Efficient Infringement Rewards Copycats and Erodes Competition | IPWatchdog Unleashed

For much of the last four decades, American innovation policy has rested on a premise that should be obvious but too often is not: strong intellectual property rights are not an obstacle to competition. Quite the opposite—strong IP rights are the precursor to robust competition. The alternative to a robust patent system is not some frictionless utopia of open competition. The alternative is secrecy, copying, and underinvestment. If patents are too weak, companies will rely more heavily on trade secrets. That means less disclosure, less technical diffusion, and fewer opportunities for others to build upon what has been invented. Weak patents do not democratize innovation—they often bury it. Weak patents also reward copycats who find it far more expedient and financially rewarding to take rather than to innovate themselves. These truths were the main point at the center of my recent conversation with Alden Abbott, Senior Research Fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University and former General Counsel of the Federal Trade Commission.

Federal Circuit Affirms Patent Ineligibility of Farming Data Collection Patents

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (CAFC) in a precedential decision today affirmed a district court ruling that five AGI SureTrack agricultural technology patents are directed to patent-ineligible subject matter under 35 U.S.C. § 101. It also vacated the finding of no exceptionality and remanded for further proceedings on whether Farmers Edge is entitled to attorney’s fees under 35 U.S.C. § 285. Circuit Judge Mayer authored the opinion, joined by Chief Judge Moore and Circuit Judge Lourie.

Trump Nominates Peter-Anthony Pappas to ITC

Peter-Anthony Pappas, Director of Intellectual Property Policy for the U.S. Senate, Committee on the Judiciary, has been nominated by President Donald Trump to be a Member of the United States International Trade Commission for the remainder of the term expiring June 16, 2026, followed by a term expiring June 16, 2035. Pappas serves as Director of Intellectual Property Policy for the Senate Judiciary Committee under Senator Thom Tillis (R-NC), who is presently the Chairman of the Subcommittee on Intellectual Property (IP) but will be retiring after this year

The Business-First IP Playbook: David Hyams on Mapping Business Value and the Limits of General LLMs

In the latest episode of IP Innovators, host Steve Brachmann sits down with David Hyams, Co-Founder and Chief Business Development Officer of Longship Legal, to explore what it looks like to build an IP practice around business value rather than patent volume. Drawing on a career that spans big law in Boston, in-house roles at Bose Corporation and AOL, and a cleantech startup, Hyams makes a case that the most important questions in IP strategy have nothing to do with patentability, and everything to do with understanding what a company is actually trying to win.

Computer and Automotive Industries Urge SCOTUS to Eliminate the PTAB’s ‘Settled Expectations’ Doctrine

On Friday, a series of computer and automotive industry trade organizations representing most of the top filers of inter partes review (IPR) proceedings at the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB) filed a brief with the U.S. Supreme Court urging the Court to grant Google’s petition for writ of certiorari that ultimately challenges the PTAB’s settled expectations doctrine as developed under the current U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) administration.

Patent Pruning Is Not Optional: Why Portfolio Discipline Must Be a Core IP Function

Most patent portfolios are overbuilt and under-managed. That is not a criticism of any particular company or patent department. It is simply the predictable result of how patent portfolios are created. Companies innovate. Business leaders demand more filings. Engineers generate invention disclosures. Outside counsel prosecute applications. Patents issue. Then years pass, products change, markets move on, competitors pivot, and strategic priorities evolve. Often—if not frequently—the patent portfolio remains the same, as if legacy assumptions and strategy remain relevant even though they no longer match business or market realities.

Olympic Games 2028 Preparation Part I: Never Too Soon to Get Your IP Strategy in Order

There’s a great deal of excitement and preparation for the Olympic Games, which will come to Los Angeles and Oklahoma City in 2028. Those of us in Oklahoma City are thrilled to host two events on behalf of LA28, softball and canoe slalom. If you are a business owner in one of these cities, you may be thinking, “How can I capitalize on the Olympic Games coming to my city?” This is the first of several helpful articles in which we will walk you through the myriad of legal issues and opportunities associated with hosting the Olympic Games.

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