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9 Oct 2011, 8:13 am by Lawrence B. Ebert
**As to the point about claims in the Boulton-Watt patent, the following is text from the Howells/Katznelson paper on bepress:Lemley begins by asserting that? [read post]
9 Oct 2011, 5:00 am by Mark Lemley
The basic refrain of the Howells-Katznelson paper is that (1) I think Edison and the Wright brothers didn’t make inventive contributions, and (2) I diminish their contributions in service of my “radical” anti-patent agenda. [read post]
16 Mar 2016, 2:42 pm by Lawrence B. Ebert
The central mistake made by Howells and Katznelson is to treat judicial opinions and patent claims as reliable evidence of who really did what. n115 These legal documents emphatically assert that Edison's inventive contributions were without peer. [read post]
19 Mar 2016, 10:55 am by Lawrence B. Ebert
Rev. 1891, 1922: The central mistake made by Howells and Katznelson is to treat judicial opinions and patent claims as reliable evidence of who really did what. [read post]
17 Apr 2024, 4:34 am by Dennis Crouch
John Howells, Ron D Katznelson, Freedom to Operate analysis as competitive necessity—the Selden automobile patent case revisited, Journal of Intellectual Property Law & Practice (2024). [read post]
13 Mar 2016, 12:59 pm by Lawrence B. Ebert
There have been suggestions that Edison put his name on patents that may have reflected some inventive contributions from his employees; whether this merits the term "patent jacking" may be questioned.As noted by Howells/Katznelson in making comments about Lemley's "Myth of the Sole Inventor," (circa 2011) Edison is the only named inventor on the fundamental light bulb patent [ 223,898]. [read post]
31 Jan 2017, 5:27 pm by Lawrence B. Ebert
For example, we often learn only about the Italian astronomer Galileo as the one responsible for remarkably observing that there are spots on the sun, yet at least three other astronomers working independently in three different countries made this same observation in the same year. n198 Similar stories of simultaneous invention and improvements can be told about Thomas Edison (light bulb), Alexander Graham Bell (telephone), Orville and Wilbur Wright (airplane), Samuel Morse (telegraph), and Eli… [read post]