When The Media Report ‘Patent Trolls’ – Think ‘People Protecting Their Private Property’

Seton Motley | Less Government | LessGovernment.org
Not What They Say This Is

You’ve heard the phrase “patent trolls,” yes? Certainly not a positive sounding term. I mean – trolls? How positive an image does that conjure?

The Media are almost always opposed to all things good. So when they with near unanimity help promulgate a term – you need to (re)contemplate its definition.

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But what exactly is a “patent troll?” He or she is someone who owns a patent – which is private property. And is trying to protect their private property from unauthorized use by someone who doesn’t want to pay to use it.

Is someone who owns a house and calls the police to roust squatters a “property troll?” Is someone who reports their car stolen an “automobile troll?”

The Media’s (ab)use of the term “patent troll” is just this absurd. The Media have – as per usual – chosen sides on an issue. The Thieves Coalition has its mega-mouthpieces.

We can begin (re)contemplating the Media’s meaning here:

Lawmakers Try Again to Curb Abusive Patent Lawsuits

Which is a 552-word article that is entirely pro-theft – until the absolute last (inordinately short and weak) paragraph. Their definition of “patent troll?”

(P)atent trollsfile abusive patent infringement lawsuits.

Well that’s fair and balanced. Methinks the abusers in these situations are the ones stealing – not the ones being forced to try to stop it.

Is this fair and balanced?

…White House-supported legislation that aims to reduce predatory patent litigation – better known as “patent trolling.

“Abusive” and “predatory.” That isn’t leading at all.

How about this?

Patent Trolls Threaten Innovation

Which ignores utterly the fact that the initial innovation – already took place. You innovate, then you patent it – to protect it. Undermining patent protection is the actual threat to innovation.

Which makes this Media description that much more ridiculous.

(P)atent trolls – entities that purchase patents, not to produce any goods or services, but to threaten and file infringement suits and attempt to collect licensing fees.

Sounds awful – until one actually applies thought.

From whom were these patents purchased? The Innovators – the people who created the things worth patenting. Not every Innovator wants to create – and then implement.

Implementation – building the business and infrastructure necessary to turn an idea into a product or service – is a big pain in the kesiter. And for most Innovators kind of boring – and likely not their bag.

Most would rather innovate – and then innovate again. So they sell their ideas to someone else. And use that money to go back to innovating.

Trying to end this cycle is completely destructive of innovation. A perspective the Media routinely fails to provide.

Hypothetical: Say I sneak in tonight and commandeer the New York Times  offices – and start renting them out. And pledge publicly that I won’t give the Times any of the coin.

The Times would of course – rightly – call the cops and get me the heck out.

Would the Times then report they themselves were “office trolls” – stymieing my innovative use of their space?

I highly doubt it.

Editor’s Note: This first appeared in Red State.

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