- The surge in the price of bitcoin has brought attention to the blockchain, the technology that underlies digital currencies.
- Banks and other corporations are interested in the blockchain as a new method of executing transactions.
- Patent trolls are also moving in. Erich Spangenberg, who made a name for himself working on drug patents with hedge fund manager Kyle Bass, has put together a company to seek blockchain patents.
The blockchain, the digital ledger system that underlies the boom in cryptocurrencies like bitcoin, is an innovation born within the open-source software community, where software coders pride themselves on the sharing of information. But the blockchain’s open-source formative years may not stay that way.
As bitcoin nears $20,000 and other digital currencies experience unprecedented gains, some of the biggest names in the corporate world are seeking patents related to the blockchain — financial companies like Visa, retailers like Walmart and the tech old guard like IBM. And in what likely would cause distress in the open-source movement, in late November one of the business world’s most notorious patent trolls hatched plans to create and amass a trove of blockchain patents.
Erich Spangenberg, who became notorious in Silicon Valley for challenging tech patents, has put together a new group to unlock the value in blockchain IP. Spangenberg wrote in a recent blog post, “The financial press is having fun talking about Bitcoin, but another important story that gets less attention is the technology underlying Bitcoin called ‘blockchain.'”
A patent war “is inevitable,” said Nick Spanos, founder and CEO of Blockchain Technologies, which has patented a blockchain-based election voting system among a handful of blockchain patents. He also is co-founder of the blockchain-based smart contract app Zap Project.
“There are a lot of applications out there that people do to make their company look good with press releases and fluff, when they want to make their company look good. … The legal battles will ensue; we will see what the landscape looks like when the dust settles.”
Misfit trolls, geeks and wonks who ‘are going to crush it’
Spangenberg has created IPwe with a team of 20 full-time staff, as well as consultants, to “apply blockchain, artificial intelligence and predictive analytics to improve patents,” Spangenberg wrote. “It is a curious path how a collection of misfit trolls, geeks and wonks ended up here — but we are going to crush it and make a fortune.”
Spangenberg’s last big push into the patent space was a venture with hedge fund manager Kyle Bass at Hayman Capital to attack drug patents while shorting drug stocks, and while it had some wins in the legal system, it was ultimately judged unsuccessful as an investment strategy.
Many of the early players in the digital currencies and blockchain space adhere to an open-source philosophy, and there are a number of companies that have been trying to put together an open-source blockchain infrastructure. But Mark Lemley, director of the Stanford Law School program in Law, Science and Technology, said, “Patent trolls follow the money, so it’s not surprising that the growth of blockchain value has caused them to come out of the woodwork,” he said.
The bitcoin boom has resulted in more than one new way to cash in on the blockchain. Riot Blockchain — which for years was a biotech company, changed its name in October and announced it was getting into both blockchain and bitcoin mining. Its shares have surged near-40 percent this year. Noted short seller Citron Research said it initiated a short against Riot Blockchain on Monday.
Small-cap financial technology company Longfin soared in trading over the past few days after saying it was buying blockchain company Ziddu.com. On Tuesday, the Securities and Exchange Commission suspended trading in another small-cap stock that has surged by near-3000 percent in the bitcoin boom.
There are now 150 hedge funds investing in digital currencies, according to a New York Times report.
“There’s certainly a lot of money there.”
“There’s certainly a lot of money there,” said Matt Rappaport, co-founder of patent strategy firm IP Checkups.
Spangenberg did not return multiple email requests for comment.
“The problem is that if the PTO is issuing too many foundational patents, defensive collection of patents won’t help avoid the patent trolls,” Lemley said. “There do seem to be a large number of companies claiming some pretty fundamental [blockchain]technologies,” he added.
James Bessen, an economist and executive director of the Technology & Policy Research Initiative at Boston University School of Law, said the idea behind IPwe is typical for the patent troll space: putting together a group of people to sit in an office all day and dream up patents. “Spangenberg, he has made out well,” Bessen said. “You want to go into a new field like blockchain because there won’t be a lot of patents, and the original stuff was open source.”
Broad patent grants can be a problem for the real innovators
Bessen said according to his review of the U.S Patent and Trademark Office’s search database, it has granted 265 patents related to bitcoin and 53 patents related to the blockchain, the earliest blockchain patent coming in April 2015. While not a blockchain expert specifically, he has written widely on innovation and intellectual property and said some of the blockchain patents granted did concern him — precisely for being overly broad. Patents can be designed to take a trivial idea and describe it in a different way, and that can lead to no one knowing the exact scope of what it covers.
“It can go far beyond what the inventor actually did,” Bessen said.
As an example, he cited a patent awarded for a system to make payments over an internet browser that used blockchain as a form of encryption. People have used encryption before the blockchain and Bessen said it seems “fairly obvious” that a browser with a secure form of communication is not novel and should not lead to a patent being granted. But he added that a security component with blockchain may look novel to the patent office and once granted, it can be expensive to attempt to overturn the patent.
“Some trolls are bottom feeders and send out thousands of letters, can be tens of thousands of letters, for a few thousand bucks each, and lots of people paid up in those cases,” Bessen said.
The history of the software industry’s first boom includes a troubling precedent that resulted in thousands of “crap patents,” Bessen said, being granted to cover digital payment methods. Many patents ultimately acquired by patent trolls led to lawsuits against businesses large and small challenging any e-commerce transactions, and the courts sided with the patent trolls.
“The big problem is this creates risk for the real innovators, the guy who is actually innovating has to pay off patent trolls who have not invented anything,” Bessen said.
Recent Supreme Court rulings have eliminated the most extreme excesses of the tech patent wars, and it is now much harder to get a patent that is no more than a form of taking something already being done for years and doing it on a computer.
The blockchain, the digital ledger system that underlies the boom in cryptocurrencies like bitcoin, is an innovation born within the open-source software community, where software coders pride themselves on the sharing of information. But the blockchain’s open-source formative years may not stay that way.
As bitcoin nears $20,000 and other digital currencies experience unprecedented gains, some of the biggest names in the corporate world are seeking patents related to the blockchain — financial companies like Visa, retailers like Walmart and the tech old guard like IBM. And in what likely would cause distress in the open-source movement, in late November one of the business world’s most notorious patent trolls hatched plans to create and amass a trove of blockchain patents.
Erich Spangenberg, who became notorious in Silicon Valley for challenging tech patents, has put together a new group to unlock the value in blockchain IP. Spangenberg wrote in a recent blog post, “The financial press is having fun talking about Bitcoin, but another important story that gets less attention is the technology underlying Bitcoin called ‘blockchain.'”
A patent war “is inevitable,” said Nick Spanos, founder and CEO of Blockchain Technologies, which has patented a blockchain-based election voting system among a handful of blockchain patents. He also is co-founder of the blockchain-based smart contract app Zap Project.
“There are a lot of applications out there that people do to make their company look good with press releases and fluff, when they want to make their company look good. … The legal battles will ensue; we will see what the landscape looks like when the dust settles.”
Misfit trolls, geeks and wonks who ‘are going to crush it’
Spangenberg has created IPwe with a team of 20 full-time staff, as well as consultants, to “apply blockchain, artificial intelligence and predictive analytics to improve patents,” Spangenberg wrote. “It is a curious path how a collection of misfit trolls, geeks and wonks ended up here — but we are going to crush it and make a fortune.”
Spangenberg’s last big push into the patent space was a venture with hedge fund manager Kyle Bass at Hayman Capital to attack drug patents while shorting drug stocks, and while it had some wins in the legal system, it was ultimately judged unsuccessful as an investment strategy.
Many of the early players in the digital currencies and blockchain space adhere to an open-source philosophy, and there are a number of companies that have been trying to put together an open-source blockchain infrastructure. But Mark Lemley, director of the Stanford Law School program in Law, Science and Technology, said, “Patent trolls follow the money, so it’s not surprising that the growth of blockchain value has caused them to come out of the woodwork,” he said.
The bitcoin boom has resulted in more than one new way to cash in on the blockchain. Riot Blockchain — which for years was a biotech company, changed its name in October and announced it was getting into both blockchain and bitcoin mining. Its shares have surged near-40 percent this year. Noted short seller Citron Research said it initiated a short against Riot Blockchain on Monday.
Small-cap financial technology company Longfin soared in trading over the past few days after saying it was buying blockchain company Ziddu.com. On Tuesday, the Securities and Exchange Commission suspended trading in another small-cap stock that has surged by near-3000 percent in the bitcoin boom.
There are now 150 hedge funds investing in digital currencies, according to a New York Times report.
“There’s certainly a lot of money there.”
“There’s certainly a lot of money there,” said Matt Rappaport, co-founder of patent strategy firm IP Checkups.
Spangenberg did not return multiple email requests for comment.
“The problem is that if the PTO is issuing too many foundational patents, defensive collection of patents won’t help avoid the patent trolls,” Lemley said. “There do seem to be a large number of companies claiming some pretty fundamental [blockchain]technologies,” he added.
James Bessen, an economist and executive director of the Technology & Policy Research Initiative at Boston University School of Law, said the idea behind IPwe is typical for the patent troll space: putting together a group of people to sit in an office all day and dream up patents. “Spangenberg, he has made out well,” Bessen said. “You want to go into a new field like blockchain because there won’t be a lot of patents, and the original stuff was open source.”
Broad patent grants can be a problem for the real innovators
Bessen said according to his review of the U.S Patent and Trademark Office’s search database, it has granted 265 patents related to bitcoin and 53 patents related to the blockchain, the earliest blockchain patent coming in April 2015. While not a blockchain expert specifically, he has written widely on innovation and intellectual property and said some of the blockchain patents granted did concern him — precisely for being overly broad. Patents can be designed to take a trivial idea and describe it in a different way, and that can lead to no one knowing the exact scope of what it covers.
“It can go far beyond what the inventor actually did,” Bessen said.
As an example, he cited a patent awarded for a system to make payments over an internet browser that used blockchain as a form of encryption. People have used encryption before the blockchain and Bessen said it seems “fairly obvious” that a browser with a secure form of communication is not novel and should not lead to a patent being granted. But he added that a security component with blockchain may look novel to the patent office and once granted, it can be expensive to attempt to overturn the patent.
“Some trolls are bottom feeders and send out thousands of letters, can be tens of thousands of letters, for a few thousand bucks each, and lots of people paid up in those cases,” Bessen said.
The history of the software industry’s first boom includes a troubling precedent that resulted in thousands of “crap patents,” Bessen said, being granted to cover digital payment methods. Many patents ultimately acquired by patent trolls led to lawsuits against businesses large and small challenging any e-commerce transactions, and the courts sided with the patent trolls.
“The big problem is this creates risk for the real innovators, the guy who is actually innovating has to pay off patent trolls who have not invented anything,” Bessen said.
Recent Supreme Court rulings have eliminated the most extreme excesses of the tech patent wars, and it is now much harder to get a patent that is no more than a form of taking something already being done for years and doing it on a computer.
Read more at:
https://www.cnbc.com/2017/12/19/a-new-form-of-bitcoin-mining-patent-trolls-coming-for-the-blockchain.html