Broad Patents Can Be Both Lucrative and Expensive

Patent attorneys often attempt to get the broadest possible coverage for a client's invention because that can usually make the patent quite lucrative.  Patenting broad claims can be expensive during the patent procurement process because patent examiners are reluctant to let broad claims issue and so there may be multiple back-and-forth communications between the patent examiners and patent attorneys.  However, patents with overbroad claims can be expensive to keep enforceable, e.g., when a third party requests the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office (USPTO) to reexamine an issued patent in view of prior art. 

For example, the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) has apparently requested the USPTO to reexamine U.S. Patent No. 7,568,213.  According to the EFF, this patent is purportedly directed to "podcasting."  When a patent is under reexamination, the patent holder must expend resources (e.g., patent attorney fees) to work with the USPTO to define the appropriate scope of the patent's claims in view of the newly identified asserted prior art.

During prosecution, patent attorneys, inventors, and anyone involved in a patent application have a duty to cite all pertinent prior art they are aware of.  However, it is nearly impossible in most fields of human endeavor for the patent attorney, patent examiner, or even the inventor to be aware of all pertinent prior art.  Thus, it is quite easy for overbroad patent claims to issue.  Sometimes, the best prior art is not even found until the patent is asserted in an infringement lawsuit because the alleged infringer is motivated to prove that it is not infringing a valid patent. 

Thus, smart patent attorneys attempt to patent claims of varying scope -- from broadly encompassing the subject matter of the invention without crossing into the known prior art down to narrowly encompassing a specific implementation that is reflective of the client's commercializable product.

What's In A Name?

In Shakespeare's Romeo & Juliet, Juliet says to Romeo:

What's in a name?  That which we call a rose
By any other name would smell as sweet.

(Act II, scene ii.)  

GoDaddy doesn't agree with Juliet.  The company is no stranger to filing patent applications and owns scores of published applications and issued patents.  Some of these patent applications are directed to a market for domain names.  As Domain Name Wire reports, two such applications published today:

  • Patent Publication No. 20090171823  claims " A method comprising the step of underwriting a sale of shares of equity in a Domain Name." 
  • Patent Publication No. 20090171678 claims "A method comprising the step of protecting a Domain Name from an undesired transfer of ownership during a sale of shares of equity in the Domain Name."

If you know anything about patents or have read my prior blog entry on breadth, you know that these are quite broad claims.  A strategy commonly employed by savvy patent applicants is to initially file broad claims and then narrow them during prosecution of the patent application in view of prior art the patent examiner or the applicant identify.  Doing so can result in broader coverage than starting with narrow claims and then attempting to broaden them during prosecution.

The names Capulet and Montague may have smelled similarly sweetly to Juliet, but to the owners of some desirable domain names that can fetch a princely sum, some domain names smell more sweetly than others.