Public Successfully Participates in U.S. Patent Examination
Process
PUBLIC
SUCCESSFULLY PARTICIPATES IN
U.S. PATENT
EXAMINATION PROCESS
Peer-to-Patent Awards
“Prior Artist” Designation in Initiative to Improve Patent
Quality
New York, NY — For the
first time in patent history, the general public has successfully used
the Internet to help improve the quality of patent applications.
The Peer-to-Patent project announced
that expert, volunteer reviewers from the general public have cooperated
with the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) to identify
“prior art” that has been used in Office actions to reject at
least one claim in each of five applications.
The Peer-to-Patent project is an
initiative of New York Law School in cooperation with
the USPTO aimed at opening the patent examination process to public
participation, and improving the quality of patents. Under the
Peer-to-Patent pilot program, inventors agree to have their patent
applications posted for up to four months on the
www.peertopatent.org Web site.
Expert volunteers from the public then discuss the applications and
submit prior art they think might be relevant to determining if an
invention is new and non-obvious, as the law requires.
The program’s first 19 patent
applications—including applications from GE, Hewlett-Packard, IBM,
Intel, Microsoft, Red Hat, and Sun Microsystems Inc., all companies that
volunteered to be part of this pilot—have been examined. For
every 500 patent applications published in 2007, the USPTO received only
one third-party prior art submission. In the Peer-to-Patent pilot,
volunteer reviewers supplied nearly four prior art references for each
pilot application - a trend which could significantly help the USPTO if
Peer-to-Patent expands beyond a pilot phase.
So far, of the first 19 first office
actions sent by the USPTO, five patent applications received non-final
rejections that relied specifically upon prior art submitted through
Peer-to-Patent. In these instances, submissions of prior art from the
public enabled the USPTO to reject claims the examiners believe fail the
novelty and non-obvious requirements that prohibit patents on inventions
that have already been invented or would have been obvious. The USPTO
response time on these office actions is notable. Because the USPTO
agreed to examine patent applications in the pilot ahead of other
applications, the time between application filing and the onset of
examination shrank from four to two years.
USPTO’s Commissioner for Patents
John Doll noted, “I hope other patent applicants look at the
processing statistics from this pilot program and realize that
Peer-to-Patent review might be a win-win situation for them. We are
encouraged by the initial success of the pilot, and we believe it holds
potential as a source of relevant prior art.”
In sending the program’s first
non-final rejection, the USPTO examiner used prior art and commentary
submitted by Steven Pearson, a senior software engineer at IBM, to reject
claims of an HP application. The second non-final rejection relied upon
prior art and commentary submitted by Rob Cameron, a Professor of
Computer Science at Simon Fraser University, to reject claims of an IBM
application. As a result, Pearson and Cameron have been awarded the
title “prior artist” on the pilot Web site.
“It is a privilege to participate
in this important project,” Steve Pearson, IBM software engineer,
said. “I’m confident these early results will help validate
that this community approach can have a meaningful impact on the
examination process and the quality of patents. Hopefully this will
encourage the participation of more domain experts in this pilot
program.”
Professor Cameron believes “it is
to everyone’s benefit—inventor, investor and the public at
large—to make the best possible effort to ensure that issued patents
are properly placed in the context of related prior art. In the future, I
think that an open, mediated review process following the trail blazed by
Peer-to-Patent should become an integral part of best practice patent
examination.”
HP and IBM will now have the
opportunity to respond to these first office actions and persuade the
examiners their claims are new and non-obvious.
“We’re very pleased with
this initial outcome,” Manny Schecter, Associate General Counsel
for Intellectual Property at IBM said. “Patents of questionable
merit are of little value to anyone. We much prefer that the best prior
art be identified so that the resulting patent is truly
bulletproof. This is precisely why we eagerly agreed to sponsor this
project and other patent quality initiatives. We are proud of this result,
which validates the concept of Peer-to-Patent, and can only improve the
quality of patents produced by the patent system.”
Launched in June of last year,
Peer-to-Patent opens the patent examination process for the first time,
enabling the public to contribute prior art and commentary relevant to
the examination of pending patent applications assigned in TC 2100
technologies with the goal of improving patent quality. On average,
each posted application has garnered a community of 14 reviewers who have
submitted five instances of prior art per application.
Peer-to-Patent is currently seeking
computer and software experts to review 13 new patent applications, on
topics ranging from photographic image inversion to managing virtual
collaboration systems. Christopher Wong, Project Manager,
Peer-to-Patent says, “We’re seeking enthusiastic and
knowledgeable people to join our diverse community and ensure the
integrity of our patent system.” Descriptions of all
applications are available at:
http://dotank.nyls.edu/communitypatent/applications.html.
About
Peer-to-Patent
Peer-to-Patent is an initiative
of New York Law School’s Institute for Information
Law and Policy in cooperation with the United States Patent and Trademark
Office (USPTO). The pilot program allows for public participation in the
patent examination process and will run for one year. The Peer-to-Patent
software and pilot program have been developed with the sponsorship of
CA, GE, HP, IBM, Intellectual Ventures, the MacArthur Foundation,
Microsoft, Omidyar Network, and Red Hat. Visit
www.peertopatent.org for more
information.