Technology is always changing. Patent law is also constantly evolving, as the courts and Congress continue to make significant changes to this area of law. But what about patents themselves? Some studies have looked at how patent specifications have changed over time, but no one has looked specifically at the most important aspect of a patent, its claims. Given the changes in technology and law, one would anticipate patent claims to have evolved. Despite the expectations, this paper concludes that patent claim shape is largely unaffected by time, technology, crowded fields, or prosecution time. This paper suggests a possible reason why claim length appears incommensurate with technology and unaffected by other factors. Specifically, patent ...
This Comment proceeds in three parts. Part II discusses the purpose of claim construction and the co...
Many rules of patent law rest on a false premise about their target audience. Rules of patentability...
Patents by their very nature are pregnant with considerations of time. The exclusive rights they aff...
Technology is always changing. Patent law is also constantly evolving, as the courts and Congress co...
How to structure IP laws in order to maximize social welfare by striking the right balance between i...
In recent decades, the Patent and Trademark Office and the federal courts have dramatically expanded...
Patent law has a problem. Its foundation rests on the principle that a patent will clearly define it...
A classic property rights question looms large in the field of patent law: where do the rights of in...
Patents are big business. Individuals and companies are obtaining far more patents today than ever b...
We show that examiner-driven variation in patent rights leads to quantitatively large impacts on sev...
Patent claims are supposed to mark the boundaries of a patent clearly so that competitors and follow...
When judges change the legal rules governing patents, those changes are always retroactive. That is,...
We document the occurrence of process claims in granted U.S. patents over the last century. Using no...
Patent law is constantly evolving to accommodate advances in science and technology. But, for a vari...
The claims of a patent are central to virtually every aspect of patent law. The claims define the sc...
This Comment proceeds in three parts. Part II discusses the purpose of claim construction and the co...
Many rules of patent law rest on a false premise about their target audience. Rules of patentability...
Patents by their very nature are pregnant with considerations of time. The exclusive rights they aff...
Technology is always changing. Patent law is also constantly evolving, as the courts and Congress co...
How to structure IP laws in order to maximize social welfare by striking the right balance between i...
In recent decades, the Patent and Trademark Office and the federal courts have dramatically expanded...
Patent law has a problem. Its foundation rests on the principle that a patent will clearly define it...
A classic property rights question looms large in the field of patent law: where do the rights of in...
Patents are big business. Individuals and companies are obtaining far more patents today than ever b...
We show that examiner-driven variation in patent rights leads to quantitatively large impacts on sev...
Patent claims are supposed to mark the boundaries of a patent clearly so that competitors and follow...
When judges change the legal rules governing patents, those changes are always retroactive. That is,...
We document the occurrence of process claims in granted U.S. patents over the last century. Using no...
Patent law is constantly evolving to accommodate advances in science and technology. But, for a vari...
The claims of a patent are central to virtually every aspect of patent law. The claims define the sc...
This Comment proceeds in three parts. Part II discusses the purpose of claim construction and the co...
Many rules of patent law rest on a false premise about their target audience. Rules of patentability...
Patents by their very nature are pregnant with considerations of time. The exclusive rights they aff...