Zlaxer wrote: ↑Thu Jun 20, 2019 8:12 am
Speaker to Animals wrote: ↑Thu Jun 20, 2019 8:06 am
Zlaxer wrote: ↑Thu Jun 20, 2019 8:03 am
So you're cool with the following scenario -
Startup A spends a cool $2,000,000 (all of their seed cash) developing the latest and greatest medical diagnostic software. Company B buys a copy, reverse engineers it at a cost of $100,000 and then proceeds to undercut Startup A in the market. That's apparently OK in StA- and Fife- World.
Keeping in mind that Startup A is the first to the market with this technology and has significant advantages in market share that Company B does not possess, while Company B can only begin the process of reverse engineering *after* the software hits the market, which means they have to spend considerable time reverse engineering and then using what they learned to develop their own software competitor.
No, I do not have a problem with it.
Even if Company B has a more massive infrastructure and can completely eclipse Company A in a matter of months?
Sorry - IMHO - your approach will fuck small guys everywhere more than the current patent field does.
LOL, exactly what I was going to say if you hadn't. This is how MS, Google etc got so big, they make you an offer, if you don't take it they copy you, leaving you gasping for cash with your only recourse a long patent court battle. Remember Netscape? A patent is simply a licence to sue, there's no Patent Police to protect you.
I love how every discussion of the govt here is so black and white, "don't fix it, get rid of it". Like all parts of the govt, the Patent Office is only as good as the way it's run, and especially funded. You can't have a good Patent Office, SEC or IRS if you don't fund them. No one is accusing it of fucking up on actual mechanisms, it's just seriously gone off the rails in software. Drugs are somewhere in between, they reward bullshit that protects drugs without actually improving them. The number of applications has skyrocketed, but the PTO doesn't have the funds to dig into the gazillion applications they receive, so they just approve and let the courts sort it out. It bears a strong resemblance to how the bond rating agencies gave AAA to issues they couldn't actually understand.
We are only accustomed to dealing with like twenty online personas at a time so when we only have about ten people some people have to be strawmanned in order to advance our same relative go nowhere nonsense positions. -TheReal_ND