[quote name='Antheus' timestamp='1336591764' post='4938740']
If you're not interested in business, you don't need to file patents. Patents only matter for business.
You have two options:
- file patents in name of your employer, thereby relinquishing any ownership
- file patents, but get a salesperson to handle the licensing paperwork on your behalf for commission
How would either of those really be better than having transferable patents?
[/quote]
They encourage in-house research - provide facilities and employ people in active research, rather than having shell companies full of MBAs and lawyers, milking off-shore suppliers for bargain bin contracts.
They eliminate trolling, hoarding and poaching of defunkt companies' IP.
They encourage technology licensing vs. blanket M&A based on portfolio sizes. Need a technology - there's an inventor you can buy it from. Instead of companies being structured around mass producing patents and selling them in bulk, without producing anything on their own. I encountered this in computer vision - a company has 40 or so PhDs employed full time to write patents. They skim academic publications and other works, then just file patent after patent without producing anything. They then sell these in bulk, since they don't hold on their own and since they don't produce anything. But they do benefit large companies who collect these so they can set up 2000-patent strong portfolios to control markets.
If patents were non-transferrable, they'd need to pursue alleged violators on their own, which involves a lot of lawyers and is very expensive. So they'd need to focus on high quality patents (difficult, requires original research). And if they make a solid business out of that, then it's fine, since they actually produce viable and commercially interesting innovations.
Much of what goes on right now are small claims, sometimes for several $1000, such as "using a drop down menu on a web page". Since these don't cover the cost of litigation, they are used to control the competition, especially in commodity markets with minimal profit margins.