Open source & patent reform

My buddy Steven M. Nipper followed up on his previous tip with a link to various recaps of the USPTO’s Feb 16’s open source meeting on the prior art database and community review patent projects. Snippets:

…The meeting then turned to the suggestion for a “Community Patent Review�? system, whereby patent applications could essentially be “peer reviewed�? by the public before being granted. The first speaker on this topic was Mr. Marc Ehrlich, an attorney with the Patent Portfolio Management/Intellectual Property Licensing department at IBM. Mr Ehrlich had a number of slides showing how such an online system might actually look in practice. His proposed system consisted of three basic parts:

  • Access – Make it easier to access applications. Add a subscription-based alert system to notify potential reviewers when a new application in their area of expertise becomes available.
  • Review – The basic platform for public review. Components include education, indexing, links, discussion, and some sort of reputation scoring system so that examiners would have some idea of the track record of folks doing the public review (similar to E-Bay’s scoring system).
  • Feedback – Find a simpler way to submit data to examiners.

Mr. Ehrlich determined that the system must also support easy ways to identify the responder (the one submitting the data to the examiner), make structured comments (in addition to just indicating any prior art found) and a way to determine if the examiner in a given case actually used the data that was provided. He then identified some of the potential challenges facing the implementation of this kind of system, the main ones being:

  • Flooding – the danger of the USPTO being overwhelmed by submissions from the public
  • Gaming – bad actors using the system to intentionally obstruct otherwise valid applications
  • Willful infringement dangers – overcoming the reluctance many developers feel about looking at any patent data whatever for fear of becoming liable to later charges of “wilful infringment�? against a patent (more on this topic later)

At this point, one of this meeting attendees, an actual patent examiner, made the admission that he sometimes did use Slashdot in trying to locate prior art, but that it was difficult and time-consuming due to “all the anti-patent noise�?.

· · ·

Professor Noveck brought up what was perhaps one of the most important reminders of the entire meeting, that being that the constitutional goal of the patent system was ultimately to spread information, not restrict it’s dissemination, and that any system must put those priorities first.

· · ·

Steve Stites writes:

Professor Beth Noveck of NY Law School made the exceptional proposal. She outlined a set of reforms based on the way that Open Source works. She proposed that the Patent Office publicize proposed patents (which they do now to a certain extent) and that the public and the Patent Office engage in a peer review process. The peer review process that she proposed is very similar to the way that academics and Open Source handle new ideas. There is a public discussion of the new idea with a person’s contribution to the discussion being weighted somewhat by the Open Source equivalent of academic prestige. From this discussion the Patent Office would gain valuable insight into prior art, triviality, overly broad patents, etc. which are of great importance is deciding whether or not to grant patents. From an Open Source viewpoint all the Patent Office would have to do is publish pending patent proposals on Slashdot and participate in the fireworks.

From the viewpoint of the Patent Office the problem with Beth’s proposal is that it is completely illegal. It was a Patent Office examiner sitting in the audience who brought up Slashdot:

“The next comment was from a patent examiner in the audience (of which there were quite a few). He said that he thought Slashdot was already a very valuable site for examiners to find prior art when reviewing applications. He thought the moderation system of Slashdot should be considered as a useful model to build on.”

This same patent examiner continued by emphasizing that he could not legally participate in the Slashdot discussions that happened to be of use to him.

Another Patent Office problem with Beth’s idea is the lack of beaurocratic structure in the peer review process. Beth addressed this problem by injecting prestige in the process to give the people participating in the peer review what seems to be beaurocratic rank.

· · ·

Finally, (there’s a lot of good stuff in there, so if you get a chance, definitely skim it over), I came across an actual project that sounds similar to my own Community Marks concept called Community Patents… the big difference being that Community Patents go in the complete opposite direction of my proposal for community ownership. Anyway, here’s their speil:

The patent system needs our help. The United States Patent Office is actively seeking ways to bring greater expertise to bear on the review of patent applications and ensure that only worthwhile inventions receive the patent monopoly. Currently, underpaid and overwhelmed examiners struggle under the backlog of applications. Under pressure to expedite review, patents for unmerited inventions are approved.

Sponsored by IBM, the Community Patent Project seeks to create a peer review system for patents that exploits network technology to enable innovation experts to inform the patent examination procedure. In every field of scientific endeavor, peer review is a critical quality control mechanism to improve innovation. Throughout the public sector both peer review and citizen consultation are either legally mandated or practiced as a way to inform policymaking.

The Community Patent Project aims to design and pilot an online system for peer review of patents. The Community Patent system will support a network of experts to advise the Patent Office on prior art as well as to assist with patentability determinations. By using social software, such as social reputation, collaborative filtering and information visualization tools, we can apply the “wisdom of the crowd�? – or, more accurately the wisdom of the experts – to complex social and scientific problems. This could make it easier to protect the inventor’s investment while safeguarding the marketplace of ideas.

So there you go. As the seven millionth patent was recently granted, it’s clear that our intellectual property system needs an overhaul — not to make it more repressive or draconian, but to enforce fair limitations on the retention of IP (if retention is really a good idea at all) while also continuing to enable inventors the chance to benefit from their work (abolishing software patents is a long way off, so we’ve got to find compromises in the meantime that are not economically devastating for the individual — if individuals can even afford patents anymore).

If the original patent system was created to promote “industrial and technological progress in the United States and strengthen the national economy”, there is indeed much work that needs to be done to reform the notion and value placed on ““. As Friedman has pointed out, as the world flattens, the competitive advantage will be in the speed of innovation and in the validity and inclusivity of ideas advanced. Open source is a means to that end, but if any civilization is encumbered or held back by its legal institutions, it won’t matter how much brawn ya got, the next generation will be determined by the speed with which civilizations are able to enact their ideas, not how well they’re able to protect them. So um, at least in the US, you might expect the end to an era in the next 10-15 years. Mebbe. Heh.

RIAA says “EFF You iPod rippers!”

EFF the RIAAMan oh man oh man.

Man oh man!

Seriously, could the RIAA make it any easier for us?

Listen fellas, yeah, youze guys with the stogies up in your crystal palace puffin away and chucklin’ to each other about how you’re going to ‘crush’ those ‘infringers’… Yeah, seriously, ya know what, we’re sick of being abused by you. We’re sick of being fed your garbage — of the idea that you think that you control everything and can dictate the rules of my use of your “product” long after I’ve bought and paid for it.

Look, I dunno what planet you guys think you’re on and what legal system is going to end up supporting your stilted worldview, but it doesn’t even matter. Because you’re irrelevant. You’re meaningless. What you’re doing is like a slow train wreck euthanasia; we’re all watching you pen your own demise, over months and months of screwing your best customers. I mean — it’s so painfully clear to us! Why is this not obvious to you?

Oh oh, okay, I know — you’re saying “well, we can afford to be the bad guys and get everyone’s hate-ons directed as us because we’ve got players in bed with us that could smite you without even thinking about it.”

And you know what, while that’s true, you’re still not getting it. Because I’m just one paucitous individual. Get rid of me, two will fall in line to replace me. Take them out, four more. And on and on. That’s what you don’t get. And when you start screwing with people who own iPods, holy crap!, you’re unleashing a wrath far more powerful than the DOJ or your own fatcat legal hegemons: the MySpaceXangaLiveJournalOrkut kids and their parents.

So don’t say we didn’t warn you. Since, yeah, it’ll be our eyes that you’ll be staring up into questioningly as you realize that you’ve taken yourself out.

The Acquisition Economy

It does seem as though Web 2.0 is not really about attempting to go-it-alone and making independent success (as was the apparent trend in Web 1.0) more about greek-alphabet soup acquisitions and buy-outs.

Anyway, I’m not the first to make this point, but it does seem that most end up being picked up in beta.. or alpha. Etc: Measure Map gets acquired by Google in something like the Alpha phase. Delicious was probably in gamma, flickr said beta but was more like delta.

Anyway, now we’ve got an arms race between Google and Yahoo for my soul. Microsoft is trying to catch up, but remains mostly irrelevant.

Kind of makes you wonder: is there room for the independent in The Acquisition Economy 2.0?

…Especially when you can buy just an employee and leave his company behind?

Out of Towner V: Scott Kveton redux

Scott KvetonScott’s coming back to town for OSBC and wants to meet up to discuss the work we’ve been doing on creating a new open source foundation as well as a new open-identity/open-auth project that might actually kick start Rhyzomatic and create a vehicle for an independent identity system… (yes yes, there are already a million solutions out there but we’re hoping to figure out an open source approach to get them all to play nice with each other).

So, tonight, February 13 at 8pm; the Argent Hotel in San Francisco. Totally last minute, but if you’re in for some hot and fast brainstorming on these issues — and to welcome our out-of-towner guest — be there!

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Proof that guns don’t kill people, they only maim

The Right to Bear Arms

Apparently our Robot-in-Chief, Cheney, shot his friend while he was hunting yesterday.

No, not hunting his friend. He was hunting quail. Geez.

But he still sprayed Mr Whittington with shotgun pellets in the cheek, neck and chest.

This followed an address by Cheney on the importance of shooting your friends while hunting, which pleased his base of NRA-backed Free Hunters. You’ll recall that he tried to shoot his friend, Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, this time last year, but failed to hit him.

Ok, so I just made all that up. Except the part about Cheney shooting the dude. That really did happen. I just wanted to promote a cool tshirt design.

Qumana 3.0 Beta out; state of the blogtoolosphere

Qumana LogoQumana has released the 3.0 beta of their blog editor, touting the following features:

  • a “blog manager” that locally stores your drafts and published posts
  • support for trackbacks and pinging
  • improved editor with valid XHTML, plus ability to view and edit code
  • a way to refresh the editor (‘New Post’) – to clear away published material and start a new post instantly
  • improved image dialogue, including preview and auto upload trigger from Drag & Drop

Looking through their Tour, there’s some remarkable similarities in their workflows to how we’ve solved similar issues in Flock (adding a blog, tagging). This suggests to me that there is some consolidation and consensus emerging in client-side blogging apps. MarsEdit 1.1 similarly added tags late last year and some other niceties.

Some things are still pretty unique to each editor… like Qumana’s Adgenta program or the DropPad feature that enables drag and drop blogging from the desktop (Ecto has something like this as well). Ecto also features email integration with the Mac Address Book to notify your friends of updated posts.

But so besides pimping Qumana’s release (hey, more choice is a good thing!), I also wanted to point out that we’re starting to see at the least the beginnings of some standard features in blogging apps, including a kludge for consistently adding tags to posts. As I use the excellent Ultimate Tag Warrior to tag my posts (when composing via the web interface), I’m hoping that tags will soon become something represented in the standard blogging APIs (I know Matt‘s already done some work on this that we’ll be taking advantage of soon). Once that happens, tools like Flock, Performancing, Ecto, MarsEdit, Qumana and so on will be able to offer native tag support and not just append that extra data to the body of the posts.