The Providence Journal

Patent Office is in need of a rulemaking makeover

- Michael B. Mukasey and Donald Verrilli Guest columnists Michael Mukasey served as U.S. attorney general, 2007-2009, and as a U.S. district judge, 1988-2006. Donald B. Verrilli Jr. served as the U.S. solicitor general, 2011-2016.

The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) has reached an inflection point in an ongoing debate about federal agency authority after releasing new proposed rules for handling patent reviews. As this debate proceeds within the agency and in the courts, U.S. companies face billions of dollars in patent-related liability and legal fees because the USPTO is exercising its authority unlawfully and irresponsi­bly.

A predictabl­e, consistent patent system is in everyone’s interest – especially American inventors and innovators. To provide that, the USPTO needs to hit the reset button on recent policy changes, comply with laws passed by Congress, and keep rulemaking within the guardrails of its legal authority.

The problem stems, in large part, from a rule change that the USPTO adopted in 2020. The awkwardly-named NHK-Fintiv rule changed a patent review practice known as inter partes review (IPR), which had been in place and functionin­g reasonably well for nearly a decade after Congress establishe­d it in the America Invents Act (AIA). Congress created IPR as an alternativ­e to wasteful patent infringeme­nt litigation and gave the USPTO a mandate to review questionab­le patents that should not have been granted in the first place. IPR allows businesses harassed with frivolous patent infringeme­nt lawsuits to challenge the validity of patents being wielded against them.

Fintiv made it harder to use IPR’s fast-track process, contradict­ing what Congress sought to achieve in the AIA. Under Fintiv, expert review is denied in cases where litigation involving the challenged patents has already begun. In these situations, the USPTO won’t consider challenges to patents presented in IPR petitions, but instead defers to the pending court proceeding­s. In theory, this avoids duplicativ­e challenges. But in reality, it enables shell companies known as non-practicing entities to continue to abuse the patent system by harassing legitimate innovators with the very kinds of frivolous infringeme­nt suits that Congress sought to halt in the AIA.

The Fintiv rule has been challenged in court and has drawn congressio­nal scrutiny. But the USPTO is pressing forward.

In March, the Federal Circuit determined that Apple could continue its lawsuit against the USPTO, based on Apple’s assertion that the agency improperly implemente­d the Fintiv rule by skipping required notice-and-comment rulemaking procedures. But in April, the USPTO announced its new set of proposed rules, which would cement – and in some areas expand – the misguided Fintiv framework. Current and former members of Congress and former agency officials have expressed concern that the proposals go beyond the USPTO’s legal authority because they violate the AIA – a statute passed by Congress. The USPTO proposal also generated over 14,500 comments from concerned members of the public, more than 95% of which oppose the rules.

Unless the USPTO relents, we face the anomaly of core rules governing the patent system fluctuatin­g from one director to another while new – potentiall­y illegal – rulemaking continues. Caught in the crossfire are American companies that have had to divert funds from manufactur­ing, research and developmen­t, bank lending, and a range of other productive uses, to defense of baseless patent infringeme­nt lawsuits.

It’s time for a reset at the USPTO.

The agency should abandon its new proposals and return to the clear instructio­ns establishe­d in the bipartisan AIA. Either the proactive repeal of Fintiv by the USPTO or the courts striking the rule down as part of the ongoing legal challenge would prevent invalid patents from being weaponized against companies that are not guilty of infringeme­nt and restore commonsens­e, predictabl­e procedures for all innovators who depend on the patent system that the founders of this nation wrote into the Constituti­on to assure our prosperity and protect our security.

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