludes: "The high court's decision deals a blow to patent trolls, which are notorious for using the threat of permanent injunction to extort hefty fees in licensing negotiations as well as huge settlements from companies they have accused of infringing. Often, those settlements can be far greater than the value of the infringing technology: Recall the $612.5 million that Canada's Research in Motion forked over to patent-holding company NTP to avoid the shutting down of its popular BlackBerry service." [17]

[edit] Defenses by manufacturers

Some believe patent trolls have an unfair advantage over manufacturers since they are relatively immune to the typical defensive tactic large entities use against small patent plaintiffs, because the cost of litigation tends to fall more heavily on an accused infringer than on a plaintiff with a contingency-fee lawyer, and because trolls have an almost-unrestricted ability to choose their preferred plaintiff-friendly forums, most prominently the Eastern District of Texas.[13] Such defense tactics can be perceived as both good and bad. Among the common techniques rendered ineffective are monitoring patent activities of competitors to avoid infringing patents (since patent trolls are not competitors, productive companies usually have no way to find out about the troll or its patents until after significant investments have been made to produce and market a product); going on the offensive with counterclaims that accuse the patent plaintiff of infringing patents owned by the defendant (the mutual threat often leads the parties to arrive at a mutually beneficial cross-licensing arrangement); or a "scorched earth" defense designed to drive up litigation costs (which is equally ineffective because patent trolls plan for and have the finances to fully litigate a case.[13] In fact, some are able to draw on hedge funds and institutional investors to finance their patent cases.[18]). Patent "pooling" arrangements where many companies collaborate to bring their patented knowledge together to create new products are also inapplicable to patent trolls because they operate outside the system.

Substantial companies that attempt over-reaching patent litigation are subject to losing their patent rights to a defensive claim of patent misuse. However, defendants find it difficult to charge patent trolls with misuse because the antitrust violations typically involved require significant market power on the part of the patent holder.[19] Nevertheless, manufacturers do use various tactics to limit their exposure to patent trolls. Most have broader uses as well for defending their technologies against competitors. These include:

  • Design arounds can be a defense against patent trolls. The amount of license fee that a patent troll can demand is limited by the alternative of the cost of designing around the troll's patent(s).[20]
  • Patent watch. Companies routinely monitor new patents and patent applications, most of which are published, to determine if any are relevant to their business activities.
Early Woodward light bulb patent purchased by Thomas Edison to preclude challenges
Early Woodward light bulb patent purchased by Thomas Edison to preclude challenges
  • Clearance search. A standard practice is to perform a clearance search for patents or pending patent applications that cover important features of a potential product, before its initial development or commercial introduction. For example, a search by Thomas Edison uncovered a prior patent by two Canadian inventors, Henry Woodward and Mathew Evans for carbon filament in a non-oxidizing environment, (U.S. Patent 181,613 ), the type of light bulb Edison wanted to develop. Edison bought the patent for US$5,000 ($100,000 in 2006 US currency) to eliminate the possibility of a later challenge by Woodward and Evans.
  • Opposition proceeding. In Europe, third parties may conduct a proceeding to oppose overly broad patents. There is a more limited process in the United States, known as a reexamination. As an example, Research In Motion, filed reexaminations against broad NTP, Inc. patents related to BlackBerry technology.
  • Litigation. Whereas some companies acquiesce to a troll's demands, others go on the offensive by challenging the patents themselves, for example by finding prior art that invalidates their patentability. They may also broadly challenge whether the technology in question is infringing, or attempt to show patent misuse. If successful, such a defense not only wins the case at hand but destroys the patent troll's underlying ability to sue. Knowing this, the patent troll may back down or lessen its demands.
  • Early settlement. An early settlement is often far less expensive than litigation costs and later settlement values.
  • Patent infringement insurance. Insurance is available to help protect companies from inadvertently infringing a third party's patents.

[edit] Criticism of term

  • Vagueness. The term "patent troll" is criticized as vague and its use as subjective.[11]
  • Overbreadth. Defining trolls broadly as patent holders that do not practice or promote the patented invention would include holding companies, most US universities and many individual inventors, for example, Thomas Edison, in the definition.[21] Large businesses typically have separate licensing departments, and may have separate patent holding companies, that are distinct from their research and development operations.
  • Misapplied. Accusations of trolling may be conflated with broader criticisms of the patent office, or of patent rights in general, by those who claim the patent system is "broken",[22] when in fact problems like poor quality patents, and patent thickets, are issues distinct from patent trolling.[21] Critics of the term argue that it is misguided to use it to criticize the patent system, because there are already mechanisms in place to restrain troll-like behavior. The two primary factors are the limited patent term and the obligation to disclose.[23] However, others, such as former Assistant Attorney General Viet Dinh, make the case that that the need for patent reform is made all the stronger by the existence of patent trolls who exploit vulnerabilities in the existing patent law.[24]
  • Political agenda. The term is used in a partisan matter by companies seeking to gain benefit at trial or by public relations by accusing competitors of being trolls, and also those objecting to or wanting to change the current patent laws on equitable grounds[25]Former Microsoft Chief Technology Officer Nathan Myhrvold alleged that use of the expression "patent troll" is primarily a public relations tactic that large corporations use to intimidate individual inventors in an effort to tilt the playing field in their favor.[26] Parties that themselves actively enforce and license patents they do not practice, may criticize other companies for trolling when it suits their interest to do so. [27]
  • Legality of conduct. Private ownership of property generally, and intellectual property in particular, is a well-established right that cannot be overturned in the United States without raising significant concerns.[28]. Under US law patent owners need not commercialize the invention to enforce their patents. They may charge any amount they wish as a royalty to others in exchange for a right to make, use or sell the patented invention, or to not use or license the patent at all (UK and European patent law, by contrast, contains provisions for compulsory licenses, something that ameliorates patent trolling). Moreover, the owner of a patent need not be the inventor. Patents are legally transferrable in the sense that they can be bought, sold and licensed to entities other than the inventor(s).[10]
  • Beneficial effects. Some claim that patent trolls benefit the patent system and the economy, suggesting the more neutral term "patent dealer", or simply calling them what they are, for example a licensor, patent pool or a patent holding company. Patent licensing is considered procompetitive because it encourages investment in bringing new products to market.[29] By creating a secondary market for patents, patent trolls make the ownership of patents more liquid, thereby creating incentives to innovate and patent.[30][21]. Aggregating patents in the hands of specialized licensing companies facilitates access to technology by more efficiently organizing ownership of patent rights.[31][32]

[edit] Non-practicing entity

A non-practicing entity (NPE) is "a patent owner who does not manufacture or use the patented invention, but rather than abandoning the right to exclude, an NPE seeks to enforce its right through the negotiation of licenses and litigation." [1]

According to Miranda Jones,

Non practicing entities ("NPEs") were initially identified by the oft invoked pejorative term "patent troll" because few people, if any, saw any value in the actions of NPEs. However, [she] argues for the use of the term "NPE" because "patent troll" unfairly vilifies the actions of NPEs. Contrary to the implication of "patent troll," NPEs are not a scourge of the patent system requiring a judicial cure. Rather, NPEs engage in activities useful to the patent system.[1]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c Jones, Miranda. Casenote. Permanent injunction, a remedy by any other name is patently not the same: how eBay v. MercExchange affects the patent right of non-practicing entities (eBay v. MercExchange, L.L.C., 126 S. Ct. 1837, 2006.) 14 Geo. Mason L. Rev. 1035-1070 (2007)
  2. ^ a b "patent troll". wordspy. Retrieved on 2007-07-26.
  3. ^ Alexander Poltorak. On 'Patent Trolls' and Injunctive Relief., ipfrontline.com, May 12, 2006
  4. ^ EPO Scenarios for the Future, 2005, Glossary]. European Patent Office. Retrieved on 2007-07-27.
  5. ^ Morag Macdonald, Beware of the troll. The Lawyer (September 26, 2005). Retrieved on 2007-07-27.
  6. ^ Danielle Williams and Steven Gardner (April 3, 2006). "Basic Framework for Effective Responses to Patent Trolls,". North Carolina Bar Association, Intellectual Property Law Section. 
  7. ^ The Original Patent Troll Returns. Intellectual Property Today who, by the way, sold copies of "The Patents Video" in 1994 on consignment (May 08, 2007).
  8. ^ Brenda Sandburg. "You may not have a choice; Trolling for Dollars", The Recorder, July 30, 2001. 
  9. ^ R.G. (December 5, 2005). Has the Enemy of Patent Trolls Become One. Ziff Davis. Retrieved on 2007-07-27.
  10. ^ a b Michael Kanellos (March 3, 2006). Patent auctions: Lawyer's dream or way of the future?. zdnet. Retrieved on 2007-07-27.
  11. ^ a b Dennis Crouch (May 12, 2006). Patently-O. Retrieved on 2007-07-26.
  12. ^ Matthew Sag and Kurt W. Rohde, Patent Reform and Differential Impact., Northwestern University, August 21, 2006.
  13. ^ a b c d e Craig Tyler (September 24, 2004). "Patent Pirates Search For Texas Treasure". 
  14. ^ Sam Williams. "A Haven for Patent Pirates", Technology Review, February 6, 2006. Retrieved on 2007-07-07. 
  15. ^ Justin Watts. "Waiting for Godot", Patent World, June 2007. 
  16. ^ US patent law, 35 USC 284.
  17. ^ Jessica Holzer. "Supreme Court Buries Patent Trolls", Forbes.com, May 16, 2006. Retrieved on 2007-07-27. 
  18. ^ Nathan Vardi. "Patent Pirates", Forbes Magazine, May 7, 2007. Retrieved on 2007-07-27. 
  19. ^ Jose Cortina (July 26, 2006). Antitrust Considerations In Patent Enforcement: A Patent Doesn’t Mean Grant Of Monopoly Power. Local Tech Wire. Retrieved on 2007-07-27.
  20. ^ Golden, John M., "'Patent Trolls' and Patent Remedies" . Texas Law Review, Vol. 85, p. 2130, 2007
  21. ^ a b c JAMES F. MCDONOUGH III (2007). The Myth of the Patent Troll: An Alternative View of the Function of Patent Dealers in an Idea Economy. Emory Law Journal. Retrieved on 2007-07-27.
  22. ^ Judy Newman (May 9, 2006). Innovators fear the patent trolls.
  23. ^ The Case for Abandoning the Term 'Patent Troll'. Retrieved on 2007-07-27.
  24. ^ "[1] Professor Viet Dinh, former Assistant Attorney General for Legal Policy, Dec. 3, 2007
  25. ^ Caroline Horton Rockafellow. Examining Patent Troll Debate: Should They Be An Endangered Species?. Local Tech Wire. Retrieved on 2007-07-27.
  26. ^ Nathan Myhrvold. Inventors Have Rights, Too!. Wall Street Journal. Retrieved on 2007-07-27.
  27. ^ Stefanie Olsen (August 9, 2004). Google, Yahoo bury the legal hatchet. CNET. Retrieved on 2007-07-27.
  28. ^ Michael Smith (October 11, 2006). Patent Pirates only exist in Neverland. Texas Lawyer. Retrieved on 2007-07-27., Texas Lawyer, November 11, 2004
  29. ^ US Department of Justice (April 5, 1995). Antitrust Guidelines for the Licensing of Intellectual Property. Retrieved on 2007-07-27.
  30. ^ Don Clark. "Inventors See Promise In Large-Scale Public Patent Auctions", the Wall Street Journal Online, March 9, 2006. Retrieved on 2007-07-27. 
  31. ^ IPFrontline Staff. "Making Innovation Pay", ipFrontline.com, March 11, 2006. Retrieved on 2007-07-27. 
  32. ^ Nicholas Varchaver,Who's afraid of Nathan Myhrvold?, Fortune Magazine, June 26, 2006

[edit] Other sources

  • Maggie Shiels, Technology industry hits out at "patent trolls", BBC News, June 2, 2004, [3]
  • Lorraine Woellert, A Patent War Is Breaking Out On The Hill, Business Week, July, 2005, [4]
  • Joe Beyers, Rise of the patent trolls, CNET News.com, October 12, 2005 [5]
  • Raymond P. Niro, The Patent Troll Myth, Professional Inventors Alliance web site, August 4, 2005 [6]
  • Raymond P. Niro, Who is Really Undermining the Patent System – “Patent Trolls” or Congress?, 6 J. Marshall Rev. Intell. Prop. L. 185 (2007).
  • Jennifer Kahaulelio Gregory, "The Troll Next Door", 6 J. Marshall Rev. Intell. Prop. L. 292 (2007).
  • Simon Phipps, On Cane Toads, Fire Ants and Patents, SunMink, February 13, 2005, [7]
  • Bakos, Tom, "Patent Trolls", Insurance IP Bulletin, Vol. 2005.3, June 2005 [8]
  • Ferrill, Elizabeth, "Patent Investment Trusts: Let's Build a PIT to Catch the Patent Trolls", N.C. J. of Law & Tech., Vol 6, Iss. 2: Spring 2005.[9].
  • Kurt Leyendecker, "Patent Trolls!", Control, Protect & Leverage, A Leyendecker & Lemire Blog, March 14, 2006. [10]
  • Steven Rubin. "Hooray for the Patent Troll!", IEEE Spectrum, March, 2007.