Patents Go Open Source, Change Agents Please Apply!!!!

The best example yet of “crowd sourcing” is a pilot program that will go live shortly inside the US Patent and Trade Office. Change Agents across the government must ask, if an agency as old as USPTO can change, embracing the future for the good of their customers and the betterment of their mission, what are others waiting for?

From today’s Washington Post.

The government is about to start opening up the process of reviewing patents to the modern font of wisdom: the Internet.

The Patent and Trademark Office is starting a pilot project that will not only post patent applications on the Web and invite comments but also use a community rating system designed to push the most respected comments to the top of the file, for serious consideration by the agency’s examiners. A first for the federal government, the system resembles the one used by Wikipedia, the popular user-created online encyclopedia.

“For the first time in history, it allows the patent-office examiners to open up their cubicles and get access to a whole world of technical experts,” said David J. Kappos, vice president and assistant general counsel at IBM.

It’s quite a switch. For generations, the agency responsible for awarding patents, one of the cornerstones of innovation, has kept its distance from the very technological advances it has made possible. The project, scheduled to begin in the spring, evolved out of a meeting between IBM, the top recipient of U.S. patents for 14 years in a row, and New York Law School Professor Beth Simone Noveck. Noveck called the initiative “revolutionary” and said it will bring about “the first major change to our patent examination system since the 19th century.”

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GovernmentChangeAgents.com would like to thank Stephen Schneider for his help creating a bold *new look* for the Blog.   Like any change agents, we recognize the value in renovation.   Please continue sending us your comments and feedback.

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