The present invention, known as the Intellectual Property Pre-Market Engine (IPPME) relates generally to the field of automated entity, data processing, system control, and data communications, and more specifically to an integrated method, system, and apparatus supporting transactions among buyers and sellers of intellectual property, especially intellectual property holdings that are “in progress” in the sense that they are only partially complete, or they are not yet authorized by regulatory bodies. The market also supports options to be transacted on top of the underlying intellectual property holdings.
The present invention relates generally to the field of automated entity, data processing, system control, and data communications, and consists of a system for obtaining bids and offers for complete or in-progress intellectual property holdings or for options associated with those holdings. Because it is advantageous to have a single “mart” for intellectual property holdings (intellectual property holding), the IPPME is available for complete intellectual property holding as well as those in progress. The IPPME supports an extensive variety of complete and in-progress holdings and options, including holdings and options pertaining to Patents, Trademarks, and Copyrights. For most of the following discussion, the example of patent holdings is presented, but analogous arguments can be made for trademarks, copyrights, and their associated assets.
According to statistics released by the USPTO, patent abandonment has increased sharply, having nearly doubled in the years 2004-2008. Additionally, studies have shown a decreasing willingness of patent holders to pay maintenance fees. Some of this phenomena can be related to higher standards at the USPTO (resulting in fewer allowances) and to the chaotic market for innovation, which orphans entire branches of technology, driven by substitution, globalization, and outright faddism. Unfortunately, we cannot guarantee that only bad patents are abandoned, nor can we guarantee that only useless patents die for lack of maintenance fees. Because patent prosecution is typically lengthy (pendencies of four years are not unusual) and because prosecution is relatively expensive, (average legal costs for prosecution software patents are estimated to be in the neighborhood of $25,000) many patent owners simply run out of money before they can prevail in the prosecution. This “unjustified' destruction of intellectual property hits hardest in small businesses and individual inventors—the very people who provide most of the innovation and growth in the economy.
Business create patents because they expect to be successful. For large businesses, this is often an expectation of continued success, and the development of a large patent portfolio allows them to negotiate licensing from an advantageous position. Lack of a patent portfolio can doom large businesses to competition strictly on cost, and to commoditization. Trademarks, especially those well known to the public, or engaging of a particular market audience, can also be valuable IPHs. Similarly, in progress or complete copyrightable works, including computer software, art, literature and music have value to a portfolio holder that are potentially distinct from their current market value.
For small businesses, the situation is somewhat different. A patent represents an option which is typically only exercised if the business becomes successful via application of the particular innovation. If the innovation turns out to be useless, the patent (and often the business) may be abandoned. If the innovation is highly successful, then a patent, or even a pending patent application, can prevent even the largest and most predatory infringers from simply stealing the idea. Bad ideas are not the only things that kill small businesses. Lack of capital, market fluctuation, cost of labor, and cost of materiel, and inter-personal breakdowns can also spell doom. These businesses are often left with intellectual property assets “in the pipeline” and may have no way of monetizing those assets. This circumstance represents a waste for all of the parties involved—the inventors or assignees—who may be discarding property, the USPTO, which has invested time and expertise in developing prime facie challenges to the patent, with the goal of sharpening the patent's statement, and the general society, which loses the capital and jobs generated by the IP assets, and may lose technological or artistic benefits, which often languish without capital investment.
In contrast to most financial markets, especially commodity markets, the value of many intellectual property holdings is extremely context dependent. The value of IP is highly dependent on technological and market capabilities of the companies or other entities that acquire it. Thus, an effective market in intellectual property holdings must consider not only the intrinsic value of the intellectual property holding, but also the context-dependent component of that value to the buyer.
An additional concern for owners of in-progress intellectual property holdings is the need to maintain secrecy during the evolution of the intellectual property holding. In the case of patents pending, this may be accomplished by requesting non-publication during the patent's examination. In the case of copy-written material, an author may disclose some elements, artifacts or metadata concerning the intellectual property holding, without disclosing the entirety. This prevents market participants other than the IP owner from obtaining an early sample for (unwarranted) activities such as illegal copying. Another reason for desiring confidentiality with respect to IP development is that an intellectual property holding may not want to telegraph areas of research to market or technology competitors.
Thus, what is needed is a system that can provide market liquidity for intellectual property holdings and can support buyers and sellers of various types of in-progress or complete intellectual property holdings, and for options associated with underlying intellectual property holdings, and for aggregations of intellectual property holdings of all types. The presence of such a market will permit inventors and assignees to realize at least some of the value of their assets, and will often allow them to fund continued prosecution by writing options on the in-progress work, or by selling some intellectual property holdings to fund the development of others. This system must also support intellectual property holding and intellectual property holding owner confidentiality where that confidentiality is requested.
There is an existing auction for patents, run by ICAP Ocean Tomo. This service is valuable for holders of issued patents, and for companies specifically desiring a particular patent, but does not provide a protocol designed to support the needs of intellectual property pre-market participants. Another organization, patentauction.com, offers a free service to buyers and sellers of patents, and allows listing of both patented and patent-pending inventions, but provides no way for IP holders to mitigate the disclosure risk involved in advertising pending intellectual property. Additionally, some companies, exemplified by The Hutter Group, LLC. act as “patent matchmakers” who facilitate arrangements between patent owners and potential buyers. These services are also aimed primarily at completed IP (e.g. patents that have issued) rather than in-progress IP. Additionally, some efforts have been made to securitize intellectual property by “selling” it in smaller pieces as described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,228,288 to Elliott entitled “Method of repeatedly securitizing intellectual property assets and facilitating investments therein”, and by writing contracts on patent licenses, as described in United States Application 20060259315 to Malackowski et al. entitled “Intellectual property trading exchange and a method for trading intellectual property rights. U.S. Pat. No. 7,386,460 to Frank, et al.; discloses a “System and method for developing and implementing intellectual property marketing” and U.S. Pat. No. 7,346,518 to Frank , et al. discloses “System and method for determining the marketability of intellectual property assets”—taken together, these inventions are primarily aimed at helping the intellectual property holder monitize his holdings, and make informed decisions with respect to the market.
US Application 20090024513 to Arst, et al. discloses “Methods For Intellectual Property Transactions” and provides a method for establishing a options to purchase or sell IP ownership at (pre determine) prices. This mechanism supports at least some degree of hedging among IP owners and (potential) IP acquirers. US Patent Application 20080140557 to Bowlby et al. discloses an “On-Line Auction System and Method” which supports conditional transfer of rights and factional transaction of rights. U.S. Pat. No. 7,272,572 to Pienkos describes a “Method and system for facilitating the transfer of intellectual property” involving intermediaries who aid in the transfer of intellectual property rights, and providing verification of the value or technological scope of the patent. US Patent Application 20060100948 to Millien, et al. discloses “Methods for creating and valuating intellectual property rights-based financial instruments”, aimed at valuing intellectual property via a pricing system that applies a hedging model to the property right. Though these services, especially when extended to in-progress intellectual property, provide a potential means of monetizing incomplete intellectual property, and even a capability of treating intellectual property holdings as options, they do not offer a market particularly suited to the succession of stages of in-progress value creation and value realization. US Patent Application 20030101073 to Vock, describes a “System and methods for strengthening and commercializing intellectual property”—which includes the publication of pending intellectual property for public view and comment. Such a system is ill-suited to monetization of intellectual property that has not yet been fully disclosed.
The current invention provides IP creators and owners with many opportunities to monetize their holdings throughout the development of their property. In the early stages of IP development, owners are justified in their reluctance to disclose material that could compromise the future value of their holdings. At the same time, capital is often needed to complete development, manufacturing, marketing, distribution etc. of properties, and that capital is not given blindly. Additionally, IP holders often face portfolio decisions, where some assets must be dropped in order to pursue others. These “dropped” assets have value, but that value is often unrealized. The present invention supports these IP holders by using IP descriptors that can be used to market the IP without monolithic disclosure of all of its aspects to any single entity, including the IP purchaser. For the IP purchaser, the present invention also offers advantages, as the IP descriptors provide standardized indexing and screening of inventions, and can also provide a level of verification through the use of independent evaluators. IP purchasers can be Venture Capitalists who plan to develop businesses using the holdings, Manufacturers, holders of existing IP portfolio, Media Companies, and financial ventures who seek diversification. Thus the invention provides sellers a market that for property that is ill-served by existing exchanges, and provides buyers with opportunities, practical specificity, protection, and liquidity that is missing in the current IP market. Note that in much of the description that follows, the mechanisms outlined can be used for completed IP as well as in-progress IP, and that a market with general protocols that can handle either completed IP or in-progress IP describes limitations that are not needed for markets consisting purely of completed IP. Once the market for in-progress IP is established, it is anticipated that many types of IP enjoy that market throughout their lifetime, even after they are considered “complete”—as the convenience of finding, and the record of previous evaluation will be useful even for completed IP, after it has initially been marketed as “in-progress” IP. Also note that the thresholds of “completion” are not as crisp as is sometimes assumed by the public. For instance, the scope of claims in issued patents may be expanded up to two years beyond the issuance of those patents, as long as the scope has not previously been surrendered during prosecution. Additionally, patent families have “live” elements for years after the first patent has issued.
In more detail, the present invention integrates several components that are necessary to flexibly provide an intellectual property pre-market system, apparatus, and related services among one or more entities, including: a computer implemented method for providing an intellectual property pre-market among generalized actors comprising the steps of: obtaining at least one intellectual property holding offer from at least one intellectual property holding offerer; obtaining a plurality of intellectual property partial descriptions referring to the intellectual property holding; providing the at least one intellectual property partial description from the plurality of intellectual property partial descriptions to at least one potential intellectual property holding bidder; obtaining at least one intellectual property holding bid from the at least one intellectual property holding bidder; matching the intellectual property holding bid to the intellectual property holding offer; providing the matched intellectual property holding bid and intellectual property holding offer as data that is stored and communicated by the computer system; and a computer implemented method for providing intellectual property pre-market matching among generalized actors comprising the steps of: obtaining at least one first intellectual property description from at least one first generalized actor; obtaining at least one intellectual property holding offer context from the first generalized actor; obtaining at least one second intellectual property description from at least one second generalized actor; obtaining at least one intellectual property holding bid context from the second generalized actor; constructing at least one first set of matches between the intellectual property holding offer and the intellectual property holding bid, in light of the intellectual property holding offer context and the intellectual property holding bid context; selecting at least one subset of appropriate matches from the a first set of matches; and using the appropriate matches to create a market allocating intellectual property holding bids to intellectual property holding offers.
Note that in the following discussion, the word “processor” is used in a generic sense, which indicates merely the ability to execute computer language instructions. The processor can actually be implemented as a virtual machine, and the computer implemented steps can be executed within either a “heavyweight” process or a thread running on such a machine or processor. Computer architectures are moving increasingly to multiple processor approaches, exploiting MPP, and SMP, cluster, grid approaches, and multi-cpu cores, thus allowing software systems that can exploit these architectures to become increasingly practical for business, scientific, and consumer applications.
Computer-accessible artifact (computer accessible artifact): An item of information, media, work, data, or representation that can be stored, accessed, and communicated by a computer.
Data Mining, Knowledge Discovery: The practice of searching stores of data for information, knowledge, data or patterns, specifically for the non-trivial extraction of useful information incorporating computational techniques from statistics, machine learning, pattern recognition and artificial intelligence.
Data source: An accessible repository or generator of data, such as a database, simulation, or sensor stream, typically in a structured format such as a CSV, flat-file, relational database, network database, delimited structure, index file, data file, document collection, web-site or database.
Generalized actor (generalized actor): one user or a group of users, or a group of users and software agents, or a computational entity acting in the role of a user, which behaves in a way to achieve some goal.
Scalability: The ability of a computer system, architecture, network or process which allows it to pragmatically meet demands for larger amounts of processing by use of additional processors, memory, and connectivity.
Data Mining or Machine Learning method: A method of building a model to make predictions about the value of variables or about the identity or category of variables, by examining relevant data and constructing a relationship that may be used to make predictions given subsequent data, including but not limited to the methods of: AdaBoost, artificial neural networks, auto-regressive integrated moving averages, bagging, Bayesian analysis clustering, Bayesian influence networks, boosting, C4.5, C5.0, Chi-square automatic interaction detection, clustering by expectation, competitive learning, constrained association rule approaches, density-based clustering, deviation-based outlier detection, distance-based outlier detection, error minimization via robust optimization, frequent-pattern tree approaches, generalization-tree approaches, generalized autoregressive conditional heteroskedastic methods, hidden-Markov models, hierarchical learning, hypergraph partitioning algorithms, ID3, incremental conceptual clustering, inductive logic programming, inferred rules, Kalman filtering, kernel methods, k-means clustering, k-medoids clustering, latent semantic indexing, linear regression, Logit regression, multi-resolution grid clustering, non-linear regression, one-R, principal component analysis, radial basis functions, regression tree approaches, robust clustering using links, rough-set classifiers, Self-organizing maps, stacking, support vector machines, the direct hashing and pruning algorithm, the dynamic itemset counting algorithm, time-series learning, unsupervised learning, vertical itemset partitioning algorithms, vertical-layout algorithms, Voronoi diagrams, wagging, wavelets, and zero-R.
Detailed descriptions of exemplary embodiments of the IPPME invention and the accompanying figures, provide specific and general illustrations of exemplary embodiments wherein the invention may be practiced. Descriptions of the exemplary embodiments provide sufficient detail to enable those skilled in the art to practice the invention without undue experimentation, given existing technologies well-known in the art. Obvious other embodiments can be utilized wherein changes to various aspects of the invention may be implemented without departing from the spirit of the invention. The descriptions are not to be taken in any limiting sense, but are presented so as to illustrate specific embodiments of the instant invention. Discussions of the following detailed descriptions are presented in terms of computer instructions, computer representations, and symbolic representation of data existing and or operating within at least one computer memory, computer system, module, other memory, virtual machine, collection of computers or equivalent devices. Reference to the processing and manipulation of the data reflects processing and manipulation of physical quantities within computer systems or equivalent devices, which cause a physical changes in those devices. The data manipulations are well known to those in the art, and the IPPME system, method, and apparatus produce useful, concrete and tangible results, consisting of new markets for intellectual property holdings, and mechanism to permit better and more pervasive monetization of intellectual property holdings throughout their lifetime, and mechanism to serve individual intellectual property holding owners, group intellectual property holding owners, individual intellectual property holding buyers and group intellectual property holding buyers, as well as parties, such as research and development or marketing groups who benefit indirectly from the IPPM by gaining information concerning the market value of innovations. The figures depict information flow and key tasks and preferred embodiments of the instant invention, however each embodiment's (possible, illustrated or described) ordering of steps depicted in the illustrations should be considered as exemplary and not limiting, regarding the scope of the invention. In most cases, alternative ordering of steps is useful, especially for some variations of the implementation, and those alternative ordering of steps and their descriptions are fully anticipated and encompassed by the current specification. It should also be noted that the list of potential application domains is enormous, and that the few domains mentioned are exemplary and not in any way limiting. In general, the invention can be used in varied fields such as finance, product development, venture capital formation, technology research and development, joint venture formation, technology hedging, and government funding of technology development.
the IPPME can be applied as one or more processes distributed over multiple processors, either locally or remotely or both. In a preferred embodiment, a federated, distributed computing system provides mechanisms for decentralized distributed processing of the IPPME processes, along with appropriate authorization ownership and control of artifacts and services. All of the processor-intensive operations of the IPPME can be distributed over an arbitrary number of processors.
Distributed Processing through Grid Computing, Cloud Computing and Special Purpose Parallel Computing.
Grid computing architectures employ multiple separate computers' resources connected by a network, such as an intranet and/or the Internet, to execute large-scale computational tasks by modeling a virtual computer architecture. Grids provide a framework for performing computations on large data sets, and can perform many operations by division of labor between the member processors. Grid technology supports flexible computational provisioning beyond the local (home) administrative domain. Cloud computing systems offer computing as a service, and may expose this service through either centralized entry-points, or via peer-to-peer networks. Commercial cloud computing is typically leased by time and/or resource consumption, allowing for large peak capacity at relatively low capital cost. In a preferred embodiment, the IPPME can be implemented on grid or cloud computing systems. The instant invention can also exploit additional special purpose computing resources such as single instruction, single data stream (SISD) computers, multiple instruction, single data stream (MISD) computers, single instruction, multiple data streams (SIMD) computers, multiple instruction, multiple data streams (MIMD) computers, and single program, multiple data streams (SPMD) computer architectures, and can exploit arbitrary heterogeneous combinations of specialized parallel computing systems and general-purpose computers.
The present application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/166752, filed Apr. 5, 2009, which is incorporated herein by reference
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 61166752 | Apr 2009 | US |