Categories
Innovation

VIDEO: Dr. Irwin M. Jacobs Delivers Keynote Address at CPIP 2018 Fall Conference

On October 11-12, 2018, CPIP hosted its Sixth Annual Fall Conference, IP for the Next Generation of Technology, at Antonin Scalia Law School, George Mason University, in Arlington, Virginia. Our conference addressed how IP rights and institutions can foster and support the next leap forward in technology that is about to break out into consumer products and services.

Dr. Irwin M. Jacobs with CPIP Founder Adam Mossoff
Dr. Irwin M. Jacobs with CPIP Founder Adam Mossoff

Without doubt, the highlight of our conference was the keynote address by Dr. Irwin M. Jacobs—the inventor of the digital transmission technology for cell phones that gave birth to the smartphone revolution and the founder of Qualcomm. Dr. Jacobs has been a luminary in the telecommunications industry for many years, and he delighted conference attendees with endearing stories and wonderful insights from his inventive and commercial activities over the years.

We hope you will enjoy Dr. Jacobs’ keynote address as much as we do!

The video is available here, and it is embedded below:

Categories
Innovation Inventors Patents

New “Invalidated” Documentary Highlights the Problems With the PTAB: Free Screening on October 26

a lit lightbulb hanging next to unlit bulbsBy Devlin Hartline and Aditi Kulkarni*

The “Invalidated” documentary will be screened this Friday, October 26, at 5:30 PM in Washington, D.C. To register for this free event, which features a presentation by Bunch O Balloons inventor Josh Malone among others, please click here.

Imagine that you’re a father of eight children who puts everything on the line to bring your invention to the marketplace. After a successful Kickstarter campaign that brings in close to $1 million, you protect your invention by securing several patents on the innovative technology. Your invention is a huge market success, and sales exceed your wildest dreams. When the copycats come along, you think your patent rights will protect you. After all, that’s what the patent system is for. But you quickly realize that the system is stacked against you, the lone inventor, and it instead favors the large companies that willingly violate your rights for profit.

While this horror story may sound farfetched, it’s exactly what happened to Josh Malone, the inventor of Bunch O Balloons. And the unfortunate reality is that Malone is not the only inventor to be let down by the patent system that is meant to protect inventors from unscrupulous infringers. Thankfully, Malone is not taking things lying down. Not only is he fighting for his rights in the courts and at the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office—the very Office that granted him the rights in the first place—but he also has become a vocal activist fighting to reform the patent system. In fact, Malone is now telling his story in a new documentary entitled “Invalidated.” The full video, which prominently features CPIP Founder Adam Mossoff and runs about 50 minutes long, is available at both iTunes and Amazon.

You can watch the trailer here:

Inspired by childhood memories, Josh Malone invented Bunch O Balloons to solve a real-world problem. His invention allows anyone to fill and tie around 100 water balloons in just one minute. As a child, he spent days filling up hundreds of water balloons to play with his friends. Though he eventually stopped playing with balloons, the idea of finding a better way to play never left him. His idea finally materialized through a method to save his children’s time by filling several balloons at once. Malone burned the midnight oil perfecting his invention, and his family also invested their time and efforts backing his venture. After failing through several experiments and exhausting their savings, Malone finally succeeded with Bunch O Balloons.

Patent figure for Bunch O Balloons: fluid source leading to balloons

Ready with the product’s final prototype embodying his invention, Malone shot a video for a Kickstarter campaign to advertise his product and to raise some much-needed funds. The campaign was a hit, bringing in close to $1 million. Malone was even interviewed on the Today Show, where he got into an impromptu water balloon fight with Carson Daly. The purchase orders then started pouring in from toy manufacturers and big retailers like Walmart. They were all interested in profiting from the competitive advantage they would get from Malone’s novel—and fun—invention.

On realizing his invention’s strength and wanting to protect it from potential infringers, Malone filed several patent applications with the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office (USPTO). While the patent applications were pending, Malone came to know that a product nearly identical to his own was being advertised and sold in the marketplace under the name, “Balloon Bonanza.” Investigating further, Malone realized that Telebrands, the marketing company that originated the “As Seen On TV” advertisements, had stolen his idea and begun selling knock-off versions of his invention.

Image comparison of Bunch O Balloons versus Balloon Bonanza

Malone sued Telebrands in the Eastern District of Texas, seeking a preliminary injunction to prevent the marketer from further infringing his rights. The district court granted the injunction, agreeing with Malone that his patent was likely valid and infringed. Telebrands fought back, appealing the injunction to the Federal Circuit and again challenging the validity of Malone’s patent on indefiniteness and obviousness grounds. The Federal Circuit sided with Malone, holding that it was not clear error for the district court to conclude that he was likely to succeed on the merits. The Court of Appeals rejected Telebrands’ arguments as failing to raise a substantial question concerning the validity of Malone’s patent.

Telebrands also challenged the validity of Malone’s patent before the Patent Trial & Appeal Board (PTAB) in a post-grant review (PGR) proceeding. During the pendency of Telebrands’ appeal to the Federal Circuit on the preliminary injunction, the PTAB rendered its final written decision: Telebrands had shown by a preponderance of the evidence that Malone’s patent was invalid as indefinite. Of course, had the issue been decided in the district court, the mere preponderance standard would have been insufficient to overturn the presumably valid patent. But in the PTAB, the rules are different, and they favor challengers such as Telebrands that use the additional venue to game the system.

The Federal Circuit was well aware of the PTAB’s decision to the contrary when it upheld the district court’s determination that Malone was likely to succeed on merits in assessing the propriety of the preliminary injunction. In fact, it mentioned the PTAB proceedings in a footnote, noting that its decision was not binding and that it was nevertheless unpersuasive. When Malone subsequently appealed the PTAB loss, the Federal Circuit finally got its chance to directly address the PTAB’s decision on the merits. The Court of Appeals held that, even applying the PTAB’s more relaxed standard, Malone’s claims were not unpatentable for indefiniteness. The Federal Circuit thus made good on the earlier indications from both itself and the district court that Malone’s patent was indeed valid.

While Malone ultimately has been victorious so far, he’s been forced to spend millions of dollars protecting his rights. He reported in July of 2017 that he’d already spent $17 million, and that it might grow to as much as $50 million before it’s all through. That’s an insane amount of money for most lone inventors, and Malone is fortunate enough to have made enough revenue in sales to be able to afford it. Most people aren’t so lucky. And the battle for inventors is certainly far from over, especially when infringers with deep pockets can repeatedly play the game and wear down their victims in multiple forums. As Malone laments, “the PTAB simply encourages infringers like Telebrands to double down on the expense of litigation, rather than acquiescing to the adjudication by the District Court.”

It’s no wonder that, in his dismay, Malone joined other frustrated inventors to symbolically burn their patents outside of the USPTO in the summer of 2017. Malone’s story is a stereotype example of how the big infringers attempt to overwhelm the little guy by simply outspending them should they dare to challenge the wrong. Such gamesmanship at the expense of inventors is not the purpose of the PTAB. As Professor Mossoff notes in the documentary: “The original argument for why we needed the PTAB is that, every once in a while, there will be a mistakenly issued patent they shouldn’t have issued, and that these patents can clog the gears of the innovation economy. Unfortunately, what Congress created was a completely unrestrained, unrestricted agency whose job is to cancel patents.”

America’s Founders recognized that a stable and effective patent system is vitally important for the innovation ecosystem to thrive. American inventors like Josh Malone have made a significant difference in people’s lives, and the patent system exists to reward them for their efforts. Inventors should be able to trust that the patent system will be there to protect them when others trample on their rights. They need those rights to be meaningful in order to recoup their investments and to realize their just rewards. The Founders understood that benefiting inventors through such private gains would redound to the public benefit. But as Malone’s story demonstrates, we will need to make some changes to the patent system before the Founders’ vision can be fully realized.

*Aditi Kulkarni is working towards an LLM Degree in Intellectual Property at Antonin Scalia Law School, and she works as a Research Assistant at CPIP.

Categories
Antitrust Innovation Patent Licensing

IP for the Next Generation of Mobile Technology: How the Antitrust Division Devalued Standard-Essential Patents

In advance of our Sixth Annual Fall Conference on IP for the Next Generation of Technology, we are highlighting works on the challenges brought by the revolutionary developments in mobile technology of the past fifteen years.

hand holding a phone with holographs hovering over the screenAs we highlighted in previous posts in this series (see here and here), a 2015 policy change at the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers-Standards Association (IEEE)—a standard-setting organization (SSO) for mobile technologies—placed one-sided restrictions on patent owners that have demonstrably harmed innovator participation and technological advancement.

Writing about the policy revisions, economist Gregory Sidak, the Founder and Chairman of Criterion Economics LLC in Washington, D.C., explains how the IEEE made these profound changes to its patent licensing policies with the encouragement and blessing of the Antitrust Division of the U.S. Department of Justice. The amendments were intended to ameliorate the supposed problems of patent holdup and royalty stacking, but they went much further than necessary and weakened the rights of patent owners in the process.

Despite the lack of evidence of harm from patent holdup or royalty stacking, the Antitrust Division commended the IEEE for changing its policies. Mr. Sidak notes that the Antitrust Division simultaneously turned a blind eye to the collusion of the implementers who had pushed for the changes (and who benefited from them by way of suppressed royalty obligations at the expense of the patent owners), and he argues that this course of action was a dereliction of duty on the part of the Antitrust Division to dispassionately assess the competitive implications of such concerted activity.

To read the Sidak article, which was published in the Georgetown Law Journal, please click here.

Categories
Innovation Patent Licensing

IP for the Next Generation of Mobile Technology: How Ignorance of Standard Setting Operations Hinders Innovation

In advance of our Sixth Annual Fall Conference on IP for the Next Generation of Technology, we are highlighting works on the challenges brought by the revolutionary developments in mobile technology of the past fifteen years.

hand holding a phone with holographs hovering over the screenThe development and implementation of technology standards is a complex process, and it’s one often misunderstood by commentators, courts, and government agencies. In an article detailing the Federal Trade Commission’s (FTC) misguided suit against Qualcomm for alleged unwillingness to license its patents on fair, reasonable, and nondiscriminatory (FRAND) terms, CPIP Senior Scholar Kristen Osenga exposes a pervasive ignorance of technology standards and the standard setting organizations (SSOs) that develop them.

According to Professor Osenga, the lack of sound economic evidence and evidentiary findings in the FTC’s allegations are indicative of a larger and more fundamental lack of knowledge that is negatively impacting important legal, business, and policy decisions. It’s a troubling trend that has the potential to not just hinder the development of technology standards, but innovation itself.

To read the Osenga article, which was published in the University of Louisville Law Review, please click here.

Categories
Innovation Patent Licensing

IP for the Next Generation of Mobile Technology: How IEEE’s Policy Changes Have Created Uncertainty for Innovators

In advance of our Sixth Annual Fall Conference on IP for the Next Generation of Technology, we are highlighting works on the challenges brought by the revolutionary developments in mobile technology of the past fifteen years.

hand holding a phone with holographs hovering over the screenEarlier this year, CPIP’s Adam Mossoff and Kevin Madigan detailed an in-depth empirical study on the troubling repercussions of policy changes at the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers-Standards Association (IEEE).

In a rigorous study tracking the activity of creators and owners of technologies incorporated into standards by the IEEE, Kirti Gupta and Georgios Effraimidis show how policy shifts at the IEEE have required patent owners to effectively relinquish their legal right to stop the deliberate and unauthorized uses of their property. Unfortunately, as Gupta and Effraimidis explain, the current unbalanced nature of standard setting at the IEEE is resulting in inefficient licensing negotiations and delayed standards development, and it’s threatening the development of new and innovative consumer products at a crucial time for mobile technologies.

The full Gupta & Effraimidis study is available here, and the synopsis by Adam Mossoff and Kevin Madigan can be found here.

Categories
Innovation Patent Licensing

Focusing on IP for the Next Generation of Mobile Technology

hand holding a phone with holographs hovering over the screenIn advance of our Sixth Annual Fall Conference on IP for the Next Generation of Technology, the Center for the Protection of Intellectual Property will be highlighting works on the challenges brought by the revolutionary developments in mobile technology of the past fifteen years. These articles address issues related to patent licensing, standard setting in the mobile technology sector, and developing business models at the dawn of the 5G era. Contrary to the tread-worn claims that new technological developments render IP rights obsolete, these articles show how stable and effective property rights in innovative technologies continue to foster the groundbreaking advancements that benefit societies.

Much debate in the mobile technology sector has centered on recent policy changes in the standard setting organizations responsible for the development of global industry standards. In a recent paper focusing on the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Standards Association (IEEE), mobile industry expert Keith Mallinson explores the practical impact of policy changes made in 2015 by the IEEE that implemented the “patent holdup” theory by restricting the rights of owners of patents on technology that is contributed to standards.

Providing an empirical analysis of the activity of innovators of new standards technology since the 2015 change in the IEEE’s patent policy, Mallinson finds that innovators are not contributing their patents resulting from their massive investments over many years into risky research and development of cutting-edge technologies. This is evidence that the one-sided and unbalanced restrictions on innovators, and not on implementers, that were imposed by the IEEE in 2015 under the “patent holdup” theory have slowed the adoption and implementation of pioneering technologies. Mallinson explains that a more balanced and clear respect for the rights of owners of patented technologies that are contributed to standards must be restored in order to better facilitate technological advancements.

To read the Mallinson article, which first appeared on the 4iP Council website in September 2017, please click here.