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Authored by: Wol on Thursday, June 07 2012 @ 05:18 PM EDT |
Not necessarily accompany the application (what if you're patenting a 4-6-2
Pacific?).
But the patent should include proof the patented item actually exists, and
should there ever be a court case, the plaintiff MUST be able to produce the
invention to the court.
Cheers,
Wol[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: nuthead on Saturday, June 09 2012 @ 03:53 PM EDT |
Make businesses pay a property tax on every patent. If their IP is truly the
valuable real property they claim it is, make them pay like they do on the other
real property and make the tax based on the value of the patent. If the company
claims it's worth billions, them tax them based on that figure. If they claim
it's not hardly worth anything (to reduce the amount of tax) then they can't
exceed that value in court if they sue. [ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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