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Strategic Disclosure in the Patent System


Douglas Lichtman


University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) - School of Law

Scott Baker


Washington University in Saint Louis - School of Law

Kate Kraus


Irell & Manella LLP

September 2000

U Chicago Law & Economics, Olin Working Paper No. 107

Abstract:     
Patent applications are evaluated in light of the prior art. What this means is that patent examiners evaluate a claimed invention by comparing it with what in a rough sense corresponds to the set of ideas and inventions already known to the public. This is done for three reasons. First, the comparison helps to ensure that patents issue only in cases where an inventor has made a non-trivial contribution to the public's store of knowledge. Second, it protects a possible reliance interest on the part of the public since, once an invention is widely known, members of the public might reasonably assume that the invention is free for all to use. And third, it pressures inventors to file their patent applications promptly lest some other inventor disclose a related invention or the applicant himself inadvertently let slip some fraction of his own research result.

The prior art inquiry has a fourth policy implication, however, and while this one might not have been one of the motivating factors for establishing the inquiry in the first place, it is just as important when it comes to designing and interpreting sensible prior art rules. That additional wrinkle is simply this: the fact that patent applications are evaluated in light of the prior art gives firms a strategic incentive to create prior art. A firm can publish a journal article or engage in a public demonstration and in that way affect both a rival's ability to patent a related invention and the rival's incentive to do so. Perhaps surprisingly, this can make the disclosing firm better off even though, by revealing information, the firm is likely helping its rival and, worse, narrowing or even fully preempting the very patent it seeks.

In this Article, then, we explain the incentive for strategic disclosure. We show that a firm trailing in a given patent race has an incentive to disclose information in the hopes of preempting a rival's patent, but only if the laggard itself has little chance of leapfrogging the leader and winning the race. We show that a firm leading a patent race similarly has an incentive to disclose, this time in an effort to reduce its rival's expected payoff and in that way encourage the rival to quit the race. We consider the possibility that private negotiations will displace public disclosures, for example with the laggard agreeing not to disclose and in exchange receiving from the ultimate patentee some form of favorable licensing agreement. Lastly, we consider the implications all this might have for the patent system overall.

Number of Pages in PDF File: 40

Keywords: patent law, disclosure, prior art, information economics

JEL Classification: C7, K0, K3, L0

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Date posted: November 10, 2000  

Suggested Citation

Lichtman, Douglas Gary, Baker, Scott A. and Kraus, Kate, Strategic Disclosure in the Patent System (September 2000). U Chicago Law & Economics, Olin Working Paper No. 107. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=243414 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.243414

Contact Information

Douglas Gary Lichtman (Contact Author)
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) - School of Law ( email )
385 Charles E. Young Dr. East
Room 1242
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1476
United States
310-267-4617 (Phone)
Scott A. Baker
Washington University in Saint Louis - School of Law ( email )
Campus Box 1120
St. Louis, MO 63130
United States
Kate Kraus
Irell & Manella LLP ( email )
1800 Avenue of the Stars, Suite 900
Los Angeles, CA 90067
United States
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