Patents are all about quantity, hardly about quality.
Your patents are most valuable if you have so many
that no one else can keep track of them.
It's a common misbelief that patents are granted
for ingenious inventions.
Even the patent establishment
admits that patents no longer protect huge breakthroughs.
It's the little steps that get patented these days. For instance,
Siemens alone holds about 50,000 patents. There is no way that
those are all brilliant inventions.
Patent inflation is a global problem.
On a worldwide basis, 4 million patents are valid as we speak, and
every year about 700,000 new patents are applied for. The situation
in Europe is no exception.
"The demand for patent protection in Europe continues to rise.
In 2005, the European Patent Office received a record total of over 193 600 patent
applications, 7.2% more than in the previous year. This trend is still holding:
'For the current year we expect a further increase in patent applications.
The signs are that we shall pass the 200 000 mark for the first time.'"
Alain Pompidou, President of European Patent Office
In more than half of those
cases, a patent is actually issued. Software patents is one of the
biggest growth areas of all.
number of patent applications
filed at the European Patent Office
The more patents, the more problems.
The rising
numbers of patent grants and patent applications would be good
news if this really meant more innovation. To the contrary, those
numbers show ever lower standards by the European Patent Office.
Unfortunately, each of those numerous patents is a gun,
and many of those guns
are in the hands of people and companies who have nothing
good in mind.
Click to read why patents are
reminiscent of the Cold War