How to Stop Patent Trolls - YouTube

Channel: ReasonTV

[0]
Hello, I’m parenthetically Andrew Heaton
[2]
and you’re watching Mostly Weekly.
[4]
And today we’re going to talk about patent trolls.
[7]
They’re like regular trolls, only balder, paler,
[10]
and prone to lawsuits.
[11]
Patents are the legal equivalent of dibs.
[15]
Or a temporary monopoly that the government awards to inventors,
[19]
so that after they’ve developed a new technology they’re rewarded for their efforts.
[22]
But patent trolls are gaming the system,
[25]
to the point that the patent system is holding back innovation instead of encouraging it.
[29]
Patent trolls buy or register stupid or vague patents.
[32]
Then when someone invents something awesome
[35]
they claim the inventor is using their patent, and they sue.
[38]
That creates a minefield where inventors are afraid to create things
[41]
for fear they’ll step on a patent and blow their legs off.
[47]
Trolls cost US firms twenty-nine billion dollars in lawsuits every year.
[51]
And the threat of lawsuits strangles startups and hampers innovation.
[55]
Like this, or this, or this, it's good for father's day.
[58]
Or this, that's a good valentine's day present.
[61]
Or this, Christmas?
[63]
To be awarded a patent, an inventor is supposed to create a new idea
[67]
which is novel and not just an obvious improvement over an existing idea.
[71]
Like this!
[72]
The US Patent Office doesn’t nitpick every moron’s application,
[75]
so patent trolls file broad, vague, and weak applications
[80]
that they can use as flimsy pretenses to lob lawsuits at people.
[84]
For example, this is an actual patent:
[88]
it's patented as “thermal refreshening of a bread product.”
[92]
Oh! You mean toast?
[93]
You can’t patent, friggin, toast!
[98]
Or this!
[99]
"Method of concealing partial baldness.”
[103]
That’s a combover!
[104]
You didn’t invent combovers!
[108]
If you think toast and combovers are overly broad,
[111]
you’re right, you score a point-
[115]
which is also a patent!
[119]
Apple and Samsung had a patent dispute
[122]
over who owned rectangles with rounded edges.
[126]
Quit fighting about quadrilaterals!
[127]
Just build me a robot butler already!
[129]
For years, trolls filed their frivolous lawsuits in East Texas.
[134]
Partly because East Texas was more friendly to patent lawsuits,
[137]
and also because it’s irritating to have to fly to East Texas.
[141]
So defendants, much like a substitute teacher in her late thirties,
[145]
are inclined to settle--
[147]
which is exactly what the trolls want.
[149]
In the recent case of TC Heartland v. Kraft Foods
[152]
the Supreme Court ruled that patent lawsuits must be filed wherever the defendant is
[157]
Which is a big blow to patent trolls.
[159]
Meanwhile, other patent troll victims have started fighting back.
[162]
Personal Audio LLC sued Adam Corolla for podcasting,
[165]
which they claimed to own the patent for.
[168]
Rather than ponying up extortion money,
[170]
Corolla raised half a million dollars through podcasting
[172]
and threw in another 200,000 of his own to fight them in court.
[176]
We don’t know what the settlement was,
[177]
but I imagine they didn't make very much money,
[179]
and they’ll probably think twice about trying to extort the podcast community again.
[183]
Which means I can now fearlessly release my pogcast.
[186]
Which is a podcast about pogs!
[189]
Hey, remember pogs?
[191]
Finally, a guy named Alexander Reben
[193]
developed an algorithm that spits out tens of thousands of invention ideas every day.
[198]
If a troll patents something in the future and sues someone,
[201]
the defendant can point to the millions and millions of Reben's ideas that predate it.
[206]
And some of those ideas are brilliant.
[209]
Like: “a shoe tree for one shoe”
[211]
and a pineapple lily plant that can track people.
[214]
That's innovation!
[215]
Trolls are on the run, but there’s a major step we can do take to hobble them.
[219]
What do trolls fear most?
[221]
Commitment.
[222]
Obviously, everyone knows that.
[224]
But after that, “fee shifting.”
[227]
Fee shifting means whoever loses the court case pays for all of the legal fees.
[232]
It’s what they do in Canada and Britain,
[234]
although we only do it for exceptional cases in the United States.
[236]
If you knew you’d have to pay yours and the defendant's fees
[239]
if you lost a frivolous patent case,
[242]
you’d be less likely to register it in the first place.
[244]
On my end, I'm going to file a patent for “being an extortionist dickhead”
[248]
so I can sue the pants off some patent trolls.
[250]
And that'll show them how the-
[253]
And apparently the patent for ironic patents has already been patented so that's great.
[258]
Now if you’ll excuse me, I have a court date.
[260]
But not for patent violations.
[263]
For murder.