CCIA Calls for Innovation, Reform With PTO Appointees
1/26/2009
The Computer & Communications Industry Association is calling on
the Obama Administration to appoint people to the Commerce Department
and Patent and Trademark Office to who can bring reform and encourage
innovation. CCIA said this is an area where change is needed and we
must break the tie between bureaucracy and the special interests, which
have captured this area.
“We have to recognize that the entire
intellectual property system – patents, copyrights and trademarks – is
in crisis and loosing credibility. The Administration needs someone who
can bring reform instead of just attacking critics,” said CCIA
President & CEO Ed Black.
“IP policy has been administered with a sort of ‘you’re with us or
against us approach’ and you couldn’t propose reforms without being
pigeonholed as anti-IP,” Black said. "However much we believe
copyright, patents, and trademarks are valuable, it has become
abundantly clear that too much IP protection can be as harmful as too
little, and that the structure, limitations and exceptions of IP need
attention if the overall system is to function well for all of society."
CCIA is also asking the Obama Administration to designate an
Undersecretary for Intellectual Property who can address the broad
challenges in innovation policy facing the nation. "We need someone who
is a visionary, as well as a manager and a diplomat," Black said. "PTO
can be important to making innovation work, but it needs to be
connected to broader thinking about innovation and concerned with
results, not just churning out patents."
The Undersecretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property not only
oversees the operations of the Patent and Trademark Office but is
charged with advising the administration on intellectual property
policy which has become more complicated in a global economy and our
digital era.
In the patent area alone, today there is a growing backlog of over 1.2
million patent applications awaiting approval. The Office lacks
capacity to conduct economic analysis; and there is growing concern
that the patent system is not working well for important areas of the
economy, including information technology and services. Innovators in
information technology are faced with thousands, even hundreds of
thousands of patents, and the need to hire lawyers to interpret and
evaluate them.
The patent bar has asked the Obama Administration to appoint someone
experienced in patent law. "While we would all like our interests
represented by one of our own, the patent system has grown too diverse,
complex, and controversial to be left to lawyers,” Black said. “Any
good attorney must be familiar with the details of patent law, and
there are plenty of them at the PTO. We need somebody who can bring the
whole of patent policy into the 21st Century with a objective
understanding of the system's strengths, weaknesses, and limitations."
In addition, CCIA has advocated an independent Institute for Innovation
Economics and Patent Policy as essential element to making the system
work effectively for all sectors. "Without evidence-based analysis,
there is no alternative to the loudest voices of the biggest customers,
i.e., patent lawyers and the industries most dependent on patents, most
notably pharmaceuticals," Black said.
For the past three years, patent reform has been stymied by
inter-industry disputes over the proper scope of reform. During the
last Congress, the administration played only a reactive role,
eventually opposing the reform legislation, although supporting parts
of it. Brian Kahin, CCIA Senior Fellow, explained: "Business as usual
is not an option. The Obama Administration needs to lead, not only in
addressing the immediate needs for reform, but in reinventing the
framework for patent policy."