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Elves or Trolls? The Role of Non-Practicing Patent Owners in the Innovation Economy
Damien Geradin Howrey LLP; Tilburg University - Tilburg Law and Economics Center (TILEC) Anne Layne-Farrar Law and Economics Consulting Group (LECG), LLC - Chicago, IL Office A. Jorge Padilla Law and Economics Consulting Group (LECG), LLC - Brussels, Belgium Office; Law and Economics Consulting Group (LECG), LLC - Madrid, Spain Office TILEC Discussion Paper No. 2008-018 Abstract: Firm structure and the degree of vertical integration lie at the core of a key intellectual property concern currently under debate: "patent trolls." While court opinions and competition agency decisions have focused on "non-practicing" patent holders as the source of anticompetitive exclusion and hold up problems, this view of upstream specialists is far too narrow. In fact, patents in the hands of non-practicing entities can increase competition, lower downstream prices, and enhance consumer choice. We explain why and argue for more business-model-neutral policy when it comes to patent licensing. Clearly, patents are a complex subject that cannot be portrayed as either all good or all bad; tradeoffs will always be involved. Without a better understanding of the many complicated effects of patents in high technology markets, we run the very real risk of misguided policy decisions. Accepted Paper Series Date posted: May 23, 2008 ; Last revised: July 17, 2008Suggested CitationContact Information
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