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Also covered in the New Yorker yesterday: "How to Make War on Patent Trolls" -- an informative, thoughtful article, listing resources the government already has to defeat trolls but isn't much using, though it describes how Vermont is acting in at least one case.

http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/elements/2013/06/how-t...

From the article: "It is time to declare total war on patent trolls. The federal government, and the states, should do everything they can to exterminate them and to make anyone regret getting into such crooked work. The existence of trolls is entirely a product of government: they abuse a government program (the patent law), and continue to exist only thanks to government inaction."

It later continues...

"The one exception to the pattern of government inaction is Bill Sorrell, the Attorney General of Vermont, who, two weeks ago, filed lawsuits against MPHJ for exploiting Vermont businesses and nonprofits. He explained to me that Vermont is trying to attract new businesses to the state, and that scaring off trolls might help. “This is not anti-patent,” Sorrell said. “This is anti-abuse of patent rights. We don’t want people preying on Vermont’s small business.”

The Vermont story may help create a race to the top. If Vermont succeeds in scaring trolls away, it will give companies there an advantage. And as more states act, it will be relatively worse to do business in those that don’t."

It covers more than just Vermont and links to other informative resources.

On another note...

A major problem infrequently mentioned is that a lot of people, especially in parts of business far from R&D, see patents solely as a way to recoup private investment, not supposed to be balanced with public interest after limited times, and they use number of patents as a proxy for amount of innovation.

They honestly see the system as it is now as functioning great. Many see objections to patents as objections to capitalism and business. Many of these people aren't stupid, malevolent, or self-serving. They believe in a model that no longer functions, but haven't realized that model no longer applies.




> A major problem infrequently mentioned is that a lot of people, especially in parts of business far from R&D, see patents solely as a way to recoup private investment, not supposed to be balanced with public interest after limited times, and they use number of patents as a proxy for amount of innovation.

Lots of people in R&D see things this way. My friends in "Big Engineering" are proud of the number of patents they have to their name.




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