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Eleventh Annual Los Angeles Intellectual Property Law Association (LAIPLA) “Washington in the West ”Conference January 30, 2008 – Los Angeles Robert Clarke, Director Office of Patent Legal Administration (OPLA). S. 1145 PATENT REFORM ACT OF 2007.
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Eleventh Annual Los Angeles Intellectual Property Law Association (LAIPLA) “Washington in the West”Conference January 30, 2008 – Los Angeles Robert Clarke, Director Office of Patent Legal Administration (OPLA)
S. 1145 PATENT REFORM ACT OF 2007
Patent ReformApplicant Quality Submission (AQS) Question:Should applicants explain what they file at the USPTO? Issues: • 25% of applicants provide no evidence or supporting information with their patent applications. Another 15% provide lots of documents (sometimes thousands), usually with no explanation • Lack of information and too much undigested information greatly hamper patent examiners’ review • Practitioners reluctant to provide data/make statements for fear of “inequitable conduct” attacks Our thoughts: • Inequitable conduct must be fixed, so applicants/practitioners are encouraged to be forthcoming with the USPTO. • Clear statements, providing prior art and explaining its relevance, will provide clarity, improve the quality of patents, and promote timely examination by the USPTO.
Patent ReformINEQUITABLE CONDUCT (IC) Question:How should “inequitable conduct” be reformed? Issues: • “Inequitable conduct” = Accusation of lying to the USPTO • Widespread agreement that judge-madedoctrine needs fixing • Right now – harsh results (loss of patent rights), even where misstatements are inadvertent. Discourages full disclosure. Our thoughts: • Easy fixes: - Correct the standard & - Correct the impact when IC is found
PATENT REFORMDAMAGES & REMEDIES Question:How much does an infringer (party found to have violated a patent) owe? Issues: • Patent owners want compensation • Infringers believe courts are over-compensating owners • Standard for compensation is “no less than a reasonable royalty” Our thoughts: • Current system is fundamentally fair. • Parties want certainty – Need to know what is a “reasonable royalty”? • Courts could benefit from guidance, which is easy to provide and won’t ruin a fundamentally fair system.
Patent ReformPOST GRANT REVIEW Question:Fast-track, lower-cost way to challenge a patent? Issues: • Is there an alternative, fair system for reviewing patents? • Input reflects widespread support for a USPTO-run review Our thoughts: • The USPTO has developed a rigorous, streamlined, transparent post-grant review proceeding. • Implementation requires statutory authority. • Only real remaining issue = When can challengers request review? (USPTO has a proposal).
Patent ReformVENUE • Question: Where should a patentee or patent challenger be permitted to sue? • Issue: Should venue be restricted to defendant’s principal locations to avoid forum shopping? • Our thoughts: • Present law subjects many companies to suits in every district • Forum shopping should be discouraged while providing reasonable forum selection to plaintiffs
Patent ReformFIRST-INVENTOR-TO-FILE Question: First-inventor-to-file (FITF) vs. first-to-invent? Issues: • Predictability –2 inventors - - who gets the patent? • Administration – Who determines novelty, resolves conflicts between two (or more) parties asserting priority? • Harmonization - First-to-Invent (U.S.) vs. the rest of the world? Our thoughts: • FITF is more predictable, easier to administer, and would facilitate global patent protection for U.S. innovators • Unilateral move to FITF could compromise USG negotiating leverage to obtain an internationally harmonized grace period for U.S. inventors. • Grace period = Period of time before filing the application when an inventor can disclose the invention without losing patent rights. • Some trading partners lack a U.S.-style grace period, putting American inventors’ rights at risk in the global marketplace.
Patent ReformFEE-SETTING AUTHORITY Question: Should the USPTO have authority to set fees? Issues: • General concerns about any Federal agency setting fees • Questions about what fees the USPTO would change Our thoughts: • USPTO would like ability to eliminate fees, lower fees, consolidate fees, raise fees if necessary – all to accurately capture the cost of providing services. • Oversight – Important, necessary, and sought by USPTO. Fee changes (including lowering & eliminating fees) merit transparent review.
Contact Information • Robert Clarke, Director Office of Patent Legal Administration e-mail: Robert.Clarke@uspto.gov Phone: (571) 272-7735