Patent Reform Encourages Invention And Protects Ideas

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By Lamar SmithReal Clear Politics:
Few issues are as important to the economic strength of the United States as our ability to create and protect intellectual property. American IP industries account for over half of all U.S. exports, represent 40% of the country’s economic growth and employ 18 million Americans. A recent study valued U.S. intellectual property at $5 trillion dollars - or about half of the U.S. Gross Domestic Product.

Whether it’s a mouse trap in your home or iPod in your hand, intellectual property plays a critical role in both our day-to-day lives and the global economy. Patents protect intellectual property and preserve the financial and competitive incentives that often drive invention.

While IP industries have soared, patent law has remained virtually unchanged since the 1950s. The Patent Reform Act of 2007 updates current law to better protect intellectual property, enhance patent quality and increase public confidence in the integrity of patents.

Specifically, the Act addresses two significant problems with the system.

First, because of the rapidly expanding fields of technology, too many patents of questionable integrity have been approved. The new law creates a post-grant opposition system to weed out bad patents. Read on.

 

Also read:

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  • How Vital Patents Can Be
  • Inventors Beware Protect Your Money And Invention
  • Patent Searching Online
  • Protect Your Invention Idea By Taking Notes Right Away
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