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Repealing Patents, Christopher Beauchamp
Repealing Patents, Christopher Beauchamp
Vanderbilt Law Review
The first known patent case in the United States courts did not enforce a patent. Instead, it sought to repeal one. The practice of cancelling granted patent rights has appeared in various forms over the past two-and-a-quarter centuries, from the earliest U.S. patent law in 1790 to the new regime of inter partes review and post-grant review. With the Supreme Court's recent scrutiny of the constitutionality of inter partes review, this history has taken on a new significance.
This Article uses new archival sources to uncover the history of patent cancellation during the first half-century of American patent law. These …
Online Appendix To Irrational Ignorance At The Patent Office, Michael D. Frakes, Melissa F. Wasserman
Online Appendix To Irrational Ignorance At The Patent Office, Michael D. Frakes, Melissa F. Wasserman
Vanderbilt Law Review
In this Section of the Appendix, we discuss a bounded analysis of the personnel costs to the Patent Office (“the Agency”) that result from doubling patent examiner time allocations. In particular, we adopt different multipliers to account for the full cost of a patent examiner to the Patent Office in excess of their base salary. As discussed in Section II.A, we assume a 2.04 factor of an employee’s base salary to account for fringe benefits, employer taxes and insurance, and allotments for office space, rent, equipment, replacement/turnover cost, managerial support, etc. Below, we repeat the calculation in Table 2 of …