From the category archives:

Patent Trolls

Creating Markets For Patents

by Doug Park September 22, 2009

The New York Times recently reported on the emerging patent marketplace. The idea is that a market where patents can be bought and sold would reduce the costs of patent litigation and promote innovation. What are the prospects for success of a patent marketplace?
Patents As Commodities?
For a patent marketplace to operate efficiently, it would certainly [...]

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Mistakes Small Businesses Make Regarding Intellectual Property (Part 2)

by Doug Park August 7, 2009

In this post, I continue to examine how small businesses and startups can avoid common misconceptions about intellectual property. This time, I turn to patent issues that small and emerging companies must consider to maximize the value they create and capture from their intellectual property.
As noted in the previous post, these misconceptions come from an [...]

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Economically Rational Patent Trolls

by Doug Park July 9, 2009

In The Prior Art blog, Joe Mullin wrote yesterday about GOOD Magazine’s profile of Erich Spangenberg, a highly successful “patent troll.” Mullin’s main beef with the article is GOOD’s comparison of Spangenberg, and patent trolls more generally, to Robin Hood. Mullin argues that in the case of patents, there is no poor person to whom [...]

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Honeywell’s “Patent Troll” Loses One

by Doug Park July 1, 2009

The patent troll loses one.
Honeywell’s intellectual property licensing unit, Honeywell Intellectual Property International (HIPI), recently lost a patent infringement suit that it brought against Novatek, a Taiwanese LCD panel manufacturer. What’s notable is that Honeywell sued seven other defendants for infringing the same patent, and all of those defendants settled. Novatek refused to pay Honeywell [...]

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