Patent Reform: Where We Are and Where We’re Going (House Version)

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Last week, the Senate Judiciary Committee voted 16-4 to move the PATENT Act to the full Senate floor, a big step toward making patent reform a reality. This morning, the House Judiciary Committee will take its turn marking up the Innovation Act. Unfortunately, that bill’s fate remains unclear.

When Rep. Goodlatte introduced his Innovation Act earlier this year (in the same form as it was overwhelmingly passed in December 2013), we, along with many others, applauded it as a strong piece of comprehensive legislation that would do much to fix a broken patent system. So were feeling very optimistic last week when the Senate moved its bill, because last year it was the Senate that held up reform. That sense of optimism lasted until earlier this week, when we saw the latest version of the Innovation Act.

Simply put, some of the most important provisions—those surrounding discovery, pleading, and venue—had been watered down, in some cases beyond recognition. As we write this post on the eve of the bill’s markup, we understand negotiations are ongoing, so we remain hopeful that the bill language we see today will indeed provide meaningful reform.

More details on what we’ll be watching:

  • Discovery: Currently, discovery is by far the most expensive part of litigation for any party facing suit. For a patent troll who doesn’t make or sell anything, the cost of discovery is next to nothing. However, it can use abusive discovery practices to drive the costs of litigation even higher than they already are. The Senate bill would curb some of the worst of these practices by staying discovery until a party has had a chance to try to have a case dismissed. Unfortunately, the House bill would undermine that reform by limiting this important stay. We’re closely watching and supporting an amendment being introduced by Reps. Collins and Farenthold that would fix this.
  • Pleading: Right now someone can file a patent suit without providing almost any basic details about his or her case, information like how a patent is infringed, what products allegedly infringe, and even who owns that patent. This information is easily known to any patent holder at the outset of a case, especially those who engage in a responsible amount of due diligence prior to filing a case. However, getting this information can cost the defendant tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars. Fixing these pleading practices has long been a cornerstone of meaningful patent reform. The current version of the House bill, however, will not provide that fix. Frankly, the current legislative language is confusing and hard-to-follow, making it impossible to support it in its current form. We’re closely watching for an amendment, hopefully one that would more closely mirror the language in the Senate’s PATENT Act, an effort we would support.
  • Venue: The majority of patent troll cases take place in small towns in the Eastern District of Texas. (Watch John Oliver explain it much more hysterically than we can here.) That’s because the Eastern District of Texas is notoriously friendly to patent holders (including trolls) and is hard and expensive to get to, making it even more difficult for startups to defend themselves. We’re glad to see the House bill take on this issue, but the language as it stands has so many  loopholes that it wouldn’t be effective. We are closely watching and supporting an amendment that would fix this being introduced this morning by Reps. Issa, Goodlatte, Nadler, Lofgren, Forbes, Chu, Farenthold, DelBene, and Walters.

The good news is that, as stated above, many members look ready to introduce amendments that would fix these shortcomings.

The bad news is that the process has, to put it mildly, gone awry.

We remain optimistic that the bill that comes out of the House Judiciary Committee tomorrow will meaningfully address the patent troll problem, but—until we see today’s vote—we cannot be sure.

A Local Approach to Enabling Entrepreneurs, Despite Visa Limitations

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With little movement on meaningful immigration reform from the federal government, entrepreneurs in Massachusetts and now Colorado are pursuing a local approach to enabling foreign-born startup founders to launch and grow their businesses in the U.S.

Under the current immigration system, international students graduating from U.S. universities have a short runway to secure jobs from companies that will sponsor their visas in order to remain here to work. Even for those students talented enough to land great jobs at U.S. companies, the H-1B visas commonly reserved for tech workers are in extremely limited supply. And for those graduates, or even current H-1B visa holders, looking to launch their own ventures, acquiring and retaining the appropriate visa is nearly impossible. (Though it should be noted the President’s executive actions are attempting to make this process slightly easier.)

Last year, Jeff Bussgang from Flybridge Capital Partners worked with former Massachusetts governor Deval Patrick and the Massachusetts Technology Collaborative to imagine and establish a new way for non-citizen students to jumpstart the H-1B visa application process so they can start businesses in the U.S.

The Global Entrepreneur in Residence Program partners with universities to select a group of “entrepreneurs in residence”, similar to the temporary entrepreneur mentors at many businesses and venture capital firms. Instead, however, these entrepreneurs are employees of a university that sponsors their visas.  As academic institutions, universities are not subject to the same H-1B visa caps as traditional employers. The entrepreneurs are expected to dedicate several hours a week to being a resource and mentor at the university while the rest of their time can be devoted to their startup. It’s a creative, thoughtful solution to an extremely outdated immigration system holding back too many promising entrepreneurs in this country.

The University of Massachusetts Boston and University of Massachusetts Lowell piloted the program last year. As a result, Harvard Business School graduate Vivek Gupta was able to keep his financial services technology startup, Wealthvine, in the U.S, and his fellow alumnus Bryan O’Connell was able to build his healthtech company here too. Massachusetts’s current governor, Charlie Baker, recently allocated $100,000 in funding to continue the program this year.

The initiative has also now expanded to other parts of the country. Brad Feld of the Foundry Group and the University of Colorado Boulder are together funding at least four experienced and emerging entrepreneurs through the program this fall. The selected entrepreneurs will be expected to work for up to 20 hours a week on campus.

The program benefits both entrepreneurs and the university. “The EIR program will bring outside talent to campus to mentor students engaged in a range of projects requiring an entrepreneurial mindset,” explained Phil Weiser, dean of the University of Colorado Law School and executive director and founder of Silicon Flatirons—the university’s law, technology and entrepreneurship center.

“While I’m not giving up on a federal solution, I plan to put my money and my energy into a state level solution,” Brad remarked in a blog post, touching on what’s so refreshing and inspiring about this initiative: it’s a local, collaborative solution to what’s become a massive challenge to overcome at the federal level.

Only Congress has the power to solve the issue at scale by revisiting our outdated visa system and establishing a true entrepreneur’s visa like those in Chile, Canada and the UK. In the meantime however, communities and universities with an interest in retaining the bright students already in their schools or attracting and supporting new global talent now have an alternative approach at their disposal. The Global Entrepreneur in Residence Coalition serves as a sort of open-source toolkit for other cities, states and universities to explore launching similar programs.

“Our hope is that by publishing the program's playbook, we can encourage other states to implement the program as well,” wrote Jeff on his blog.  Any state looking to support entrepreneurship would do well to follow the lead of Massachusetts and Colorado.

Patent Reform: Where We Are and Where We’re Going (Senate Version)

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Tomorrow morning, the Senate Judiciary Committee will markup the PATENT Act, a comprehensive piece of legislation that seeks to address the patent troll problem. We explained what we liked about that bill here when it was first introduced. In short, the most important provisions of the bill rein in an out-of-control patent litigation system that allow bad actors (trolls) to force startups to pay up by threatening expensive lawsuits.

This is a key political moment for patent reform: in fact, it was exactly at this time last year—on the eve of markup in the Senate—when efforts to fix the system fell apart. “Marking up” a bill is a crucial step toward making law; tomorrow, senators on the Judiciary Committee will debate and rewrite the legislative language and then, if everything goes according to plan, vote the bill out of committee and send it to the Senate floor for a full vote.

At the same time, debate continues in the House on a similar but slightly different piece of legislation, the Innovation Act. That bill should be marked up next week and we’ll of course be watching it closely.

At this point in the process, things are moving quickly. There’s a chance that by the time you’re reading this post, some real changes might have happened (if they did, we’ll update you!).

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This is probably the most important issue that remains up in the air. As part of the last update to patent law, 2011’s America Invents Act, Congress created a procedure called inter partes review (IPR). IPRs allow a party to challenge a patent’s validity at the Patent Office instead of in court. They move quickly, within a year, and are considerably cheaper than litigation. While IPRs remain too expensive for most small startups (with legal fees, an IPR can easily cost upward of $250,000), they represent smart policy that helps rid the world of bad patents. So far the procedure has been successful.

Significant changes to IPR were not originally part of the Senate’s PATENT Act. We wish that were still the case. Yet it appears that IPR is now on the table (more of our thoughts on that here) as some reform opponents from the pharmaceutical industry have conditioned their support on this issue.This is where the process gets a bit strange. Senators who support litigation reform are hard at work trying to hammer out a compromise on IPR that will get the PATENT Act out of committee tomorrow with a wide vote margin, which we support. But, in the meantime, they have left a “placeholder” in the bill to clean up the language around IPR. This might explain why many of us who have long supported reform are not cheerleading as much as usual—not because we don’t support the PATENT Act per se (we still do), but because we actually haven’t seen the final language and, until we do, it’s hard to know whether this will be a full win for startups.

In the meantime, we will keep working to ensure IPR remains a strong and viable option to clear the system of low-quality patents while not ceding ground on the litigation reforms at the heart of the PATENT Act. Those reforms, of course, are the core of what will protect startups and successfully address a patent troll problem that has grown out of control.

Check us out on Twitter where we'll be following the situation closely and updating accordingly. 

Statement on Expanded Employment Authorization for Spouses of Highly Skilled Workers

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UPDATE - May 26, 2015:
 
Today, U.S. Citizen and Immigration Services (USCIS) began accepting work authorization applications for work for H-4 dependent spouses. The implementation of this program is an important step in modernizing our immigration system and bolstering our workforce. Allowing the spouses of immigrants to work provides greater economic stability and a better quality of life to many immigrant families around the country. And it's a win for startups and other businesses that will now have access to a wider pool of global talent already here in the U.S.
 
 
Statement by Engine Policy Director Evan Engstrom
Re: DHS Expanding Employment Authorization for Some Spouses of Highly Skilled Workers
 
Today's DHS announcement is a hard fought win for thousands of immigrant families, providing more stability and certainty for those who want to come and stay in the United States. It's also a win for U.S. startups, removing yet another major obstacle to attracting and retaining top talent from around the world, and adding even more workers to the talent pool. While we still await Congressional action to expand the supply of visas available to high skilled workers, the H-4 rule solves a significant problem with our nation's broken immigration system. We're grateful to the White House, DHS, USCIS, and the many startups, workers, and advocates who have been leading the charge for true immigration reform. We look forward to seeing more of the President's directives become reality in the coming months, including improving visa options for immigrant entrepreneurs who start companies and create jobs in the U.S.
 
 
 

The Next Wave of Tech Talent: Veterans

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by Anna Duning and Anthony Hogrebe

 

Memorial Day provides an opportunity for all of us to think about what we can do to support our nation’s veterans.  The technology community—employers, investors and educators—play a pivotal role in helping men and women in uniform succeed back at home by ensuring veterans have opportunities to join our fast-growing technology economy.

According to the Schultz Family Foundation, over 2.6 million post 9/11 veterans are transitioning back to civilian life. The heartening news about this population is that overall unemployment among veterans is at its lowest since 2008, around 5.3 percent as of March. Yet hundreds of thousands of veterans remain unemployed. And post 9/11 veteran unemployment remains higher than the national average at 7.2 percent.

Meanwhile, according to the White House, there are currently over half a million unfilled jobs in information technology, making up 12 percent of all job openings in the U.S. This number is only projected to grow. This is a massive opportunity for our hard-working and talented veterans to either build on the skills they already have or acquire new skills they can deploy.

Many organizations around the country are working toward this goal of preparing veterans and connecting them with job opportunities in technology fields. VetsinTech runs eight national chapters that coordinate training programs with major technology firms including SalesForce and Microsoft. Sharp Decisions, an IT consulting firm based in New York, hires tech-savvy armed services veterans to participate in their internal vets-only bootcamp (we profiled their inventive program in our Innovation for All blog series last year.) And many tech bootcamps, typically marketed to recent graduates or people seeking a career change, are developing courses and creating scholarship funds specifically for veterans.

Yet there’s still much work to be done. More tech companies need to make recruiting veteran candidates a priority when hiring, and provide the mentoring and other supports that veterans will need to succeed. And we need to help more veterans access non-traditional tech education programs. Right now, GI benefits can only be used at federally accredited programs, but almost no coding bootcamps and schools—many of which boast high job placement rates—have that accreditation. Congress needs to work to modernize the accreditation system, to help veterans access quality coding programs that are often more effective than traditional two and four year programs in preparing students for jobs in tech.

Over the months ahead, we’ll be making veteran access to technology jobs a key part of our diversity efforts and a key focus of our Diversifying Tech Caucus. Not only is it the right thing to do - tech companies simply can’t afford to miss out on tapping into such a great pool of talent.

#fixpatents: On the Hill with Startups, CEA, and Engine

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By CEA and Engine

On Tuesday, Engine and CEA held a startup fly-in to advocate in support of the the Innovation Act and PATENT Act, which would bring critical reforms to the nation’s patent system. We were joined in DC by founders and executives from TMSoft, MapBox, Smart Ride, Jump Rope, Meetup, Kickstarter, and Etsy. Before the jam-packed day of meetings, CEA and Engine hosted these startups from across the U.S. at the Association’s Innovation House on Capitol Hill. The #fixpatents team shared their own stories about battling trolls before conveying to lawmakers how devastating this legalized extortion is to small companies.

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Photo courtesy of the Consumer Electronics Association

 

The day was a great success as we went from office to office, between the House, Senate, and Capitol, for meetings with members of the Judiciary Committees of each house. We used the occasion to disseminate Engine’s latest booklet of stories from startups that have been targeted by patent trolls.

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The #fixpatents team came out of meetings optimistic that legislators are committed to passing bills that will fix the current state of abusive patent litigation. Members and their staff were highly engaged, and many were surprised to hear the stories of those startups in attendance. The startups’ experiences very clearly underscored the impact of the patent troll problem and the extortion that happens behind the closed doors of settlement.

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Photo courtesy of the Consumer Electronics Association

Jump Rope discussed their inability to recover fees, despite winning their case against a troll that claimed its patent covered reserving the future purchase of goods. And then there was TMSoft who estimated their troll case costing $190,000 in legal work before even setting foot in the courtroom. We reiterated the need for a more level playing field that would afford defendants the chance to fight back.

We’d like to thank Franklin Square Group and TwinLogic Strategies, as well as our Congressional co-hosts for their assistance in coordinating the event. You can see what the #fixpatents team had to say and hear their personal stories about fighting for innovation in the face of troll attacks. Check here for forthcoming videos from CEA and Engine’s Patent Reform Day.

Here’s to getting patent reform across the finish line!

100 Girls Coding and Counting

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You can also read this post on Medium.

When the Tennessee Code Academy started coding camps for kids in the summer of 2013, its organizers noticed something missing: girls. Young women weren’t signing up for the weeklong code camps despite generally high enrollment. “So we sat down with the team to figure out how to get girls to sign up,” explained Sammy Lowdermilk, who is now the director of the growing spin-off project, 100 Girls of Code.

Sammy and other partners, including several female programmers, decided to establish a one day workshop specifically for girls between the ages of 12 and 18. In the summer of 2014, they launched these workshops, at no charge to students, with the support of volunteer instructors and organizers in 12 different locations throughout Tennessee. Their goal was to reach 100 girls. Over 200 girls signed up for the workshops, and shortly thereafter the organizers were contacted by interested groups outside of the state. Could they offer these workshops in South Carolina? In Kentucky?

Since last summer, over 600 girls have attended free 100 Girls of Code workshops in nine different states and new chapters of the program continue to open across the country. Typically, up to 25 girls attend each six hour workshop, entirely led and supported by female programmers and volunteers. “We want to create an environment where the girl from the beginning is comfortable being herself without any distractions, any fear or intimidation,” explained Sara Kennedy, a front end web developer who leads the Columbia, South Carolina chapter.

The workshop begins with a short history lesson in computer science that specifically highlights women who were integral in the field early on, such as Grace Hopper and Ada Lovelace. Instructors also discuss current female leaders in technology: Marissa Mayer and Megan Smith, for instance. The students then get to coding. They learn some introductory HTML and CSS, and even dabble in programming languages, primarily through Scratch, an MIT-built tool that facilitates learning computer programming through creating interactive stories, games and animations. By the end of the workshop, the girls have created basic websites that tell stories about their day spent as a “girl of code.”

While the workshops only introduce computer programming skills, the hope is these few hours have a lasting impact. “At minimum, I hope they can walk away and feel proud about what women can do in technology,” said Sara. And at best, 100 Girls of Code alumni will seek out additional opportunities to build on their skills and eventually pursue a college education and a career in computer programming. They’ve already had a few girls come back to help assist in additional workshops.

100 Girls of Code is starting to explore how they can provide their alumni with additional coding education opportunities. In most locales, computer science is not offered in public schools. The organization is planning to establish more advanced workshops in some chapters and hopes they can eventually create a scholarship fund for girls graduating high school and planning to pursue STEM degrees in college. And they’re actively looking for sponsors to contribute supplies, resources and funding for the free workshops across the country.

“Software, hardware, the Internet—this all comes from someone,” said Sara “and it needs to be created by the people it’s for.” That includes women. According to one study, 74% of girls show interest in STEM fields in middle school, yet only 3% of them go on to pursue degrees in this field. 100 Girls of Code wants to change that, one girl at a time.

Patent Reform is Good for Startups and Investors

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 By Ron Conway and Julie Samuels

This piece was originally published in The Hill: http://bit.ly/1Hv8uXM

 

The debate over patent trolls rages on, getting some pretty high-profile (and hilarious) attention from John Oliver and action in the Senate, where the PATENT Act, the long-awaited companion bill to the House’s Innovation Act, was recently introduced. This legislation can’t move fast enough—and we are hopeful that the House Judiciary Committee will take the first step this week in passing meaningful reform. Every day without patent reform is another day of trolls targeting additional businesses and individuals. And unfortunately, those who suffer the most are the startups and small companies with whom we work. These are the companies that create jobs, build new technology, and have carried the laboring oar in helping our economy recover.

Which is why the investor community should wholeheartedly support these reform efforts. And most investors do. A survey of 200 VCs and their portfolio companies found “venture capitalists overwhelmingly believe that patent demands have a negative impact on the venture-backed community, with all or most of those assertions coming from” so-called patent trolls. And it’s beenestimated that were it not for troll threats, VC investment in startups would have been $8 billion higher over the last five years alone.

Even more, VCs nationwide, particularly those investing in high-tech companies, by and large support reforming the patent system. In fact, more than 140 of them signed a letter to Congress in support of the very type of reforms in the Patent Act and its companion in the House, the Innovation Act.

This makes all the more confounding a so-called “disagreement” in the venture community surrounding patent reform. Why would any VCs oppose reforms like those in the Patent Act or, the Innovation Act? Let’s look at some of the claims the National Venture Capitalists Association (“NVCA”) has made in testimony and in writing.

First, NVCA’s Scott Sandell expresses concern about the Innovation Act’s fee-shifting provision, claiming that it “effectively mandates the payment of legal expenses by the non-prevailing party in almost all cases.” Put mildly, that is a serious misreading of the current bill. In fact, members of Congress led by Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) reached a carefully negotiated compromise that would give courts discretion over when to award fees to a winning party—and said those fees should not be granted when a party’s “position and conduct … were reasonably justified in law and fact.” In English: bring a reasonable case and even if you lose, you won’t be stuck paying the winning party’s legal fees.

Sandell goes on to complain that fee-shifting “means that any entrepreneur who seeks to defend their patent will have to take into account the risk that losing in court could bankrupt their company.” Again, that is not the case. The only entrepreneurs who should in fact face such a risk are those who bring an unreasonable case—the exact type of litigation we are trying to discourage.

Perhaps even more troubling, Sandell claims that investors should not support this provision because it allows for investors to find themselves on the hook for a losing party’s fees. Again, not the case. Both bills carve out investors whose “sole financial interest” in the patent(s) is one who has an equity interest in the company. The Senate bill goes even farther, only applying in cases where the “primary business” party suing is “assertion and enforcement of patents,” e.g., is not making or selling anything based on the underlying technology. Even more, both bills allow for an investor to renounce his or her interest in a patent (and not the company that owns it).

Perhaps what’s most troubling, though, is NVCA’s blanket denunciation of these efforts and apparent unwillingness to come to the table to craft language that would accomplish the bills’ goals, which are not to target venture capitalists but to end the dangerous practice of trolls using shell companies to hide their identities and their assets.

Without fee-shifting, startups facing patent troll litigation have little incentive to put up a defense: even if they win the suit, they are stuck paying as much as millions of dollars in legal fees. The potential promise of seeing some of that money back helps align proper incentives—giving defendants a tool to fight back and encouraging plaintiffs to only bring reasonable cases.

Even more, Sandell claims that the fee shifting will cause more big companies to attack startups because they might recoup attorneys’ fees at the end of a suit. We reject this reading of the bill, but more importantly the data does not support this claim. Big companies are not, generally, suing startups over patents. We do not believe that adding even a million dollars in fees in a victory will change behavior. Will big companies decide that a small change in the balance sheet is worth the time of management to pursue? We think not.   

Opponents of reform aren’t just making erroneous attacks on fee-shifting. Objections to other provisions of the Innovation Act and the PATENT Act similarly leave us scratching our heads.

Take heightened pleading. Reform opponents claim this creates too much work for patent owners, but what does it really require? Setting forth such basic information as who owns a patent, what product allegedly infringes the patent, and what parts of the patent are at issue. This is not rocket science —it’s the kind of basic information a party needs to decide whether to fight or settle. The same is true with discovery reform, which would streamline the process to get the most basic information about a case at the outset before costs balloon out of control, leaving startups and small companies with no choice but to feed the patent troll. The kind of goals we’re talking about—transparency and fairness—should apply to anyone bringing a lawsuit in federal court, small startup to Fortune 500 company.

So again we ask, why would anyone who supports entrepreneurship—especially those who invest in it—not support the level-headed, common-sense and carefully crafted reforms in the Innovation Act and the PATENT Act? Taken in conjunction with strong patent reexam provisions established under the America Invents Act, these bills represent an important package of incentives that would rebalance and restore faith in a broken system. They will level the playing field and give startups and those companies that investors like Mr. Sandell fund tools to fight back against patent trolls, while at the same time not burdening legitimate patent holders who want to defend their rights in court. Without them, patent trolls will continue to prey on the youngest and weakest companies. It’s well past time to put an end to this dangerous trend once and for all. We urge the members of the House Judiciary Committee who want to support the startup and venture capital community to vote in support of the Innovation and PATENT Acts.

Conway is an angel investor and philanthropist in San Francisco. Samuels is executive director of Engine, a non-profit organization that supports the growth of technology entrepreneurship.

How Entrepreneurs are Building the Next New Orleans

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This week Engine is traveling with Steve Case on the Rise of the Rest road trip to celebrate entrepreneurship, in all its forms, across America. Every day we’ll post dispatches from the cities we’ve seen. For more updates follow #RiseofRest on Twitter.

New Orleans, home of jazz, Mardi Gras - and startups - was the last stop on a whirlwind tour of the Southeast. As the city nears the ten year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina this summer and its 300th birthday in 2018, New Orleanians are more optimistic than ever about the city’s future and its continued economic growth. New Orleans has experienced 5 consecutive years of net in-migration, and since 2006 the greater metro area’s GDP has grown 20%.

As Tim Williamson, CEO and Founder of the Idea Village explained, local entrepreneurs aren’t trying to build the “next Silicon Valley”, but rather the “next New Orleans”. To grow new companies and chart the city’s forward-looking economic path, entrepreneurs, business leaders and local policymakers draw from the city’s many cultural assets and industry expertise, as well as the city’s history of perseverance.

New Orleans culture was on full display throughout our visit and peaked during a mini pitch competition aboard a Mardi Gras parade float, led by the “Krewe de Nieux”. As the colorful float rolled through the city’s streets, entrepreneurs shared stories about their growing businesses in food, health and wellness, music and even the shipbuilding industry. The afternoon’s pitch competition, at the brand new home for Jazz music in New Orleans, also featured companies with New Orleans cultural roots: WhereY’art, for instance, is an online community for artists and art-lovers. Other young companies in New Orleans, many of which have strong social missions, are building education and environmental solutions.

ROTR Float

We also visited the BioInnovation Center, a technology business incubator where dozens of life sciences startups are creating new life-sustaining technologies. They benefit from biotech talent in the region and work with researchers from major area institutions including Tulane, LSU Health Sciences Center, Xavier and the University of New Orleans.

Another important piece of New Orleans cultural heritage is its diverse population, and local leaders are working to make sure New Orleans’ entrepreneurial future is even more diverse. One of the best examples of these efforts is PowerMoves, a program designed to increase the number of venture-backed minority-founded companies locally and nationally. At its helm is Earl Robinson who told us he hopes PowerMoves can help this country “reimagine the way people value African Americans’ contributions to society,” not only as athletes or musicians, but also as entrepreneurs. The program is clearly doing something right—a Power Moves company, GoToInterview, won the $100,000 pitch competition in New Orleans. CEO and Founder Crystal McDonald has built a software solution for employers in industries with high workforce turnover.

ROTR Pitch NOLA

Perhaps the greatest asset New Orleans entrepreneurs have is the city’s sense of community. New Orleans has a history of connecting people through its many festivals and seasons—Mardi Gras, Jazz Fest, even Saints season. But continued growth of the startup ecosystem will also hinge on fostering and attracting talent and capital. There’s plenty of money in New Orleans, but very little is committed to funding new ventures. Hopefully, the Rise of the Rest stop helped inspire a little more investment from the many people who care about the future of this great American city.

Photos from PATENT Act Hearing

On Thursday May 7th, 2015 Engine Executive Director Julie Samuels testified at the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on the PATENT Act. Check out these great photos from the hearing, and then go to fixpatents.org to get involved and help pass patent reform this year!

 

 

Ensuring Entrepreneurs are Part of Atlanta’s Bright Future

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This week Engine is traveling with Steve Case on the Rise of the Rest road trip to celebrate entrepreneurship, in all its forms, across America. Every day we’ll post dispatches from the cities we’ve seen. For more updates follow #RiseofRest on Twitter.

 

With over five million people, sixteen Fortune 500 companies and one of the top-ranked undergraduate engineering programs in the nation, it may be unfair to call Atlanta a city on the rise. Yet, the city’s environment for early stage entrepreneurs and new sources of innovation is still developing in many ways. The Rise of the Rest tour, with Steve Case at the helm, spent its fourth day on the road in Atlanta to learn from this vast, diverse city and to inspire the wider business, policy and educational leaders here to support its many entrepreneurs.

One of the Atlanta startup community’s challenges is fragmentation. Despite the proliferation of entrepreneurial activity, with 130 square miles and several city centers, Atlanta can be a sprawling place to navigate for both businesses and residents. Recognizing this challenge, David Cummings founded the Atlanta Tech Village in 2013 in an effort to bring the community together. Today, over 240 early and mid-stage tech companies are based there. SalesLoft calls the ATV home and Yik Yak did until recently—the messaging app experienced such rapid growth that they’ve now relocated to a new office space to accommodate an expanding team. Meanwhile, the Atlanta Tech Village continues to grow and newer centers for budding entrepreneurs have followed such as the Opportunity Hub.

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We also got a sense of how Atlanta’s later stage technology startup companies are becoming part of a more connected Atlanta. The Ponce City Market is an 8,000 square foot space (in the old Sears Roebuck building) in an historic Atlanta neighborhood undergoing transformation, retrofitted for retail, residential apartments and offices. Cardlytics and Mailchimp showed off new startup-chic offices with lounges and snack rooms that rival any Silicon Valley startup’s digs. The Atlanta Business Journal reports Twitter may set up an Atlanta office there as well.

Yet another tech industry hub is the Atlanta Technology Development Center (ATDC) at Georgia Tech University. The ATDC brings together Georgia Tech students, industry experts and corporate partners through its incubator program and many resources. The center has enabled Georgia Tech students in engineering and computer science to find another career path after graduation—contributing their talents to a startup is made just as viable as working for a large corporation or going into research. These graduates remain a huge source of talent throughout the region.

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Atlanta’s pitch competition put a number of promising new businesses on display - including Local Roots, which enables delivery of farm-grown produce to people’s homes, and  eCredable, which has created a platform that calculates alternative credit scores. The pitch competition’s winner was a great example of the best of Atlanta startups: Partpic has a diverse team and innovative technology that identifies parts via mobile images, in much the same way Shazam can identify a song.

What we saw in Atlanta was just a slice of a widespread movement made up of many leaders committed to the city’s future. With continued support, a focus on inclusive entrepreneurship that reflects Atlanta’s diverse population, and the engagement of (and capital from) the city’s biggest companies like Coca Cola and UPS, Atlanta’s entrepreneurs will have the opportunity to build on the city’s success.

Patent Quality Comments Submitted to USPTO

On May 6, we responded to a request for comments from the US Patent Office (USPTO) about efforts to improve patent quality. Check out full comments here.

We not only emphasized our support for improving patent quality (by ensuring that issued patents satisfy the statutory requirements, do not impinge upon the public domain of prior art, are clear as to their scope, and have a fully developed record of proceedings in the file history) but the duty of the USPTO and every examiner to defend the public and to defend the future from the momentous external costs created by low quality patents, by diligently reviewing applications and weeding out invalid claims at the outset.

We urged the Office to focus its energy on creating data, training materials, and enhanced quality reviews targeted at reducing errors in allowances. 

Silicon Harbor is Building Momentum in South Carolina

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This week Engine is traveling with Steve Case on the Rise of the Rest road trip to celebrate entrepreneurship, in all its forms, across America. Every day we’ll post dispatches from the cities we’ve seen. For more updates follow #RiseofRest on Twitter.

 

From one Carolina to the next! The Rise of the Rest tour stopped in Charleston, South Carolina today - a mid-size coastal town known for its well-preserved historical architecture, renowned Southern cuisine and a lively college atmosphere.

But are there startups here? At a breakfast with Charleston’s mayor of 39 years and local business leaders, John Osbourne, director of the local entrepreneur center, noted how the city’s evolved over the past few decades. It’s become a place where people come not only to vacation, attend school or even retire, but also a place people build businesses. “We’re at a tipping point,” said John, suggesting the city’s myriad entrepreneurship-centered activities are beginning to coalesce into a wider movement.

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In addition to the region’s larger technology presence - with companies like Boeing - a number of newer and thriving technology companies set an example for the what’s possible here. We visited People Matter, a human resources software company that’s grown to over 200 employees since 2009. Levelwing, a data analytics firm, was originally founded in New York, but relocated to Charleston when it decided to expand.

The afternoon’s pitch competition showcased a diverse array of earlier stage companies, all with viable business strategies and creative approaches to developed industries. Eatabit built a product for online food ordering, OpenAngler has created the first online reservation system for fishing charter reservations and Dynepic’s devices turn standard kids’ toys into digitally connected smart toys. The winning startup, Bidr, offers solutions for fundraising event organizers to automate the bidding process. The hope is that $100,000 in new capital will ensure the company’s continued growth and serve as a catalyst for other entrepreneurs and investors to turn their attention towards Charleston.

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South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley also joined Steve Case for a conversation about economic development in her state and the key role entrepreneurs play in that growth. She’s excited about the momentum in Charleston and hopes it spreads throughout the state. While the Charleston startup community is still young, it could soon give even more entrepreneurs reason to visit and to stay.

Engine Written Testimony at Patent Act Hearing

Committee on the Judiciary

 

Hearing

“The PATENT Act: Finding Effective Solutions to Abusive Patent Litigation”

Testimony of Julie P. Samuels

Executive Director and President of the Board,

Engine  

May 7, 2015

 

Chairman Grassley, Ranking Member Leahy, and members of the Committee, thank you for holding this hearing and inviting me to testify about finding effective solutions to abusive patent litigation. We are greatly encouraged by all your committee has done to address the problem of abusive litigation practices, a favorite weapon of so-called patent trolls.

I am the Executive Director and President of the Board of Engine, a technology policy, research, and advocacy organization that bridges the gap between policymakers and startups. To accomplish this, we work with government and a community of hundreds of high-technology, growth-oriented startups across the nation to support the development of technology entrepreneurship. Engine creates an environment where technological innovation and entrepreneurship thrive by providing knowledge about the startup economy and helping to construct smarter public policy. To that end, Engine conducts research, organizes events, and spearheads campaigns to educate elected officials, the entrepreneur community, and the general public on issues vital to fostering technological innovation.

Patent litigation abuse is a real problem, and one that disproportionately targets the startups and small businesses that make up Engine’s community. This troll problem is an acute and growing menace that adversely impacts the operations and viability of companies who can least afford these threats. Since startups and small businesses are key drivers of innovation and job growth, troll threats against them are particularly stifling to American economic growth and prosperity. One recent study found that trolls cost the U.S. economy at least $29 billion per year.

As a preliminary matter, I use the colloquial term “patent troll” or “troll” throughout this testimony for ease of description, but titles and terminology are immaterial. The parties who have created the problem and continue to abuse the system use certain behaviors that should not be permissible under the law; it is these behaviors the PATENT Act rightfully targets.

 

Background

Trolls exploit poor quality patents and a litigation system that is stacked in their favor to extract nuisance settlements from vulnerable startups, typically with baseless claims. They hide behind shell companies in order to exploit uncertainty about patent ownership and ambiguity about what their patents purport to cover. Without any due diligence, they routinely send demand letters and file suit alleging infringement to multiple parties, on a wholesale and indiscriminate basis, demanding settlement payments from their innocent prey. Trolls have also been known to even target a company’s customers, in an effort to extort quick settlements that would otherwise not be warranted. The troll abuse problem is exacerbated by the fact that trolls amass and deploy poor quality patents—vague, abstract, or overly broad patents that fail to meet the law’s requirements that were erroneously issued in the first place.  

This chokehold on innovation requires a multi-pronged set of remedies; the courts, the Patent and Trademark Office (PTO), and Congress each must play an essential role. The Supreme Court has taken significant steps on the judicial front, issuing several key decisions that clarify and strengthen patent quality, particularly the requirements for patent eligibility. If rigorously implemented by the PTO and by other courts, these decisions should have the effect of improving the quality of prospective patents. However, the decisions will have little impact on the many existing patents in trolls’ arsenals and on a litigation system that is unbalanced and unfair. And patent allowances show no sign of slowing: the rates of allowance are alarmingly high at 92 percent in 2014 (up from below 70 percent just five years ago). That means that 322,214 patents were issued in 2014 alone.

Thus, patent quality is but one side of the troll equation. Trolls thrive because of a grossly uneven patent litigation playing field that incentivizes and rewards frivolous claims. Only legislation can change that. We need a robust reform bill, like the PATENT Act, to give startups, small businesses, and even individuals a fair chance to have their day in court when faced with a troll threat. Unless these reforms are enacted, patent trolls will continue forcing startups to drain critical energy and resources away from the business of innovating and creating jobs.   

 

The Impact on Startups

Startups and small businesses develop breakthrough technologies that fuel innovation and drive economic growth and job creation. In fact, research shows that startups are responsible for all net new job growth in the United States. So trolls’ crushing impact on startups reverberates throughout the ecosystem, impeding innovation and hurting the U.S. economy at large.    

Research also shows that startups bear the brunt of troll abuse and the impact of troll threats on startups is disproportionately severe: 82 percent of troll activity targets small and medium-sized businesses, and 55 percent of troll suits are filed against companies with revenues of less than $10 million. Generally lacking the resources to decipher vague and often bogus demand letters, startups are vulnerable to extortion. The time and money required to fight back against a troll could put the viability of their entire business in jeopardy.

Trolls’ impact on startup operations is acute: a very high percentage of startups who received a demand letter reported “significant operational impact” in the form of deferred hiring, change in strategy, cost-cutting, reductions in personnel, decreased valuation or total shut-down.

The economic incentives in the troll model are clear: a bare bones and vague demand letter provides immediate low-risk, low-cost leverage over a startup, even when the claim is baseless. It can easily cost a startup $50,000 just to hire a patent lawyer to evaluate demand letter claims. Litigation costs range between $1 million and $6 million, and can mean life or death for a fledgling business. So startups often capitulate, and layoff an employee or hire one less programmer, in order to pay off the troll. For example, Ditto, a virtual eyewear company, had to lay off four of its 15 employees in response to a troll demand. Although the infringement claim was dismissed, the suit resulted in a reduction in Ditto’s valuation of $4 million.  

The mere threat of troll suits has chilling effects on the investment community. In a survey of 200 venture capitalists, 100 percent indicated that the presence of a patent demand could be a major deterrent in deciding whether to invest. It is estimated that VC investment in startups would have been $8 billion higher but for troll threats in the last five years alone.

Trolls like to paint themselves as the champions of the small guys, as legitimate entities who help independent inventors monetize their patents by enforcing them on the inventor’s behalf. In fact, trolls increasingly target small entities, and statistics show that very little of a patent troll’s revenue is transferred to actual inventors. Patent trolling activities are associated with half a trillion dollars of lost wealth for their victims—largely startups and small businesses—from 1990 to 2010 alone.

Patent trolls are primarily armed with two weapons: low-quality, impossible-to-understand patents and the outrageous costs of patent litigation, which can easily run well into the millions of dollars. So imagine you are a small startup, cash-strapped and hungry, and you get a patent demand, either in the form of a lawsuit or a demand letter, from a company you’ve never heard of, claiming it owns some seemingly basic technology. Your choices are: hire a lawyer and spend valuable time dealing with the problem or pay the troll to go away, usually for a sum far smaller than what it would cost to hire that lawyer or go to court.

And while numbers and statistics can feel abstract, the impact that trolls have on real startups and entrepreneurs is extremely personal. Take the experience of Jump Rope, a Chicago startup founded by Peter Braxton. An Air Force veteran and former Combat Pilot, Braxton started Jump Rope using his own money and funds raised from friends and family. Jump Rope is a smartphone application where users can pay a (dynamic) price to skip the line and gain immediate entrance to nightclubs, bars, museums, and sporting events. The platform provides a time-saving, transparent and hassle-free service to its customers.

Less than one month after launching Jump Rope, a patent troll called Smart Options approached Braxton, claiming that Jump Rope infringed its patent. Braxton’s lawyers advised him to settle, be he instead decided to fund the litigation personally–spending more than $250,000. Braxton won the first suit, and the court awarded him fees after a finding that the Smart Options failed to perform even minimal due diligence before suing. Nevertheless, Smart Options came back, threatening additional suits with even more patents. The situation took a surprising turn when Erich Spangenberg, often called a patent troll himself, agreed to step in to fund Jump Rope’s defense in exchange for equity in the business. In the end, Braxton was forced to give up sizeable equity in his business in order to fight what proved to be specious claims.

These kinds of troll stories are all too common. There’s the case of TMSoft, creator of a popular white noise app, which was targeted by now notorious troll Lodsys. Lodsys was a particularly destructive troll, targeting app developers for implementing simple click-to-upgrade functionality, a basic technology that both Apple and Google provide to their app sellers. TMSoft founder Todd Moore was forced to defend his company, knowing that litigation could cost millions of dollars he didn’t have. But he still rejected Lodsys’ offer of a $3,500 settlement that would be routed to an overseas bank account. Fortunately, Lodsys decided to drop the case before it went to trial. But Moore’s attorney estimates the case required legal work that was valued at $190,000 - even though it never even made it to a courtroom.

Another California company, Life360, also found itself in the crosshairs of a patent troll. Life360’s app keeps over 55 million families safe and connected through messaging and location sharing capabilities. The company had on several occasions chosen to settle with patent trolls. But after growing their network to millions of families and raising $50 million in capital early last year, the company was hit with a troll suit that it decided to fight head on. The troll in question was Florida-based Advanced Ground Information Systems, or AGIS. AGIS claimed that its patent covered any tech that marks the location of a person on a map and makes calls to that person’s phone.

Life360 took the case to a jury trial where it won a verdict of non-infringement on all counts. Yet in spite of a jury finding the troll’s claims meritless, Life360 still had to spend over $1.5 million to defend itself, with no reasonable recourse to recover that money.  That’s $1.5 million that could have paid salaries for additional jobs, instead spent defending against a baseless lawsuit.

These are the kinds of consequences that result from troll suits, not just for brand new ventures but for growing startups as well. Foursquare currently faces four separate troll suits, on top of two it has already settled. Its legal budget this year set aside a sum of money for these cases that would otherwise have been enough to hire between six and ten additional engineers—good jobs that now do not exist. Foursquare is itself a patent holder, and believes in a strong patent system. But this constant onslaught of troll attacks have prompted companies like Foursquare to support comprehensive patent reform like the PATENT Act.

Unfortunately, many startups are so afraid of attracting more troll suits that they are willing to share their stories only if their names are omitted. One such company, a California-based startup, has been faced multiple meritless suits from patent trolls. The startup’s general counsel reported: “The system is set up in such a way that it pretty much guarantees that the troll gets paid. It has nothing to do with the patent’s claims, but with the litigation fees. We were bombarded with letters, emails, discovery requests, and motions. It was all meaningless paper, but we still had to spend time and money to respond.” In spite of  these continued attacks, this startup recently filed for its first patent and plans to file more applications in the future. It also strongly supports litigation reforms like those included in the PATENT Act. To quote its general counsel: “As an actual innovator, we believe in patenting our inventions. But we still support reform efforts aimed at those who abuse the patent litigation system.”

Another California-based startup that asked to remain anonymous spends between $800,000 and $1 million annually developing its patent portfolio, which the company generally intends to use for defensive purposes. This company’s general counsel pointed out that this money—which could be used to innovate, fund growth or hire more employees—is instead being used just to protect against lawsuits. He also told me that “the way the current system is set up today stifles innovation. People holding large patent portfolios with no intent to practice the inventions hinder innovation. You can’t go forward and do something without the fear of a lawsuit. It’s inconceivable to get an effective freedom to operate opinion because there are so many existing patents out there and new ones filed everyday on questionable so-called ‘new inventions’.”

This particular company, which employs nearly 400 people nationwide, has faced several troll suits from traditional trolls and so-called competitors with “licensing programs.” One such competitor signed up for the company’s service online, and then filed patents for the type of services provided, without citing the original company’s work as prior art in its patent  application. That so-called competitor went on to sue, and the original company had to settle to avoid the costs of litigation. These cases illustrate why there is no need to define who is or who is not a patent troll—legislation like the PATENT Act need only target certain bad-faith behaviors that attempt to substitute litigation for innovation.

 

The PATENT Act Includes Necessary Reforms

Only legislation can deter trolls from exploiting a stacked litigation deck against startups like those discussed above to extort settlements. Congress must therefore pass the PATENT Act, a strong patent reform bill that removes existing incentives to assert bad patents and creates a level litigation playing field for all inventors. Specifically:

  • Because trolls often hide behind shell companies, the PATENT Act requires transparency of a patent’s ownership so startups know exactly who is threatening them, can access information about whom else a troll may be suing with the same patent, and can better evaluate how to respond.
  • Because someone can file a patent suit without providing almost any basic details about his or her case, information like how a patent is infringed, what products allegedly infringe it, and even who owns that patent, the PATENT Act institutes welcome increased transparency requiring this type of information. This information is easily known to any patent holder at the outset of a case, especially those who engage in a responsible amount of due diligence prior to filing a case. Yet startups are left with no choice but to consult a lawyer about the scope of the threat they face. However, most startups don’t have an in-house lawyer at all, let alone one who specializes in patents, so getting this information can cost tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars. The PATENT Act would fix that, requiring patent holders to provide this basic information at the outset of litigation and also require patent holders to tell the Patent Office when they transfer a patent. Only with this basic information can parties make informed decisions about how they should proceed. If a party legitimately cannot find some of this information after making a “reasonable inquiry”, it may still file a suit, an important caveat protecting the responsible patent holder.
  • Because the high cost of discovery is a cudgel of leverage, the PATENT Act rightfully places reasonable limits on discovery, by staying discovery until after the court has a chance to hear early dispositive motions. When startups face companies solely in the business of licensing and litigation (oftentimes a patent troll), they find themselves facing outrageously expensive motion practice that has little to no impact on their adversary. Reasonable limits on initial discovery will help incentivize startups to fight the trolls in court.
  • Because current law allows for the awarding of attorneys’ fees only in “exceptional” cases, a startup has almost no chance of recovering fees and costs even if it fights and wins. It is nearly impossible for a startup to find the resources to fight a patent suit. The promise of seeing some of that money back at the end makes securing the resources easier. Furthermore, meaningful fee shifting will discourage the most egregious actors — those without meritorious cases — from suing in the first place. This is why it is so important that the PATENT Act gives judges real discretion to award attorney fees and costs to a prevailing party when the behavior and conduct of a losing party was not objectively reasonable or substantially justified and the proper tools to ensure recovery of that award. A fee-shifting provision like this should in no way discourage or hamper the ability of a patent holder to assert any valid claims, but would provide some downside risk to trolls who are otherwise free to engage in frivolous litigation with impunity. Importantly, the fee-shifting provision is accompanied by a provision that enables the party to whom fees are awarded to recover by holding the real party in interest liable; otherwise, the fee-shifting provision would be toothless against a shell plaintiff with no assets.
  • Because trolls are increasingly suing consumers and other users for infringement to gain further leverage, the PATENT Act rightfully shields innocent users with a “customer stay” provision that halts such actions and allows manufacturers to defend the infringement allegations.
  • Because trolls notoriously deploy abusive and opaque demand letters that lack any information about the alleged infringement, we were pleased to see the PATENT Act’s provisions that require specificity and clarity in demand letters. This will allow startup targets to understand why they are being threatened, how they are alleged to be infringing, and whether the claim has any merit.

Notably, the PATENT Act contains all of these core elements to reduce existing incentives in the patent assertion system that enable trolls to threaten startups with baseless infringement claims. Unless these patent litigation reforms are enacted, patent trolls will continue to be free to exploit dubious patent claims and the high cost of litigation to extort settlements from startups.    

Opponents of robust reform legislation argue that the proposed changes in the law would have the unintended consequence of making it harder to assert valid claims. In fact, nothing in the PATENT Act would hinder an inventor from monetizing, asserting, or enforcing valid patents, or making claims that are substantially justified or objectively reasonable. The proposed legislation strikes the right balance and ensures that the law in no way would prejudice valid patents or meritorious claims made in good faith. The fact remains that the current litigation playing field is disproportionately skewed in favor of patent holders. It is therefore not surprising that companies that are likely to be patent plaintiffs, and the patent bar—which profits from ballooning patent litigation—would exaggerate potential unintended consequences in an effort to maintain their own existing advantages. The PATENT Act would create an equal playing field for plaintiffs and defendants; its passage is essential to curbing abuse and giving startups a fair shot at defending themselves against frivolous suits that extort inventors.

To be certain, the PATENT Act is not perfect. There are a number of areas that we think should be made stronger to ensure some of the most flagrant abuses of the system are actually addressed and that we do not find ourselves back before Congress in a few years asking for additional reforms:

  • We wish the discovery reforms went farther, clearly providing in-statute limits on discovery to those documents directly related to the questions before the court related to scope of the patent and infringement. Specifically, we wish the legislation mandated sharing of certain core documentary evidence, along with a breakdown of who should bear the costs of exchanging evidence beyond those core documents. These provisions would really limit the ways a party can drive up discovery costs and provide greater efficiency in our patent legal system.
  • We also would like to see language included to address one of the most flagrant abuses of the patent system: venue. There is no arguing that some districts are friendlier to patent cases than others. We would like to see Congress take back up the question of transfer of venue and make it easier for parties to move a case out of the Eastern District of Texas, where nearly half of patent infringement cases are brought and where judges are notoriously plaintiff-friendly.
  • We remain concerned that the current customer stay provision only kicks in when the manufacturer is already involved in litigation. We think improvements could be made to make it easier for any manufacturer to actively step in on behalf of its customers.
  • Finally, we think the bill should also make it easier and cheaper for parties to challenge low-quality patents at the Patent Office through a process called inter partes review (IPR). For many parties, seeing a case all the way through to a final decision is not an economic reality, even with the above discussed reforms. IPR provides a valuable means for a startup or party with limited financial resources to invalidate or narrow the scope of an otherwise overly broad patent. This program should be not just available, but also accessible to companies large and small.

 

Conclusion

We applaud the committee for taking up this important issue. In particular, we thank Chairman Grassley, Ranking Member Leahy, Senators Cornyn and Schumer, and the other co-sponsors of the PATENT Act who have spent nearly two years crafting numerous compromises that both address the patent troll problem and protect legitimate users of the patent system. We encourage this committee to move forward expeditiously with passing comprehensive patent reform legislation and return the patent system to its rightful place of incentivizing innovation in America.

 

Remarks from Senate Hearing on PATENT Act

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Engine Executive Director Julie Samuels' Oral Testimony as Prepared, Senate Judiciary Committee Hearing on PATENT Act:

 

Chairman Grassley, Ranking Member Leahy, and members of the committee, I’m Julie Samuels, Executive Director of Engine, an organization started several years ago to help advocate for high-tech, high-growth entrepreneurship. Through a combination of policy analysis and economic research, we represent startups nationwide. It’s an honor to be here today. I look forward to discussing effective solutions to the patent troll problem, especially because this problem disproportionately harms the community of high-tech, high-growth startups I represent.

Today I’m going to tell you about what the startup community needs from a functioning patent system—balance and fairness—and why the PATENT Act would help ensure those things.

Patent trolls are armed with two weapons: low-quality, impossible-to-understand patents on the one hand and the outrageous costs—both in time and money—of patent litigation on the other. So imagine you are a small startup, cash-strapped and hungry, and you get a patent demand from a company you’ve never heard of, claiming to own some basic technology. Your choices are: hire a lawyer and spend valuable and limited resources fighting back, or pay the troll to go away.

Which is why I want to talk today about fairness and balance, two concepts that go together. Right now, we have a system that across-the-board favors patent holders who abuse that system. Those parties have exclusive access to all of the relevant information surrounding the patent—basic things, such as, who owns it? Who else has rights to it?—along with the ability to single-handedly drive up the costs of litigation through discovery and motion practice.

It’s a system that essentially allows for legalized extortion, and that leaves startups nearly powerless to fight back without great personal risk and expense.

Take the experience of Jump Rope, a Chicago startup founded by Peter Braxton. An Air Force veteran and former Combat Pilot, Peter found himself facing a troll suit less than one month after he launched Jump Rope. Peter’s lawyers advised him to settle, but he instead decided to fund the litigation himself. Ultimately the court found no infringement, and that the the plaintiff failed to conduct even due diligence before filing suit—but not before Peter was forced to spend more than $250,000 on his defense.

Or take Life360, an app that keeps over 55 million families safe and connected. After raising $50 million in capital early last year, the company was hit with a troll suit that it decided to fight. In spite of a jury finding the troll’s claims meritless, Life360 still had to spend over $1.5 million to defend itself, with no reasonable recourse to recover that money.

Many of the startups who support reform are also patent owners themselves. Like Foursquare, which currently faces four troll suits. This year’s legal budget set aside enough money for these cases alone that could otherwise have been used to hire between six and ten engineers—good jobs that now do not exist.

There are countless other companies in our network, too, who invest in the patent system yet still support strong reform. Many asked that I not use their names, because they’re so afraid of attracting more troll suits. One startup general counsel told me, and I quote, “The system is set up in such a way that pretty much guarantees that the troll gets paid. It has nothing to do with the patent’s claims, but with the litigation fees. We were bombarded with letters, emails, discovery requests, and motions. It was all meaningless paper, but we still had to spend time and money to respond.”

In each case, startups divert resources from innovating, growing their business, and creating new jobs to fight what are often meritless claims. To make matters worse, the bulk of this money never finds its way back to inventors or research and development departments.

For a small startup, even one troll suit can ruin its business and the mere threat can cause significant disruption. No small business owner should be forced to put her company at risk simply to defend what she knows is right.

Which is why we need the kind of comprehensive set of reforms that is the PATENT Act.

The PATENT Act would bring much needed transparency to the system through heightened pleading and demand letter reform; giving startups tools to understand the scope of the threat they face, helping them decide whether they should hire a lawyer and fight or take a settlement and walk away. The bill creates the appropriate incentives for startups facing meritless suits to fight back: by shifting fees and allowing for real recovery and by reforming discovery, the PATENT Act allows parties a fighting chance in court. Right now, a startup worried about its bottom line has almost no choice but to pay a troll to go away; the PATENT Act would dramatically change this calculation and keep the courthouse doors open to everyone.

Taken together with the strong post-grant review procedures from the America Invents Act, the PATENT Act represents an important package of incentives that would rebalance and restore faith in a broken system. To be clear, no single reform in the bill can accomplish this task alone. It is only when they are all taken together that we can find the missing balance and fairness.

Opponents of reform argue that the proposed changes in the law would have the unintended consequence of making it harder to assert valid claims. In fact, nothing in the PATENT Act would hinder an inventor from monetizing, asserting, or enforcing valid patents, or making claims that are substantially justified or objectively reasonable.

The freedom to innovate has always been a central part of the American dream. For the sake of our economy and our identity, we must not let innovation become a legal liability.

A patent should be valued for what it covers and how it incentivizes innovation, not for its litigation value. The PATENT Act would go a long way to making that the case.

Thank you, and I look forward to your questions.

 

The Triangle’s on Top: Here’s a Region Serious about Startups

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This week Engine is traveling with Steve Case on the Rise of the Rest road trip to celebrate entrepreneurship, in all its forms, across America. Every day we’ll post dispatches from the cities we’ve seen. For more updates follow #RiseofRest on Twitter.

 

After our first stop in Richmond, Virginia, the tour continued south to the Triangle in North Carolina. This area—encompassing the cities of Raleigh, Durham, and Chapel Hill—has already experienced significant success in its innovation and technology economy. Its top universities, leading healthcare and biotech companies, as well as world class research facilities at Research Triangle Park have all contributed to the region’s emergence as a center for tech talent as well as startup density and success. STEM jobs here grew by 39% in the past ten years—more than any other region in the country. And in 2014, 59 companies in the area were acquired and six went public.

These impressive numbers tell part of the story, but during our whirlwind day across the region, we learned there’s a lot more to building a thriving entrepreneurial ecosystem beyond existing industry leadership. Much of the local startup activity takes place within several impressive and energetic co-working spaces: HQ Raleigh in Raleigh, and American Underground, which has locations in Raleigh, Durham, and in a retrofitted old tobacco factory—a reclaimed relic of the region’s old economy. American Underground is home to over 850 entrepreneurs who come from the area’s many universities or decide to locate their companies here due to the ease of access to great talent, support and mentorship. And antother group of young entrepreneurs finds that kind of support right at home: the Thinkhouse is Raleigh is a live-in dormitory for startup founders.

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What’s also exciting about this cohesive community is its genuine commitment to expanding opportunity and diversity: it’s a topic that’s top of mind for local leaders across industries. We spent some of the day with Talib Graves-Manns, founder of an education startup called RainbowMe and Durham’s Code2040 Entrepreneur in Residence. In addition to building his company, he is helping create a network of black entrepreneurs in the region. There are also organizations dedicated to empowering female entrepreneurs, like Soar Triangle and e51.

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The day’s pitch competition was an opportunity for Raleigh-Durham to showcase many promising early stage ventures, as well as the support community that helps them succeed. The winner of Steve Case’s $100,000 investment was Archive Social, which provides tools that enable governments take greater advantage of social media. Archive Social presented themselves as a unique outcome of the Triangle’s entrepreneurial ecosystem with roots in a local accelerator, capital from local funds, and clients in local and state governments.

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The Triangle is a model of how a region can leverage its many resources, even across independent counties and cities, to cultivate future generations of economic growth. And with their commitment to inclusive entrepreneurship, we hope they can set a national example.

Richmond’s on the Rise

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 This week Engine is traveling with Steve Case on the Rise of the Rest road trip to celebrate entrepreneurship, in all its forms, across America. Every day we’ll post dispatches from the cities we’ve seen. For more updates follow #RiseofRest on Twitter.

We’re back on the road again, this time traveling through the Southeast, visiting some of America’s oldest cities where entrepreneurs from across the region are creating new ventures. We kicked off the tour in Richmond, Virginia, a town steeped in history, but with passion and promise for innovation. The sense of the new is palpable on the city’s streets where restaurants, independent retail shops, and theaters are popping up or undergoing renovations after years of vacancy. But perhaps Richmond’s greatest advantage in building an entrepreneurial ecosystem is the tight knit community that has galvanized around the startup economy. It’s one of these places where everyone seems to know and support one another.

The day began with a conversation among Steve Case, Richmond’s entrepreneurial leaders as well as three Virginia governors, two of whom are now Senators, and Richmond’s mayor. Governor Terry McAuliffe and Senators Mark Warner and Tim Kaine remarked on the tremendous growth of the state’s economy over the past few decades and the vast opportunities that lie ahead, for Richmond in particular.

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We witnessed some of that opportunity and innovation in the making during a startup tour around this city. We met a number of companies that have grown out of the early stage accelerator Lighthouse Labs. Nudge is a software service that integrates data from health tracking devices. Blue Ocean Brain offers a micro-learning platform within companies to stimulate creativity and critical thinking. Maxx Potential facilitates technical workforce development by matching apprentices with companies in need of tech talent. Their program selectively identifies candidates and provides them with both coaching and on the job training, building a tech workforce that’s 100% on-shore. We also visited the headquarters of Evatran, whose slim and sleek device - a charging pad called Plugless Power - wirelessly charges electric vehicles.

At the center of Richmond’s startup ecosystem is the team behind New Richmond Ventures, a group with a mission to make their city a “world-class ecosystem of entrepreneurial talent, patient capital, and innovative start-ups.” By leading local capital investment, developing mentors, and forging relationships among businesses in the region, NRV is one of the Richmond startup community’s biggest assets.

The day’s final events included a pitch competition featuring eight local startups with a range of products and ideas: from a plant-based protein powder in hundreds of stores (also employing regional chickpea farmers) to a software that streamlines the 1099 tax return process for independently contracted employees. Ultimately, Wealthforge, which creates online tools to simplify raising capital for both startups and investors (as well as those platforms enabled by the 2012 passage of the JOBS Act) took home the $100,000 prize.

Today’s greatest takeaway about Virginia’s capital city? It might just be one of the startup world’s best kept secrets. With community, talent, leadership, and broad-based political support, Richmond is certainly on the rise.

Senate's PATENT Act is a Big Win for Startups

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Today, Sens. Grassley, Leahy, Cornyn, Schumer, Lee, Hatch and Klobuchar introduced the PATENT Act, an important piece of legislation targeting a serious patent troll problem. Engine is proud to support that bill.

The PATENT Act, and the Innovation Act, its House counterpart, are effective because they are comprehensive in scope. Each contains a package of incentives that, taken together, insert balance back into patent litigation, giving troll targets the tools to fight back and ensuring that patent holders act responsibly. Importantly, they are carefully crafted to ensure that a patent holder with a high-quality patent and a legitimate claim of infringement will face no barriers to making that claim.

To understand the way these bills work, you have to understand a bit about the patent troll problem. Patent trolls are primarily armed with two weapons: low-quality, impossible-to-understand patents and the outrageous costs of patent litigation, which can easily cost a defendant well into the millions of dollars. So imagine you are a small startup, cash-strapped and hungry, and you get a patent demand from a company you’ve never heard of, claiming it owns some seemingly basic technology. (This really happens. Often. See here, here, here, and here, for example.) Your choices are: hire a lawyer and spend valuable time dealing with the problem or pay the troll to go away, usually for a sum far smaller than what it would cost to hire that lawyer or go to court.

The good news is that the Supreme Court has been busy trying to fix the problem of low-quality patents. The bad news is that we still have a long way to go. Patent litigation remains outrageously expensive and one-sided, giving a patent owner who is willing to take advantage of loopholes in the system the ability to run roughshod over defendants.

This is where Congress, and specifically today’s introduction of the PATENT Act, comes in. Its provisions help right the imbalance in patent litigation through a series of reforms:

  • Transparency and Heightened Pleading: Currently, someone can file a patent suit without providing almost any basic details about his or her case, information like how a patent is infringed, what products allegedly infringe it, and even who owns that patent. This information is easily known to any patent holder at the outset of a case, especially those who engage in a responsible amount of due diligence prior to filing a case.  However, getting this information can cost a party being sued tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars. The PATENT Act would fix that, requiring patent holders to provide this basic information at the outset of litigation and also require patent holders to tell the Patent Office when they transfer a patent. Only with this basic information can parties make informed decisions about how they should proceed. If a party legitimately cannot find some of this information after making a “reasonable inquiry”, it may still file a suit, an important caveat protecting the responsible patent holder.
  • Fee-shifting: Currently, little incentive exists for a party to defend itself in court. After years and millions of dollars spent litigating, a successful party will often be sent on its way with nothing more than a Pyrrhic victory. The PATENT Act remedies this by awarding fees to a winning party when a court determines that a losing party’s position was not “objectively reasonable”. This provision carefully strikes a balance between deterring those who bring crappy, unsubstantiated lawsuits and those who bring reasonable, good-faith cases. It also includes important provisions that would effectively end the practice of using shell companies with little or no assets to avoid responsibility. Specifically, a party who doesn’t make or sell anything with its patents will have to show that it can pay for fees if they are awarded. Only with this incentive can many startups afford to take on a troll threat, discouraging those trolls from bringing frivolous cases.
  • Demand Letter Reform: Currently, trolls send vague demand letters full of legalese, targeting small businesses and even individuals. Because this takes place before a lawsuit is even filed, there is no public record of how often it happens. We know it is common practice, so we also know that we can’t even properly understand the scope of the entire patent troll problem. The PATENT Act will help fix this by requiring that such letters include certain basic information about the infringement claim and that they do not make false claims about the patent holder’s rights with regard to the patent. Only with these requirements will startups be able to make informed decisions about whether they should respond to or ignore a demand letter and whether they should hire a lawyer.
  • Discovery Reform: Currently, discovery is by far the most expensive part of litigation for any party facing suit. For a patent troll who doesn’t make or sell anything, the cost of discovery is next to nothing.  However, it can use abusive discovery practices to drive the costs of litigation even higher than they already are. The PATENT Act would curb some of the worst of these practices by staying discovery until a party has had a chance to try to have a case dismissed. It also makes further recommendations to shift some of the discovery burden from the party producing information to the party requesting it. Only with these reforms can small companies and startups afford to litigate.
  • Customer Stay: Currently, trolls love to target a company’s customers, claiming that by using off-the-shelf technology those customers are liable for infringement. This can put enormous pressure on companies that provide products and services (e.g., every company). The PATENT Act provides tools to both the customers and the companies in this dangerous situation, allowing the company to fight the litigation on behalf of its customers. Only with this provision will startups be able to protect their customers.

To be certain, the PATENT Act is not perfect. There are a number of areas where the bill could be made stronger. For instance, we wish the discovery reforms went farther, clearly providing in-statute limits on discovery to those documents directly related to the litigation and requiring a party seeking documents to cover the costs of getting those documents. We’d also like to see the bill more directly address venue and make it easier for parties to move a case out of the Eastern District of Texas, where so many cases are brought and where judges are notoriously plaintiff-friendly. Likewise, we remain concerned that the current customer stay provision only kicks in when the manufacturer is already involved in litigation.  We think improvements could be made to make it any easier for that manufacturer to actively step in on behalf of its customers. Finally, we think the bill could also make it easier and cheaper for parties to challenge low-quality patents at the Patent Office through a process called inter partes review (IPR).  For many parties, seeing a case all the way through to a final decision is not an economic reality, even with the above-discussed reforms. IPR provides a valuable means for a startup or party with limited financial resources to invalidate or narrow the scope of an otherwise overly broad patent.

All that said, we remain proud to support this bill. The heart of it—the litigation reform provisions—represent a hard-fought compromise, spearheaded by Sens. Schumer and Cornyn, who tirelessly worked to get this done. We will continue to work to improve the PATENT Act where we think it needs improvement, and fight off any efforts to water down its provisions. We look forward to seeing this become law.

 

Statement on Introduction of the PATENT Act

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We applaud the introduction of the PATENT Act, an important piece of legislation that would create much-needed balance, fairness, and transparency in the patent system. The bill’s package of incentives directly target a patent troll problem that has, over the past decade, grown out of control, harming countless startups and our economy at large.

The patent troll epidemic has been well-documented by reporters, advocates, and even comedian John Oliver. It costs our economy at least $29 billion annually. But, worst of all, it disproportionately targets startups and small companies. Research shows that 55 percent of companies targeted by trolls have less than $10 million in annual revenue. And a survey of 200 VCs and their portfolio companies found “venture capitalists overwhelmingly believe that patent demands have a negative impact on the venture-backed community.” In fact, it’s been estimated that were it not for troll threats, VC investment in startups would have been $8 billion higher over the last five years alone.

The PATENT Act would give those threatened by patent trolls the tools they need to fight back, redistributing power and creating a more level playing field. These common-sense reforms would require patent owners to provide basic information, and would incentivize them to bring only those lawsuits that are based on high-quality patents and represent legitimate claims of infringement. As such, it creates no unnecessary burden on patent holders. And the bill effectively addresses the serious problem of out-of-control demand letters.

Patent reform enjoys broad bipartisan support in both houses and growing demand from the American people. In the weeks ahead, we'll be redoubling our efforts to ensure the passage of the PATENT Act, a bill that will strengthen the patent ecosystem for all innovators.

We commend the bill’s co-sponsors Sens. Grassley, Leahy, Cornyn, Schumer, Lee, Hatch and Klobuchar and look forward to the PATENT Act becoming law.