What are the costs and benefits of patent laws? While Congress and the courts are often able to evade this difficult question, there is one institutional actor that is not only well-advised but also required to consider costs and benefits: the Patent and Trademark Office, which—as an administrative agency—is required by executive order to conduct cost-benefit analysis of all economically significant regulations. Yet the agency’s efforts have been less than satisfactory. In its cost-benefit analysis, the PTO overlooks crucial functional considerations, misunderstands basic precepts of patent economics, and resists quantification when quantification is required. In combination, these shortcomings suggest that the PTO has not correctly measure...
Innovation is vital to economic prosperity, and lawmakers consequently strive to craft patent laws t...
The PTO Code of Professional Responsibility regulates the conduct of patent practitioners to ensure ...
Many scholars and practitioners believe there are too many “weak” patents—those that should not have...
What are the costs and benefits of patent laws? While Congress and the courts are often able to evad...
There is widespread agreement that the patent system in the United States is in need of reform. Most...
This Article undertakes the first attempt to causally investigate the influence of funding on the Un...
Responding to years—arguably decades—worth of cries to repair our “broken” patent system, Congress r...
Whereas Congress has increasingly turned to administrative agencies to regulate complex technical ar...
This article describes the processes involving the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office\u27s (PTO\u27s) ...
Many believe the root cause of the patent system’s dysfunction is that the U.S. Patent and Trademark...
In the last ten years, the workload of the Patent and Trademark Office ( PTO ) has increased dramati...
As statutory schemes go, the patent statute has been relatively stable from 1952 to the present. In ...
For more than two decades, the Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) and the Federal Circuit have exerci...
Interactions between the PTO and the courts are more complex than for most agencies. PTO decisions m...
The Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) finds itself caught in a vise. On the one hand, it has been...
Innovation is vital to economic prosperity, and lawmakers consequently strive to craft patent laws t...
The PTO Code of Professional Responsibility regulates the conduct of patent practitioners to ensure ...
Many scholars and practitioners believe there are too many “weak” patents—those that should not have...
What are the costs and benefits of patent laws? While Congress and the courts are often able to evad...
There is widespread agreement that the patent system in the United States is in need of reform. Most...
This Article undertakes the first attempt to causally investigate the influence of funding on the Un...
Responding to years—arguably decades—worth of cries to repair our “broken” patent system, Congress r...
Whereas Congress has increasingly turned to administrative agencies to regulate complex technical ar...
This article describes the processes involving the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office\u27s (PTO\u27s) ...
Many believe the root cause of the patent system’s dysfunction is that the U.S. Patent and Trademark...
In the last ten years, the workload of the Patent and Trademark Office ( PTO ) has increased dramati...
As statutory schemes go, the patent statute has been relatively stable from 1952 to the present. In ...
For more than two decades, the Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) and the Federal Circuit have exerci...
Interactions between the PTO and the courts are more complex than for most agencies. PTO decisions m...
The Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) finds itself caught in a vise. On the one hand, it has been...
Innovation is vital to economic prosperity, and lawmakers consequently strive to craft patent laws t...
The PTO Code of Professional Responsibility regulates the conduct of patent practitioners to ensure ...
Many scholars and practitioners believe there are too many “weak” patents—those that should not have...