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by procombo 1810 days ago
The U.S. had a president not too long ago who tried to shake things up. Ended up giving the patent office truckloads of cash, considered it "job creation". Goal was to improve efficiency, but all it did was unthrottle submissions, and lower quality. On paper, it looked more efficient, apparently.

The U.S. also "harmonized" their patent laws with the rest of the world to reward paper-pushers who are "first to file", instead of those who are "first to invent." Should have been the other way around.

That with lowering submission fees and requirements drastically, those efforts basically turned the office into an even bigger joke.

Getting a patent means virtually nothing without enforcement and protection, and that requires litigation.

1 comments

First to file has some advantages that are hard to ignore.

It incentivises early submission which means we all learn from it earlier.

It disincentivises submarine patents where one party deliberately hides an obvious invention until another market player has established a business and then proves they invented it first.