首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Patents, said Thomas Jefferson, should draw "a line between the things which are worth to the public the embarrassment of an exc
Patents, said Thomas Jefferson, should draw "a line between the things which are worth to the public the embarrassment of an exc
admin
2011-03-10
65
问题
Patents, said Thomas Jefferson, should draw "a line between the things which are worth to the public the embarrassment of an exclusive patent, and those which are not". As the value that society places on intellectual property has increased, that line has become murkier-and the cause of some embarrassment, too. Around the world, patent offices are being inundated with applications. In many cases, this represents the extraordinary inventiveness that is occurring in new fields such as the internet, genomics and nanotechnology. But another, less-acceptable reason for the flood is that patent offices have been too lax in granting patents, encouraging many firms to rush to patent as many, often dubious, ideas as possible in an effort to erect legal obstacles to competitors. The result has been a series of messy and expensive court battles, and growing doubts about the effectiveness of patent systems as a spur to innovation, just as their importance should be getting bigger.
In 1998 America introduced so-called "business-method" patents, granting for the first time patent monopolies simply for new ways of doing business, many of which were not so new. This was a mistake. It not only ushered in a wave of new applications, but it is probably inhibiting, rather than encouraging, commercial innovation, which had never received, or needed, legal protection in the past. Europe has not, so far, made the same blunder, but the European Parliament is considering the easing of rules for innovations incorporated in software. This might have a similarly deleterious effect as business-method patents, because many of these have been simply the application of computers to long-established practices. In Japan, firms are winning large numbers of patents with extremely narrow claims, mostly to obfuscate what is new and so to ward off rivals. As more innovation happens in China and India, these problems are likely to spread there as well.
There is an urgent need for patent offices to return to first principles. A patent is a government-granted temporary monopoly (patents in most countries are given about 20 years’ protection) intended to reward innovators in exchange for a disclosure by the patent holder of how his invention works, thereby encouraging others to further innovation. The qualifying tests for patents are straightforward--that an idea be useful, novel and not obvious. Unfortunately most patent offices, swamped by applications that can run to thousands of pages and confronted by companies wielding teams of lawyers, are no longer applying these tests strictly or reliably. For example, in America, many experts believe that dubious patents abound, such as the notorious one for a "sealed crustless sandwich". Of the few patents that are re-examined by the Patent and Trademark Office itself, often after complaints from others, most are invalidated or their claims clipped down. The number of duplicate claims among patents is far too high. What happens in America matters globally, since it is the world’s leading patent office, approving about 170,000 patents each year, half of which are granted to foreign applicants.
Europe’s patent system is also in a mess in another regard: the quilt of national patent offices and languages means that the cost of obtaining a patent for the entire European Union is too high, a burden in particular on smaller firms and individual inventors. The European Patent Office may award a patent, but the patent holder must then file certified translations at national patent offices to receive protection. Negotiations to simplify this have gone on for over a decade without success.
As a start, patent applications should be made public. In most countries they are, but in America this is the case only under certain circumstances, and after 18 months. More openness would encourage rivals to offer the overworked patent office evidence with which to judge whether an application is truly novel and non-obvious. Patent offices also need to collect and publish data about what happens once patents are granted--the rate at which they are challenged and how many are struck down. This would help to measure the quality of the patent system itself, and offer some way of evaluating whether it is working to promote innovation, or to impede it.
But most of all, patent offices need to find ways of applying standards more strictly. This would make patents more difficult to obtain. But that is only right. Patents are, after all, government-enforced monopolies and so, as Jefferson had it, there should be some "embarrassment" (and hesitation in granting them.
What’s wrong with Europe’s patent system?
选项
A、Lack of a unified patent system.
B、Smaller firms and individual inventors tend to be neglected.
C、Patent protection is not secure enough.
D、Patent application process is too complex.
答案
A
解析
这题主要考的是倒数第三段的内容。欧洲专利制度与美国相比存在另一方面的问题,造成某种混乱的局面,即欧洲各国专利局各自为政,加之各国语言差异,造成种种障碍。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/zjYO777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
Onethingthatdistinguishestheonlineworldfromtherealoneisthatitisveryeasytofindthings.TofindacopyofTheEc
Youshouldnotfearspidersthankstotheirpoison.Ofallthespidersin【M1】______NorthAmerica,onlyonekindisreallyda
Youshouldnotfearspidersthankstotheirpoison.Ofallthespidersin【M1】______NorthAmerica,onlyonekindisreallyda
EducationinU.K.iscompulsoryforallbetweenagesof______.
Paris:ThankstoaFrenchinsurancecompany,bridesandbridegroomswithcoldfeetnolongerfacefinancialdisasterfromacanc
TheChamberlain’sMen,inShakespeare’stime,werearemarkablegroupofpeople-excellent______whowerealsobusinesspartners
Therecentsurgeinoilpricestoroughly$55abarrelteachessomeusefullessons.Oneisthatsurpriseshappen.Ayearagofut
Insixteenth-centuryItalyandeighteenth-centuryFrance,waningprosperityandincreasingsocialunrestledtherulingfamilies
A、Psychoanalyst.B、Estateagent.C、Farmer.D、Gardener.B
随机试题
简述晚清教育制度变革。(天津师范大学2018年中国史真题)
了解智力活动的动作结构,明确活动的方向是智力技能形成哪一阶段的特点()
肯定不能用来做肝肿瘤显像剂是下列哪种
血中淀粉酶按血浆酶的来源与分类属于
以下与地西泮不相符的叙述是
可供选择的分摊方法有()。
正铲挖掘机特别适用于与运输车辆配合开挖土方路堑,正铲工作面的高度一般不应小于()m。
股票发行采取溢价发行的,其发行价格由发行人与()协商确定。
套期保值的原则包括()。Ⅰ.买卖方向对应的原则Ⅱ.品种相同原则Ⅲ.数量相等原则Ⅳ.月份相同或相近原则
求极限
最新回复
(
0
)