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Difference between revisions of "Patently-O"
(In September 2014, a few months after the US Supreme Court's ''Alice'' ruling, Crouch suggested amending the US patent law by adding a final line: "''Patent eligibility extends to the full e) |
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− | '''Patently-O''' is the patent blog of Dennis Crouch, a professor and [[patent lawyer]]. A minority of posts are by guest authors. | + | '''Patently-O''' is the patent blog of Dennis Crouch, a law professor (and previously a [[patent lawyer]]). A minority of posts are by guest authors. |
The blog is not against [[software patents]], but is also not rampantly pro-swpat, and has allowed anti-swpat articles to be published as guest posts. | The blog is not against [[software patents]], but is also not rampantly pro-swpat, and has allowed anti-swpat articles to be published as guest posts. |
Revision as of 15:08, 16 September 2014
Patently-O is the patent blog of Dennis Crouch, a law professor (and previously a patent lawyer). A minority of posts are by guest authors.
The blog is not against software patents, but is also not rampantly pro-swpat, and has allowed anti-swpat articles to be published as guest posts.
The quality of information is very good and so ESP Wiki includes a lot of links to Patently-O and reading it is recommended for it's technical quality.
In September 2014, a few months after the US Supreme Court's Alice ruling, Crouch suggested amending the US patent law by adding a final line: "Patent eligibility extends to the full extent permitted by the Constitution."[1]
Related pages on ESP Wiki
- Sources of software patent news
- News links - an unmaintained list of links to relevant articles from websites, including Patently-O. To see the Patently-O articles, sort the table by the 'Website' column and go to the Patently-O section