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Previous comments... You are currently on page 4.
This started under Bush 2 when he appointed Jon Dudas (not a patent attorney or technical) as the head of the patent office. Technical Dudas' actions were illegal in multiple ways. There was at least one lawsuit against the patent office on point.
The next director of the patent office changes this, but the attitude remains in many parts of the patent office and may be the attitude of the new director of the patent office.
I just dont see how this is fair at all under the current system.
If any good comes from the patents, its that it encourages others to get around the patents, which does nothing to preserve the intellectual property of the original patent holder at all.
No one opposes patents per se (though I have met people who oppose copyright). But there are many such as myself who believe that there need to be reasonable limits on intellectual property awards -- not only on their duration, but on what they prohibit competitors from doing without permission -- because when original owners have the right to ban derived works for decades or longer, that power can be and often is used to prevent more innovation than the patent enables.
It's even worse when IP awards are retroactively extended for decades longer. That obviously can't cause any new inventions whatsoever.
As the post made clear your position is so outrageous that it is clear that you are not interested in reason.
The issue comes down to your own time and whether or not you own your time...and hence your life (and the products thereof).
This is the metaphysical basis of Objectivism and individualism.
I also notice that while you were choosing to insult someone who disagreed with you, you also avoided the thrust of the argument to focus on one (or two, maybe even three?) historical incidents - namely that independent invention is not rare as you claim, but as shown by data and research to be the norm rather than the exception.
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