Difference between revisions of "Patent Troll Fact Sheet"
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'''PWC 2014 Patent Litigation Study''' | '''PWC 2014 Patent Litigation Study''' |
Revision as of 14:12, 22 April 2016
- FTC collected $458 million from an antitrust settlement in 2015 [1]
- Intellectual capital in some form, including patents, accounts for 55% of GDP, and “intangible assets” such as corporate intellectual property, goodwill, and brand recognition account for 80% of the value of US public companies today. [2]
- Modern patent systems give incentives to inventors to undertake costly investments in time, effort, and resources to generate innovations in hopes of realizing potential profits from them. [3]
- More than 80% of gains in US productivity in the early 2000s could be traced to the development and application of new ideas and technologies (in particular IT) [4]
- Up to 60% of pharmaceutical-research projects that eventually lead to new discoveries would not have occurred without patent-based incentives. [See Thomson Reuters]
- In a 2005 study, Yale economist William Nordhaus estimated that about 4% of the total present value of social returns to innovation is captured by innovators. [5]
- Most of the benefits of technological change are passed on to consumers rather than captured by producers.
- “Many blame (patent trolls) for a majority of the problems with the patent system. But they bring only a minority of patent suits: 17% of high-tech patent suits in the last eight years”. [6]
- “Share of hardware patent NPE suits (26%) was nearly triple that of financial patent NPE suits (9%)”
- In only 8% of suits did a large firm sue a small one (predation profile)
- Taken from a study conducted by Colleen Chien from Santa Clara University of Law
- NPEs are defined as trolls in this article
- Only 5% of patents are the subject of licensing and 1% of litigation
- Mark A. Lemley, Rational Ignorance at the Patent Office, 95 NW. U.L REV. 1495, 1507n.55(2001)
- “Lower upfront costs mean lower barriers to entry. Patents can therefore be viewed as increasing entry and competition by lowering the cost of market entry for upstream specialists”
- From article "Elves or Trolls? The role of nonpracticing patent owners in the innovation economy"
- The number of specialist biotechnology firms grew from a handful in 1975 to 4414 globally in 2007
- Ernst and Young (2008), Beyond Borders: Global Biotechnology Report 2008. [7]
- Greater number of upstream specialists
- Between 1995 and 2001, median damage awards granted to NPEs versus practicing entities were $5.2 million to $6.2 million, respectively, and this disparity grew between 2002 and 2009 as the median NPE damage award rose to $12.9 million while the median award for practicing entities fell to $3.9 million (PwC 2010 study)
- This statistic could be attributed to the definition of NPEs
- Many people define patent trolls simply as entities that hold patents with no intent of commercializing the invention. This is incredibly broad, and includes universities, individual inventors, think tanks etc.
- Non-employer firms (defined as no paid employees, has annual business receipts of $1,000 or more) are three quarters of all businesses
- According to the US Census Bureau, the mean annual revenue of businesses with less than 20 employees is about 148,000 USD. (Used file titled "U.S. & states, NAICS sectors, small employment sizes" from [9])
- Mean annual revenue of businesses with less than 500 employees is 403,000 USD.
PWC 2014 Patent Litigation Study
- In 2014, the annual number of patent actions filed declined for the first time since 2009. Approximately 5700 cases were filed in 2014 - representing a drop of 13%
- In contrast, the number of patents granted by the USPTO continued to grow steadily, increasing by 14% over 2014. There continues to be a very high correlation (approximately 95%) between the number of patent cases filed and patents granted.