Thoughts
on Patent Defense
and How to Fight Knockoffs
by
Mike Marks
In a perfect world
the patent that the government issues to me would be automatically and
vigorously defended by that same government. When a product that violated
the claims of my patent hit the market the all-knowing (and benevolent)
government would immediately dispatch law enforcers to remove the offending
product from the shelves and plow it into the earth. Alas, as we all
know all too well, the world is far from perfect.
It’s bad enough
to spend some $20,000 to get a patent to issue. The cost of defending
a patent can rise into millions. How does an independent inventor fight
a large corporation with limitless resources? What does an inventor
do if the value of the patent is probably less than the cost of defending
it?
The first time I
saw a product that violated a patent of mine was at a tradeshow. I got
red in the face, went up to the salespeople in the trade show booth
and loudly demanded that the offending product be removed. They put
the product away… until I walked off. When I went back an hour
later, surprise, surprise, the product was back on display. So I took
the General Manager aside and said (I was calm now), “Listen,
you’re blatantly violating x,y,z claims of 2 of our patents. Here
are copies of the patents I’m talking about. Why don’t you
go around our patents by changing this and that. If you make those changes
you’ll have an inferior product but the product cost will be less.
There’s no reason for us all to waste a lot of time and money
in court.” The General Manager replied, “You’re being
decent about this. You know what, I’ll do as you suggest.”
They pulled the product off the market, made the changes I’d suggested
and reintroduced it a year later. The redesigned product failed. The
outcome was perfect.
The next time we
were knocked off we ended up in courts in Taiwan and the USA. The bottom
line from that experience was that winning an infringement suit in Taiwan
was worth almost nothing – the copycat was slapped on the wrist
and kept on copying. In the USA the copycat (a different one) backed
off before we went into court. The cost was around $50,000 in legal
fees for each country, a total of $100,000. The good news is that knockoffs
of this product, in the USA at least, have not been a problem since
then. The only reason I can see to get a patent in Taiwan or China is
that some day in the future the patent might be worth defending in those
countries. In the meantime we now spend money defending patents only
in countries where winning in court truly enables us to stop infringement.
In the examples
cited above I was writing about small companies that engaged in blatant
violations. What happens when the violation is not so blatant and the
company doing the violating is humungous? The discussion below is not
based on personal experience but on information I’ve gleaned from
speaking with attorneys about my company’s patents. This is not
legal advice. I’m not a lawyer.
Imagine I have a
patent claim issued for “…a square recess.” Now imagine
that a large corporation is making my invention with a more or less
square recess. Is there a violation if the recess is mostly square,
perhaps incorporating small flats in each corner? If I asked a patent
attorney, depending on many details, the likely answer would be one
of three choices: 1) maybe or 2) possibly or 3) perhaps (and I’d
spend $5,000 to $10,000 to get that in writing).
Let’s make
the matter squishier by adding that I believe I might earn something
like $75,000 by licensing the patent. In other words, the cost of fighting
the violation could very well and very quickly exceed the earnings I
might receive… even if I win.
As I’ve learned
recently, the first thing I should NOT do is to write the corporation
a cease and desist letter. If I do that I could be sued by the corporation
for threatening them. I could quickly spend $20,000 answering a lawsuit
against me! However, I have been told that (check with your attorney
before doing this), if I include an offer to license my patent along
with the assertion that it is being violated, then there are no grounds
for being sued. In other words, if licensing is a possibility then I
should make the offer to license my patent at the same time I assert
that the corporation is violating it. In combining the offer with the
accusation I should (again, check with your attorney) avoid being sued.
Legally speaking
the corporation doesn’t need to recognize my patent until I’ve
told them about it. It seems that just having the patent issued is probably
not enough to meet the requirement of informing an infringer. It might
be enough to have a patent number written on a product that is publicly
available. Sending a certified letter with a copy of my patent and a
discussion of how a claim in the patent is being violated should cerainly
qualify. There are many possible pitfalls in this process and there's
no way I'd proceed without hand holding from an experienced patent attorney.
Once the corporation has been informed they become liable for treble
(3X) damages starting from the day I informed them… but not before.
Thus, it makes sense to tell a corporation that they’re violating
my patent sooner rather than later.
There’s one
other thing to be aware of. If I don’t use it I lose it. This
concept is called “laches” which means undue delay or negligence
in asserting my legal rights. In practice, once I’ve accused the
corporation of violating my patent, even if I include an offer to license
it, even though 3X damages are accruing, the corporation might choose
to ignore me. Even if I begin negotiations I might not reach an agreement.
In either case, if there is no agreement then my next step is to initiate
a lawsuit. The good news is that I should have somewhere between 1-6
years, from the time of either, a) informing the company or, b) failure
of negotiations, to initiate the lawsuit. In the meantime the 3X damages
continue to accrue.
If the patent violating
product is successful the violating company will have a strong incentive
to settle. If the product is a dud then they might well ignore me until
since 3X nothing = nothing.
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