A recent World Economic Forum survey rated the US 19th in IP Protection. As Nate Anderson (over at Ars Technica) points out “nothing objective is being measured in the WEF survey question on intellectual property (p. 347) except for the feelings of the executives who answered it.” None the less the US Chamber of Commerce has called for tougher IP protection.
Unfortunately this seems to ignore the question of what the right amount of IP Protection is. While it is not surprising that a group of businesses would call for tougher IP laws, I wonder whether they should be. It is often assumed by businesses that tougher IP laws will help them. However, anyone working in the current patent field will tell you that tougher IP can be a detriment to innovation. Every IP protection results in a loss to the public domain. In many cases the loss is outweighed by the benefits to society of the intellectual property. However in some cases it is not. For example in some scientific discoveries another party would have discovered the same thing weeks later. Yet the patent system often rewards the first discovery with full patent protection. This can lead to a net loss to society and a lossed business opportunity (assuming the discovery would have still occurred without patent incentive …)
Obviously this discussion could go on for ages, so I will instead leave you with these two thoughts:
What level of IP protection will result in not just an incentive to produce intellectual property but rather the right incentive (the gain to the producer must not outweigh the cost to society)?
How can we ensure the Congress is concerned with the above question and not the lobbying power of the US Chamber of Commerce?
The article highlights an important part of law and society that is often over looked: without public support for a law the law will not be obeyed. To demonstrate this point the authors describe a stretch of road in Las Vegas
While
Perhaps a simpler example is hotels. This past weekend I paid $90 to stay at the Marriot rather than $55 to stay at a cheap nearby motel. Why? Because Marriott provides services I value above and beyond a place to sleep. Marriott has a reputation for great customer services, clean rooms, and fancy hotels whereas I suspected the $55 hotel might not maintain the same level of cleanliness or service.
Monday evening I saw my first 3-D movie, Up. While watching animated movies is usually something I relegate to my Netflix list rather than paying $10+ dollars in a movie theater, I was curious to see the 3-D technology up close and in person. I was impressed. In my opinion the movie was good not great, but the subtleties of depth on the screen were incredible. Some of the people in our group felt that the movie did not have much 3-D and were disappointed with the lack of a large difference. I on the other hand felt that the depth of the movie was fantastic and part of the beauty of the 3-D was that it was so realistic and well done that it wasn’t in your face.
