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by ElViajero
1809 days ago
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For an example take the "Loading Screen Game" patent (https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2015/12/loading-screen-game-pa...) > According to the law, a person isn’t entitled to a patent if the claimed invention already existed when the application was filed or would have been obvious to someone skilled in the relevant technology area. This usually is completely overlook in patents. So, patents are ridiculous, they overlap and create a legal minefield for any small developer. Patent trolls exist because the patent system is so easily exploitable. I am not against the concept of patents, I see the value of allowing some corporation to regain invested money. But, it needs to be for real inventions that took time and effort to develop thru costly processes. Meanwhile things like "one-click buying, is the technique of allowing customers to make purchases with the payment information needed to complete the purchase having been entered by the user previously" are accepted. Patents are a useless joke, at least in the software industry. And its only goal is to increase the power of already monopolistic corporations. |
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Be careful with this. I have a friend who has a patent (might be expired by now) that basically came to be because I asked him a question about a battery charging design he wanted me to write some code for. It didn't make sense to me but in the process of explaining it, a lightbulb went off in his head and that was the basis of the idea. It's actually funny remembering the sudden excitement crossing his face as he realized he was on to something no one had thought of before (he had years of experience in the field).
At the time I was already an experienced EE and I can assure you that the idea was definitely "not obvious to a skilled practitioner in the field" but yet it didn't take much development (we had it working about a week later).
Found the patent here: https://patents.google.com/patent/US5894212A/en
[edit] looks like it's been cited by quite a few other patents since then! I never asked him how much he sold it for.