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​​Patently Strategic Musings

Patent Wars: Innovators, Revolutionaries, and the Race to Reform

3/21/2023

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By: Josh Sloat
Patent Wars: Judge Paul Michel, Professor Adam Mossoff, and Randy Landreneau
Illustration: Declan Wrede

Patent Reform Solutions

In this month’s episode, we’re talking about the patent reform solutions needed to save the innovation economy, with the revolutionaries who are leading the charge!

​Over the course of the past couple of months, we've had the opportunity and honor to host conversations with thought leaders across the patent world:
  • Judge Paul Michel. Former Chief Justice of the nation’s top patent court, who stepped down from his position to be able to speak freely on these problems.
  • Professor Adam Mossoff. Law professor at George Mason and simply one of the most brilliant minds in intellectual property law, whose research is regularly leaned on by Congress, the Federal Circuit, and Supreme Court on all things patent law and innovation policy.
  • Randy Landreneau. President of US Inventor, the largest inventor advocacy group in the country, a group that has worked diligently to push through legislation and administrative changes to protect inventors and innovative startups. 
Working from their insights, this episode explores the biggest problems plaguing patenting and how those problems impact the innovation economy that so very tightly depends on strong, predictable, and reliable patents. Building on that understanding, we work toward getting a more complete view of the legislative, judicial, and educational solutions needed to get back to the gold standard patent system. In doing so, we not only talk with our guests about their support for the proposed solutions on the table, but we also explore the strongest criticisms. 
​

Patent System at the Precipice

​Nearly two decades worth of Federal Circuit and Supreme Court rulings have thrown the patent system into disarray and weakened patent rights for inventors. Subject matter eligibility is a confused, chaotic mess – leaving even the Federal Circuit Chief Justice at a loss on how to determine eligibility. The muddied state of invention enablement puts at risk the software innovations fueling economic growth and the key life science innovations that can save lives. Court interventions on injunctions have made it all but impossible for patent owners to stop others from using their property rights without permission, turning predatory infringement into an efficient business model. This already perfect storm was compounded by an act of Congress a decade ago that inadvertently created a patent killing machine that has weaponized the patent office against inventors. This has all been bolstered domestically by the deep pocketed marketing and lobbying campaigns of a big tech industry that is now destroying the ladder it once climbed up on. Amplifying the threats within and heightening the sense of urgency for solutions,  international exploitation in an undeclared cold war has led to one of the greatest wealth transfers in human history – and begs the existential question of who is going to develop the technologies of tomorrow. 

Revolutionaries on Reform

The problems are many and the stakes couldn't be higher, but hope is far from lost! With the help of our guests who are working tirelessly toward undoing the evisceration of our patent system, we explore the virtues and viabilities of a wide array of potential solutions to the biggest problems plaguing patenting:
  • Eligibility. This hallmark of the US patent system and key enabler of economic success has been under attack by the judicial system. We examine the recently introduced Patent Eligibility Restoration Act and how it hopes to fix the eligibility mess. Our guests also carefully analyze the bill’s language and potential for side effects, weighing in particularly on concerns regarding the use of “non-technological”, the potential to make software unpatentable subject matter, the risk of reintroducing pathogen patents, and whether or not the bill would overrule the Bilski, Myriad, Mayo, and Alice (aka the “Four Horsemen of the Innovation Apocalypse”) decisions that gave rise to the judicially created eligibility exceptions.
  • Enablement. The other half of the distorted judicial puzzle that is having a devastating impact, especially to life science and pharma patents. We discuss upcoming SCOTUS cases like Amgen v. Sanofi that could help or hurt the present confusion around the ability to patent critical, life saving innovations. 
  • Predatory Infringement. The America Invents Act (AIA) and its most unfortunate progeny, the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB), have resulted in an 84% invalidation rate and the death of thousands of valid patents at the hands of infringers looking to profit from innovations they didn’t invest in to create. This infringement story is worsened by another SCOTUS decision that made it nearly impossible to stop infringers from making, using, and selling pirated inventions. We explore two pieces of legislation that have been designed to tackle these problems, but each in its own unique way: The STRONGER Patents Act and the Restoring America's Leadership in Innovation (RALI) Act.
  • Patent Troll Mythology. Every good narrative needs a convincing villain. Big Tech’s patent troll narrative has been one of the most well funded and successful misinformation campaigns in history. It created the moral panic that predicates so many of the judicially and legislatively manufactured issues we discuss. Debunking this myth is at the core of meaningful reform. We discuss its genesis and how it formed the basis of congressional action for the AIA and PTAB.
  • Patent Pending Indefinitely. A patent is a constitutionally created property right and is often compared to a title deed like we might have on our home and other pieces of property. At present, this seems like a very broken metaphor. The PTAB’s invalidation rates are jaw-dropping, but studies have shown that even district courts invalidate patents at an alarming rate of about 40%. We discussed with our guests what it would take to get to a point where the determination by the PTO was closer to something binding, with invalidations being an extremely rare exception in any context.
  • Undeclared Cold War. A system void of any competition can operate internally however it wants and sometimes still end up ok. Many experts are beginning to argue, however, that there’s a real sense of urgency in addressing these internal problems because of the rapidly escalating external threat that is China’s undeclared cold war. We examine Congressional attention to the evolving problem of China going from a country that steals technology to a country that is successfully replicating the parts of the US system that worked so well for centuries – and what the national security implications would be for letting an authoritarian regime, one that’s actively engaged in human rights violations, define and build the technologies of tomorrow.
  • Quality Patents. As long as this is the world we live in, as inventors and practitioners, we cannot settle for anything less than quality when it comes to our patents. We have to focus on minimizing surface area for these sorts of challenges. We close out the episode by providing some practical tips for creating the highest quality patents we can under the circumstances. 

The Innovation Race

​We’ve been wanting to do a patent reform focused episode like this for a long time, particularly since we covered US Inventor’s 2021 Decade of Stolen Dreams rallies with our American Inventor Horror Story episode – it was then that we truly witnessed firsthand just how devastating the America Invents Act and the PTAB have been for inventors. Flash forward a couple of years to present, and the makers of a new documentary entitled, “The Innovation Race” reached out to us to screen their film.

​With bipartisan interviews with folks like Senator Chris Coons from Delaware and Representative Thomas Massie from Kentucky, combined with a myriad of inventors, judges, generals, law professors, and policy experts, several of whom you’ll hear from today, the movie breaks down this systematic erosion of intellectual property rights and explains the imminent economic and national security threats of China exploiting these weaknesses in US patent protection. You can find options for streaming and learn more at innovationracemovie.com. The end of the film, which touches on solutions, provides a launching point for our discussion today. 

Availability

​Patently Strategic is available on all major podcasting directories, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and Google Podcasts. We're also available on 12 other directories including Stitcher, iHeart Radio, and TuneIn, so you should be able to find us wherever you listen to podcasts.
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Resources


​Related Episodes
  • SCOTUS in Focus: Amgen v. Sanofi and the Future of Pharma Patents
  • Fortifying Life Science Patents: Eligibility and Enablement – Sections 101 and 112
  • Unpredictable Arts: Patenting Biological, Chemical, and Emerging Technologies
  • Means-Plus-Function: The Risk of Losing Your Way
  • Software Patents: Protecting Your Digital Innovations
  • American Inventor Horror Story: 10 Years of AIA and the PTAB

Related Reading
  • Enablement and Written Description: Hindsight Gotchas

Transcripts​
We're also providing computer-generated transcripts for improved accessibility and additional reference opportunities. 

​Connect with Our Guests
  • Adam Mossoff. ​You can follow Adam on Twitter at @AdamMossoff, where he posts regularly on patent and innovation policy, including his excellent “this Day in Innovation History” tweets.
  • Randy Landreneau. To learn more about or support USInventor, you can find them at USInventor.org, where you can sign their Inventor Rights Resolution and get on their email list to be notified about calls to action for legislators. They’re also a 501c4 if you’re interested in helping to support them financially. This is a great organization and they live and die on donations.
  • Judge Paul Michel. If you’d like to learn more about Judge Michel and the important bipartisan work being done by the Council for Innovation Promotion, please visit c4ip.org.
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