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Patent portfolio

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A patent portfolio is a collection of patents owned by a single entity, such as an individual or corporation. The patents may be related or unrelated. Patent applications may also be regarded as included in a patent portfolio.

The monetary benefits of a patent portfolio include a market monopoly position for the portfolio holder and revenue from licensing the intellectual property. Non-monetary benefits include strategic advantages like first-mover advantages and defense against rival portfolio holders. Constituting a patent portfolio may also be used to encourage investment.[1]

Because patents have a fixed lifespan (term of patent), elements of a portfolio of patents constantly expire and enter the public domain.

Market value and evaluation

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The value of a corporation's patent portfolio can be a significant fraction of the overall value of the corporation. Ocean Tomo LLC, for example, maintains an index of corporations whose market value is governed in large part by their patent portfolio value. The index is called "Ocean Tomo 300 Patent Index".[2]

Another example is IPscore—acquired in 2006 by the European Patent Office—a software application, developed by the Danish Patent and Trademark Office. The application estimates "the economic value of patents and development projects".[3]

Patent portfolio valuation

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Because patent portfolios can contain hundreds, sometimes thousands, of patents,[4] companies that wish to license a patent portfolio often must negotiate without complete information. In many cases, it is too costly for the negotiating parties to assess the validity and value of each of the portfolio's individual patents. Instead, parties will attempt to set a royalty that, over time, "converges on an objective probabilistic assessment of the portfolio's value."[5]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "My company is relatively new, and we are interested in ... encouraging investment by demonstrating a growing international patent portfolio." in Entering the national phase early where the international application has not yet been published, Practical Advice, PCT Newsletter No. 10/2011, page 15ff.
  2. ^ Ocean Tomo web site, http://www.oceantomo.com/indexes.html[permanent dead link] Ocean Tomo 300 Patent Index. Accessed on November 27, 2006.
  3. ^ European Patent Office web site, The European Patent Office acquires IPscore, the patent portfolio evaluation tool, Official Communication, December 29, 2006, consulted on December 30, 2006.
  4. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-07-06. Retrieved 2016-02-04.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. ^ J. Gregory Sidak, Evading Portfolio Royalties for Standard-Essential Patents Through Validity Challenges, 39 WORLD COMPETITION (Forthcoming 2016) at 10, https://www.criterioneconomics.com/evading-portfolio-royalties-for-standard-essential-patents.html.