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Against Monopoly

defending the right to innovate

All The News That Is Not Fit To Print

Monopoly corrupts. Absolute monopoly corrupts absolutely.





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Some days I can't help myself, sitting here in D.C.

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What the New York Times doesn't want you to know

The start of what will no doubt be a continuing series:

Dear New York Times:

Laudably, articles in Sunday's NYT address the need for innovation. Not one mentions the single most important ingredient needed to encourage innovation - patent reform. Patents no longer serve to encourage innovation. Rather, rent-seekers see who have the best ideas and use patents to blackmail them. Software has been one of the great engines of growth. Yet Bill Gates said: "If people had … taken out patents, the industry would be at a complete standstill today." Industry is now at a standstill and there can be no new direction for American innovation without a radical patent reform. Let us roll back patent protection in software; enforce the existing standard of non-obviousness; and eliminate the kidnapping of ideas for ransom by providing an independent invention defense. This - without public money, and unlike the random assortment of stimulus spending currently being proposed in Congress - would build the foundation for sustained economic growth.

Sincerely:

Michele Boldrin, David K. Levine, and Stephen M. Silberstein

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Michele Boldrin is Joseph G. Hoyt Distinguished Professor, and Chairman, in the Department of Economics at Washington University in St. Louis. He is a Fellow of the Econometric Society and a CEPR Research Associate. He is co-author of Against Intellectual Monopoly from Cambridge University Press, August 2008.

David K. Levine is John H. Biggs Distinguished Professor in the Department of Economics at Washington University in St. Louis. He is the President of the Society for Economic Dynamics, a Fellow of the Econometric Society and an NBER Research Associate. He is co-author of Against Intellectual Monopoly from Cambridge University Press, August 2008.

Stephen M. Silberstein co-founded, and served as the first President of, Innovative Interfaces Inc., the world's leading supplier of computer software for the automation of libraries.


   

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