I have pointed out before that patent and copyright law have only gotten worse over time, almost never better, except by some occasional judicial interpretations of the patent and copyright statutes,1 which is inevitable since these so-called “IP” laws grant artificial, unjust, and nonobjective IP rights.2 The copyright term has increased from 14/28 years to well over 100; criminal penalties have been added; and its scope has increased to cover software, video, and so on even though the Constitution only speaks of “writings.”
The only exceptions that come to mind is that for copyright, the DMCA, and for defamation, the CDA, gave platforms/ISPs some protection from liability for infringing/defamatory acts of users (see Grok summary).
And for patent, AIA’s expansion of the prior commercial user defense in 2011, and 1997 limits on enforcement of patents on surgery procedures.3
A recent IPWatchdog podcast, Patent Damages on Trial: Rule 702 and the Daubert Conundrum (July 18, 2026) (transcript below) discusses recent changes to how damages can be proved in patent infringement litigation. It’s hosted by patent shill and buffoon Gene Quinn4 and includes a bunch of legal positivist, mainstream patent lawyers etc.
They are whining in part about how difficult the federal courts are making it to “scientifically” prove damages. For example, suppose you make a phone that has some chip that uses a technique that slightly speeds up computation time or slightly increases battery efficiency, and this allegedly infringes a patent on this technique or circuit. Suppose the phone sells for $700. How much of that $700 is “attributable” to the tiny component? Nobody knows, or can know; the question is ill defined and unanswerable. But you have to give an answer, since you have to “apportion” damages somehow. The panelists below discuss the “the 25% rule”—the previous rules that posited that a reasonable royalty is roughly 25% of the infringer’s expected profits—originated in a non-representative sample of mid-20th-century Swiss chemical licenses and had no scientific foundation, which was rejected by the Federal Circuit in Uniloc USA, Inc. v. Microsoft Corp., 632 F.3d 1292 (Fed. Cir. 2011), as failing the reliability requirements of Daubert and Rule 702 (Grok elaboration). [continue reading…]
- See Grok elaboration; Kinsella, “Radical Patent Reform Is Not on the Way,” Mises Daily (Oct. 1, 2009); The Mainstream Patent Pendulum Swings Back; “Patent Reform is Here! O Joy!” (Mar. 23, 2011); “How to Improve Patent, Copyright, and Trademark Law.” [↩]
- Intellectual Property versus Intellectual Property Rights. [↩]
- See Grok summary; Kinsella, “The America Invents Act and Patent Reform: The Good, the Meh, and the Ugly,” C4SIF.org (2011); “Prior User Rights and Patent Reform”; Kinsella, “Obama’s Patent Reform: Improvement or Continuing Calamity?,” Mises Daily (2011); Kinsella, “Common Misconceptions about Plagiarism and Patents: A Call for an Independent Inventor Defense,” stephankinsella.com (November 21, 2009); 1964 Hippocratic Oath and Patents; Kinsella & Rosenthal, “How to Operate Within the Law: Patents on Medical Procedures” (Duane Morris website version), The Legal Intelligencer [Philadelphia] (Feb. 5, 1998); Industry Opposition to Patent Challenges; Trump’s Plan to Raise Patent Office Fees: Thumbs Up; “The America Invents Act and Patent Reform: The Good, the Meh, and the Ugly,” Mises Daily (Nov. 14, 2011). [↩]
- See posts at c4sif.org, stephankinsella.com, e.g. Desperate Patent Troll’s Plan to get Trump to Unblock his old patent applications to replace tariff games; A “Patent Stimulus” to End the Recession? (arguing for a “patent stimulus plan”: “If we really want to get out of this economic downturn we need a Patent Stimulus Plan. … What we need to do is have President Obama issue an Executive Order directing the Patent Office to start allowing patents.”). This genius doesn’t even know his degree is an LL.M. not a L.L.M. See here and here; Kinsella, How the History of Patents Can Teach Us What a World Without Them Might Be Like. [↩]





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