Atlanta Indian Community - AtlantaIndian.com
| | |
 


 

Why Silicon Valley Likes Obamas Patent Troll Offensive

Career
Author : Vivek Wadhwa
Add To My Favorite
Share With Your Friends



Jay CarneyTechnology companies may have backed the President'sexecutive actionsto curb patent trolling. But my first thought when reading about the move wasthat Obama was merely paying lip service to the technology community over an issue that cuts to the heart ofinnovation and job creation.Obama had failed, I thought, to go far enough. And watching White House press secretary Jay Carney hold up a picture of a crossed-out toy troll in a superhero outfit under the slogan innovation, not litigation didn't help lead me to believe otherwise.

Granted, I say this as someone who believes software patents should be abolished given that technology often becomes obsolete in the time it takes to be granted a patent. Nevertheless, I was convinced that others in the Valley would agree with me.

This wasn't enough, they'd tell me. The administration had to " and could " do more.

I started with someone who doesn't have proverbial skin in the patent game: my colleague at Stanford Law School,Mark Lemley. He'samong those at the forefront of the patent reform debate, and he fully disagreed with me. In an e-mail exchange, he told me the administration's move was far more than lip service. Then he went on, praising the White House and writing that it had done a good job of targeting real problems without attacking the patent system as a whole. So, I turned to the Valley's elite to find a like-minded spirit, focusing on the venture capitalists.

To a man (yes,women are underrepresented in the VC world), they agreed with Lemley. Several voiced their support in e-mails to me over the course of the past two weeks.

Brad Feldthought the action was very helpful and evidenced that the administration clearly understands the patent troll issue and is doing what it can to address the situation without having Congress have to change the law. But Feld, an Obama supporter, still worried that Congress might block the president's excellent recommendations.

Netscape co-founder-gone-VCMarc Andreesen, who hasgone back and forthbetween supporting Obama and former Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney,told me it looks like a positive step. Another Valley VC heavyweight,Vinod Khosla,a registered Republican, described the administration's actions in one word: good, whileangel investorRon Conway,a Republican once upon a timewho switched to undeclared, offered even more enthusiastic support, saying the move was very good and that it sends [a] great [message]. Salesforce.com CEO Marc Benioff,who has backed candidates on both sides of the aisle, was the most enthusiastic, writing, this is phenomenal for our industry, and is a game changer for all of us.

Venture capitalists, the people who invest in fledgling tech companies that stand to be trolled, tend to be pretty quiet on this issue when they're not being vague. Few dare to speak up against patent trolling firms openly because they fear companies in their portfolio will be spotlighted and slapped with lawsuits.Intellectual Ventures (IV) is among the most feared companies when it comes to patent litigation, though the company has repeatedly pushed back against the patent troll label. Instead IV describes itself as aprivately-held invention capital company, though that's not how I or many others in the Valley would describe them.According to its Web site, the company has raised $6 billion to date and gained more than $3 billion in cumulative licensing revenues. Its investorsincludeleading tech companies such as Apple, Adobe, Google, Microsoft, and Cisco, several venture funds, and universities such as Brown, Cornell, Northwestern and Stanford.

It's little wonder a cheer is going up from the Valley for Obama's proposals. So, let's hope that Congress does as the President asked. If he won't get rid of patents entirely in this fast-paced world of innovation, the least he can do is put the patent trolls out of business.


About Author
Vivek Wadhwa is Vice President of Innovation and Research at Singularity University; Fellow, Arthur & Toni Rembe Rock Center for Corporate Governance, Stanford University; Director of Research at the Center for Entrepreneurship and Research Commercialization at the Pratt School of Engineering, Duke University; and distinguished visiting scholar, Halle Institute of Global Learning, Emory University. He is author of ”The Immigrant Exodus: Why America Is Losing the Global Race to Capture Entrepreneurial Talent”–which was named by The Economist as a Book of the Year of 2012.

Wadhwa oversees the academic programs at Singularity University, which educates a select group of leaders about the exponentially growing technologies that are soon going to change our world. These advances—in fields such as robotics, A.I., computing, synthetic biology, 3D printing, medicine, and nanomaterials—are making it possible for small teams to do what was once possible only for governments and large corporations to do: solve the grand challenges in education, water, food, shelter, health, and security.

Website: http://wadhwa.com/2013/06/18/washington-post-why-silicon-valley-likes-obamas-patent-troll-offensive/

 

Disclaimer: Please use this channel at your own discretion. These articles are contributed by our users. We are not responsible or liable for any problems related to the utilization of information of these articles.

 

View All Contributions

Post an Article
Notify Me of New Articles

Become A Featured Contributor
Add Your Blog | Add Recipe | Add Article

More Article by Vivek Wadhwa

What the U.S. can learn from Indias move toward a cashless society
Why 2017 is the year of the bot
What Stephen Hawking gets right and wrong about the most dangerous time for our planet
These 6 new technology rules will govern our future
Fake news is just the beginning
View All Articles

Featured Contributors


Praveen Nair

Darshan Goswami

Christine Dunbar
Christine Dunbar

Ananya Kiran

Vasudha Sharma

Dilip Saraf
Dilip Saraf

Vivek Wadhwa

Rima Arora

Shruti Sadolkar
Shruti Sadolkar

Latest Articles

Akshay Kumar, R. Madhavan, and Ananya Panday starrer to be titled "Shankara" - A Riveting Period Drama Backed by Karan Johar by Staff
Khushi Patel Triumphs as Miss India Worldwide 2022 and Secures Christian Dior Runway Walk in New York by Staff
Tabu, Kareena Kapoor Khan and Kriti Sanon starrer "Crew" To have a Grand Landing across 1100+ Locations Overseas by Staff
THE PURPOSE OF LIVING by Darshan Goswami
Naarifirst Chief Aikta Sharma Announces Actress Malaika Arora as a beauty pageant Brand Ambassador by Staff
View All Articles