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Full-Text Articles in Law
The Need For Speed (And Grace): Issues In A First-Inventor-To-File World, Margo A. Bagley
The Need For Speed (And Grace): Issues In A First-Inventor-To-File World, Margo A. Bagley
Faculty Articles
“One is the loneliest number that you’ll ever do.” This lyric applies to the United States which, since 1998, stands alone among the world’s patent systems in awarding patents to the first person to invent a claimed invention (first to invent, or “FTI”) as opposed to the first inventor to file an application claiming the invention (“FITF”). But its lonely days may soon be over: a provision in pending patent reform legislation will (if passed) move the United States from FTI to FITF and end its solitary stance.
Some argue that the U.S. already has a de facto FITF system, …
Patent Reform And Differential Impact, Matthew Sag, Kurt W. Rohde
Patent Reform And Differential Impact, Matthew Sag, Kurt W. Rohde
Faculty Articles
The structure of the article is as follows. Part I provides an introduction to the problems created by bad patents and introduces the differential impact test for evaluating patent reform proposals.
Part II examines the origin of bad patents and applies two different economic models to explain their persistence. The first model focuses on a potential infringer’s incentives to challenge a bad patent; the second model focuses on a patent holder’s incentive to assert a patent. We explain bad patents as an emergent phenomenon: they are the product of the apparently low quality of patent examination and the complex, uncertain, …
Academic Discourse And Proprietary Rights: Putting Patents In Their Proper Place, Margo A. Bagley
Academic Discourse And Proprietary Rights: Putting Patents In Their Proper Place, Margo A. Bagley
Faculty Articles
This Article provides a fresh perspective on the Bayh-Dole debate by focusing on the impact of patent novelty rules on academic discourse. The Article proposes that to begin to reverse an observed deterioration in disclosure norms, flexibilities must be built into the patent system so that patents can be facilitators of the academic knowledge dissemination enterprise. In particular, the Article advocates creation of an opt-in extended grace period that would provide more time for academic researchers to publish and present early-stage research before having to file a patent application. Such an extension, coupled with early application publication, would both address …