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Showing posts with label provisional patent application. Show all posts
Showing posts with label provisional patent application. Show all posts

Thursday, March 13, 2014

Let it snow! Burton Patents

To say that the winter of 2014 as been harsh would be an understatement. In the North-East and West, snow totals are approaching historic levels. Even as I type, another monster storm is gathering to dump feet of snow on an area stretching from upstate NY to Maine.

If there are any winners in intense snowy winter, it is ski resorts. Resorts, it is obvious to state, can't function without skiers and snowboarders.  One of the premier outfits in snowboarding Burton is, aside from a trendsetter in slope apparel and design, a prolific patentee.

According to the patent databases, Burton has more than 100 issued patents and pending application in the US.  An appreciable number of these patents are directed to function features, such as the spring leaf modified glide board design seen above.  Other patents address the continuous problem of lacing your boots. For example patent 8418381, describes a lacing system for boots.

One of the features that drives sales in the apparel / sporting goods space is the relentless need to innovate and produce new and improved models. In that respect, the Tech space and the sports retail space are not significantly different.   The ability to patent these advancements, however incremental, mean increased sales and wide recognition as an innovator.

Not every patenable idea is a commercial success, nor should it. A large purpose behind the patent system is to allow companies and individuals to iterate over known ideas to get new ideas. Sometime, the iteration is not worth the added expense. Sometimes the iteration was the last piece of some overall systems puzzle that advances the art, and becomes the basis of new paradigm in the industry.

Burton made a large push for the integrated boot binding combination. Had it taken off, it would have changed the technological direction of the industry. At the end of the day, in 2014 at least, that technology is a side show to the more simplistic boot binding system employed by Burton and other board manufacturers.


The point is that you never know which ideas might strike and catch fire, and which ideas whither on the vine. If you wait until you are successful to patent those ideas, it is already too late.


Jordan Garner

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Getting Hired in the IP Field [PTO Stats]

There is nothing better then data...said no one...ever. However, I think lawyers should have a keen eye to trends, and trends only make sense with data.  The patent office is a great resource to uncover strategies and long term trends in the field (and in American innovation in general). Below are some patent stats for 2012.



It is interesting that slightly more than half of all the applications filed in the US, originated from inventors in foreign countries. The take away is that foreign filing in the US is a serious source of work and revenue for firms, large and small (there is a reason I go to Japan once a year). However, one could argue that Americans have lost the edge in their own patent office. When you break out the foreign countries into their own catagory, the situations becomes more interesting.
Japan, once the second largest economy in the world, is still the second largest filer of Applications in the US. In contrast, China (PRC), is the world's second largest economy, but is tied with Canada for the amount of applications filed in the U.S. Over time, these number will begin to reflect the rise of China on the global stage, but the concern that China is already at the front, is a bit misplaced.


Lastly, the estimated number of active patent practitioners is 26,000. So, when you calculate the total number of applications filed by the number of active practitioners, you get 20.8 Applications per practitioner. Seeing that some of these applications are pro se, some companies have hundreds of applications filed by a small team, the number of applications per attorney or agent is actually quite small. I will let you draw your own conclusions on what that means for the prospects for new lawyers.

Friday, January 24, 2014

[Ngram Viewer] Patent troll vs software patent vs open source

This is a brief follow up to the earlier post on not fearing/feeding patent trolls. I wanted to see the mention frequency for patent trolls measured against open source software and software patents. The chart is below and self explanatory. Social media tends to drive our opinions as the the current state of IP. However, the empirical evidence tells a differs story.

Clearly, the story of innovation is being driven by open-source technologies. While software patents exists, the percentage of mind share they occupy pales in comparison to open source.

Saturday, January 18, 2014

Standard essential patents are...essential

Forbes has an interesting article on standard essential patents (SEPs). You can read it here. http://www.forbes.com/sites/hbsworkingknowledge/2014/01/16/a-way-to-mitigate-smartphone-patent-litigation/

The article often points to Qualcomm's 6 billion dollar /year in licensing royalties (for CDMA patents) as though it were an example is an in the breakdown of the SEP system. 

However, the article fails to note that CDMA is not an obscure technology foisted on an industry. CDMA is the one of the most widely used cell phone communication standards on the planet. 

The whole purpose of the SEP system is to provide a reasonable royalty to the inventor of technology that the market determines is the best way to implement a solution to an industry-wide issue. 

If the industry is unable to perform this function, as the article implies ( noting the increased politicization of the process ), then why entrust the process to industry?  Forbes appears to be making an argument that the market, as it relates to SEPs, has failed.

If un-elected industry officials can not pick technological winners and losers, why not ask the un-elected bureaucrats to do so? In that scenario, some collection of professors, lawyers and government appointees could hash out some solution which results in a standard, non-negotiable license applied across the board.

If that outcome feels less than appealing, then the basic premise that the system is failing needs to be reevaluated.

If your technology undergrids global communications, you should be compensated for it, regardless of if you build every piece of equipment or not. The fact that different factions would argue for their technology is not a break down in the system, it is the system functioning as it was intended.

Jordan Garner
(c) 2014 Moorsgate Media

Sunday, January 12, 2014

[Scam Alert] UPTS.org

Unlike intros to songs featuring Jay-Z, this is not a "new watch" alert but a a [New Scam] alert. However, much like the rap impresario, I come to tell you tales of The Hustle.

Much in the same way that modern hip-hop reinterprets the classic Greek tragedy, IP scammers seek the remix of old strategies.
Before the Internet, IP scammers must have had it made.  All that was needed was an official looking document and an Eastern European P.O. Box. Presto, cash in bank.

Now, in order to have a credible shot at committing fraud, IP scammers have resulted to professional looking webpages, and even more official looking documents.

I find UPTS.org to be particularly innovative in this respect. They use a web URL that is surprisingly homologous to the USPTO. That off-set  P grabs you, roping in those who are vaguely aware of the existence of the USPTO, PCT and EPO. Add in the .Org and it all looks so plausibly above board.

However, the briefest reviews shows that once again, those eastern European O.P. boxes are behind the scenes. Looking to collect your checks (and god forbid,) your credit card number.

Safe to say that UPTS.org is a scam. Do not give them your money. Add them to the List.

IP-Data.biz
UPTS.org

Jordan Garner