Stay up to date with
Engine’s weekly newsletter:


NEWS FEED

Statement on Executive Order on Content Moderation

Statement on Executive Order on Content Moderation

The White House’s executive order on “preventing online censorship” is a dangerous move that will encourage bad faith lawsuits, and dismantle the fundamental and commonsense legal framework that startups depend on to compete in today’s Internet ecosystem and keep their platforms free of objectionable content.

Read More
Looking Back on a Modified National Small Business Week
Statements & Releases Edward Graham Statements & Releases Edward Graham

Looking Back on a Modified National Small Business Week

Although the U.S. Small Business Administration officially postponed last week’s 57th annual National Small Business Week (NSBW), that didn’t stop policymakers, entrepreneurs, and founders from recognizing the importance of the nation’s 30.7 million startups and small businesses all across the country. With many businesses struggling right now as a result of the coronavirus pandemic, congressional leaders from across the political spectrum took the opportunity to voice their support for small business growth, innovation, and success.

Read More
Engine asks Supreme Court to correct imbalance in patent review and appeal process
Statements & Releases, IP The Engine Team Statements & Releases, IP The Engine Team

Engine asks Supreme Court to correct imbalance in patent review and appeal process

Engine, Unified Patents, CableLabs, The Niskanen Center, and The R Street Institute filed an amicus brief with the U.S. Supreme Court this week in support of General Electric’s request that the Court consider whether competitors may bring patent validity disputes to the patent office and patent appeals court.

Read More
Statement on the EARN IT Act

Statement on the EARN IT Act

The Eliminating Abusive and Rampant Neglect of Interactive Technologies (or EARN IT) Act from Sens. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) and Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) addresses a critical issue—stopping online child exploitation, which is a goal that startups share. But, as currently drafted, the bill threatens to unnecessarily disrupt the regulatory framework that has helped the Internet flourish and potentially ban the use of strong encryption technologies that protect user safety.

Read More
Engine Applauds Signing of USMCA
Statements & Releases, Tax & Trade The Engine Team Statements & Releases, Tax & Trade The Engine Team

Engine Applauds Signing of USMCA

The United States-Mexico-Canada Trade Agreement (USMCA) signed by President Donald Trump this morning is a welcome step for startups looking to innovate and grow on a global scale. USMCA has been hailed as a template for future trade agreements between the U.S. and other countries, and we’re pleased that the deal includes startup-friendly provisions that defend IP rights and promote intermediary liability protections.

Read More
Engine submits comments to USPTO on AI inventions
IP, Statements & Releases The Engine Team IP, Statements & Releases The Engine Team

Engine submits comments to USPTO on AI inventions

Last week, Engine and the Electronic Frontier Foundation submitted comments to the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office in response to the agency’s call for comments on patenting artificial intelligence inventions. The USPTO is collecting information to determine “whether further guidance is needed to promote the predictability and reliability of patenting [AI] inventions and to ensure that appropriate patent protection incentives are in place to encourage further innovation in and around this critical area.”

Read More
Engine's statement on House passage of CASE Act
IP, Statements & Releases The Engine Team IP, Statements & Releases The Engine Team

Engine's statement on House passage of CASE Act

The House’s vote in favor of the CASE Act is disappointing, particularly because there were no hearings or debates in the lower chamber to discuss the many flaws in this legislation. The bill is purportedly designed to protect small copyright holders by establishing an extra-judicial Copyright Claims Board within the U.S. Copyright Office to adjudicate infringement claims outside of a federal court setting. However, without the traditional safeguards of the federal courts, this newly established tribunal would have the authority to grant substantial financial damage awards — up to $30,000 per proceeding — to potentially abusive parties looking to strong-arm settlements from unsuspecting companies and online users. 

Read More
San Francisco-based tech companies express concerns with CASE Act
IP, Statements & Releases The Engine Team IP, Statements & Releases The Engine Team

San Francisco-based tech companies express concerns with CASE Act

Five San Francisco-based tech companies sent a letter to Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Senators Diane Feinstein (D-Calif.) and Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) today, expressing “significant concerns” with the CASE Act. The proposed bill would create an extra-judicial board within the U.S. Copyright Office to adjudicate copyright infringement claims outside the traditional safeguards of federal court. 

Read More
Statement on Mozilla v. FCC Decision
Statements & Releases, Telecom The Engine Team Statements & Releases, Telecom The Engine Team

Statement on Mozilla v. FCC Decision

“Today’s DC Circuit Court decision is disappointing, particularly because the court, like the FCC, failed to take seriously the reliance interests of startups, entrepreneurs, and investors on the FCC’s enforcement of net neutrality protections. The startup ecosystem has grown over the past decade precisely because of the FCC’s long history of using its authority to stop abusive ISP practices—authority the current FCC has now abandoned.”

Read More
Engine submits comments to USPTO on proposed fee increases
IP, Statements & Releases Abby Rives IP, Statements & Releases Abby Rives

Engine submits comments to USPTO on proposed fee increases

Engine submitted comments to the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office in response to the agency’s proposed rule regarding Setting and Adjusting Patent Fees During Fiscal Year 2020. The USPTO’s proposal would “set or adjust patent fees as authorized by the Leahy-Smith America Invents Act (Act or AIA), as amended by the Study of Underrepresented Classes Chasing Engineering and Science Success Act of 2018 (SUCCESS Act).” 

Read More
Engine submits comments to Senate Judiciary IP Subcommittee on STRONGER Patents Act
IP, Statements & Releases Abby Rives IP, Statements & Releases Abby Rives

Engine submits comments to Senate Judiciary IP Subcommittee on STRONGER Patents Act

Engine has submitted comments to the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Intellectual Property following the panel’s Sept. 11 hearing on the Support Technology and Research for Our Nation’s Growth and Economic Resilience (“STRONGER”) Patents Act of 2019. Among other concerns, the proposed legislation would limit the availability of inter partes review (IPR) as a mechanism for improving patent quality.

Read More