Showing posts with label Statistics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Statistics. Show all posts

30 June 2021

How Effective is Australia’s 12 Month Acceptance Deadline in Limiting Examination Delays?

AccelerateOne of the objectives of the Raising the Bar IP law reforms – most of which commenced on 15 April 2013 – was to reduce delays in the resolution of patent (and trade mark) applications.  The perceived problem with such delays was not that applicants were unhappy with the speed of processing of their applications (in fact, most choose to defer examination and acceptance of their patent applications), but rather that delays create uncertainty about whether a patent will be granted, and what scope the granted claims might have.  As noted in the Explanatory Memorandum to the Raising the Bar Bill, ‘[d]elay may suit the party, but it is not in the interests of the public, or the party’s competitors.’

There were four main features of the reforms that were expected to reduce delays and uncertainty:

  1. reduction, from six months to two months, of the period within which an applicant is required to request examination, once directed to do so by the patent office;
  2. reduction of the maximum period available for an applicant to obtain acceptance of a patent application, following issue of an initial examination report, from 21 months down to 12 months;
  3. ‘tightening’ of the rules around when divisional applications can be validly filed, to reduce opportunities for what the Explanatory Memorandum describes as ‘abusive uses’; and
  4. refinement of opposition proceedings, mostly in the form of more stringent criteria for obtaining extensions of time.

The reforms to opposition proceedings had an almost immediate impact, since they applied to all new oppositions filed on or after 15 April 2013, as well as (to a more limited degree) oppositions that were already in progress.  However, since over 99.5% of all accepted applications are not opposed, the reduction in opposition duration is irrelevant to the overwhelming majority of cases. 

It has taken longer to reach the point at which there is sufficient data to evaluate the effect of the change to the examination period, since this only applied to applications for which a request for examination was filed on or after 15 April 2013.  Many of these applications remained in the system for years.  Indeed, the last patent to be granted under the pre-Raising the Bar regime – without being additionally delayed by opposition proceedings – was no. 2010311063, which was derived from a PCT application that entered the national phase in Australia on 17 May 2012.  Examination was requested on 9 April 2013, and a first report issued on 7 August 2018 (after the application inadvertently lapsed and was restored).  The application was eventually accepted on 17 February 2020, and the patent granted on 18 June 2020.

I have now analysed nearly two decades worth of Australian patent examination data, spanning the period before and after commencement of the Raising the Bar reforms.  Further details and charts are below, but in summary I have found that:

  1. reduction of the maximum examination period by nine months (from 21 to 12 months) has resulted in a drop of only a little over three months in the median period between initial examination and acceptance of successful applications;
  2. the reforms have not, however, resulted in any lasting improvement in the pendency of the most ‘stubborn’ applications, which are only accepted following one or more divisional applications being filed for the purposes of continuing examination (for want of any better term, I call these ‘continuation divisionals’);
  3. as a result, the ‘top’ 2% of cases are still pending for 900 days or more between an initial examination report being issued and an application finally being accepted;
  4. perversely, following an initial temporary drop in the number of continuation divisionals, the reforms actually seem to have resulted in an increase in the proportion of divisional applications that are filed for the primary purpose of continuing examination;
  5. on the other hand, however, the major use (i.e. over 60%) of divisional applications remains their primary purpose of pursuing alternative claims following acceptance of claims in a parent application.

Overall, reducing the examination period has had a relatively minimal effect on total pendency of patent applications – a reduction in the time prior to examination, i.e. between filing and a first examination report being issued, has been much more significant.  However, it appears to have had the unintended consequence of increasing the use of divisional applications to continue examination.

04 June 2017

Private R&D Expenditure Positively Impacted by Clustering and Academic Research Spending, New Study Finds

Network effectsThe Australian Government’s Office of the Chief Economist recently published a new research paper entitled The role of spillovers in research and development expenditure in Australian industries (which I will refer to as ‘the Spillover paper’).  The paper describes an econometric model that uses data from Australian companies that conduct research and development (R&D), and looks at how R&D activity of other firms and public institutions affect a firm’s own R&D expenditure, i.e. the effects of ‘spillover’ of R&D being conducted elsewhere.  The paper also examines the impact of geographical proximity and clustering on these R&D spillovers.

Overall, the model indicates that there are positive effects on R&D expenditure due to spillovers from peers and clients to companies that are located nearby (within 25 or 50km).  Furthermore, R&D expenditure by academia also has a positive influence on a company’s R&D expenditure within state boundaries.  However, R&D spending by government bodies appears to have the opposite effect, seemingly ‘crowding out’ private R&D spending.

The study has important policy implications, because it suggests that public support for R&D, whether to private firms through grants and/or tax incentives, or through funding of research in universities and other public institutions, results in benefits not only to the organisation receiving the direct support, but also to other firms and institutions more broadly.

Significantly, the modelling provides further evidence that Australia’s reputation for having a woefully low level of industry/research collaboration (which is based on one rather dubious OECD data point) is largely undeserved.  I have previously observed that Australian companies clustered geographically close to major academic institutions tend to file more patent applications, while research by IP Australia has shown a healthy rate of patent applications naming industry and research partners as co-applicants from Australia when compared with other OECD nations.  The Spillover paper supports this by showing a positive correlation between academic and industry R&D spending, particularly for companies and institutions located within the same state (and, in practice, probably more closely than this, although the paper does not break down academic R&D expenditure below state level).

I discuss further details of the model, and the paper’s key findings, later in this article.  If this is all you are interested in, feel free to skip ahead.  But first I would like to take the opportunity to explain the general process of econometric modelling for readers who may be interested in better understanding how economists think about the kinds of questions addressed by this paper, and how to interpret their results.

19 April 2013

‘Raising the Bar’ Raises Patent Filings

Raising the barsAs many readers will be aware, the Australian Intellectual Property Laws Amendment (Raising the Bar) Act 2012 came full effect on Monday, 15 April 2013.  A concise summary of the reforms, and a number of ‘fact sheets’, are available from the IP Australia web site.

As I wrote back in March last year, among other reforms, the new laws substantively raise patentability standards.  Significant changes include:

  1. enhanced disclosure requirements in the patent specification; 
  2. enhanced disclosure requirements in a priority document in order to obtain the benefit of an earlier filing; 
  3. replacement of the old ‘fair basis’ standard with a European-style ‘support’ standard;
  4. a new ‘utility’ standard; 
  5. removal of the geographical limitation on the ‘common general knowledge’ forming the background for inventive step and innovative step assessment; and
  6. removal of the requirement that prior art documents be ‘ascertained, understood and regarded as relevant’ by a person skilled in the art before they can be considered in an inventive step assessment.
All of this means that some claims which would have been patentable prior to 15 April 2013 might no longer be patentable under the new laws.

Under the savings and transitional provisions of the Raising the Bar Act, the former law continues to apply to any application and patent:
  1. which was filed prior to 15 April 2013; and
  2. for which a request for examination was made prior to 15 April 2013.
I predicted back in November last year that these transitional provisions would have a significant effect on applicant behaviour.  It is now possible to gain some insight into just how great that effect has been.  And it is pretty huge!

13 January 2013

Australian Patent Grants Plateau in 2012, Microsoft Slips to No. 6

Australian Patents Granted, 1992-2012


The chart to the left shows the total numbers of patents granted in Australia on an annual basis between 1992 and 2012. Having reached unprecedentedly high levels in 2010 and 2011, the number of granted patents appears to have plateaued.

In 2012, the Johnson & Johnson-owned surgical supplies company Ethicon Endo Surgery was the number one recipient of newly-minted patents in Australia, more than doubling the number of Australian patents it received in 2011, to reach a grand total of 250 for the year.  This could hardly have been a more different outcome from the corresponding US results, where not just the top 10, but the entire top 50, is dominated by ICT and other tech-sector companies.

The other notable fact about the number of patents granted in Australia in 2012 is that the total appears to have plateaued at around 19,500 per year.  However, as we have explained previously, since IP Australia still has a significant examination backlog, the number of patents granted is not a function of the number filed in the previous years, but rather of the number and efficiency of examiners working their way through the waiting list.  Apparently, there was little change in the available resources last year, although we understand that IP Australia has recently been recruiting more new examiners.

As for the US results, this week, patent research company IFI CLAIMS Patent Services released its annual list of the top 50 assignees of US patents issued in the previous year.  There are no surprises at the top of the list, with IBM coming in at number one for the 20th successive year.  Samsung is again number two, though this year IBM has actually pulled ahead a little.  Third-placed Canon is not even close to the top two, running nearly 2000 patents behind Samsung.

09 February 2012

Apple’s Strategic Plans for Australian Litigation

Weapons stockpileLast Friday, 3 February 2012, Apple and Samsung returned to Justice Annabelle Bennett’s Federal Courtroom in Sydney to resume hostilities for the new year.

While the main purpose of the most recent hearing was to set a timetable for a full trial on both parties various claims against the other, Apple has taken the opportunity to add new allegations of infringement to its case against Samsung, bringing the total number of patents asserted by the company in the Australian litigation to 22.

Computerworld’s Chloe Herrick has reported that Samsung’s legal team insisted at a second court appearance on Wednesday, 8 February 2012, that they would require most of this year to prepare their case, pointing out that there has probably never been a larger patent infringement case in Australia, and that at least 10 of the patents now asserted by Apple have not been raised by the company in any other country. 

Justice Bennett has set down a further date for timetabling of Apple’s case against Samsung on 9 March 2012.

Meanwhile, it appears that a schedule for Samsung’s countersuit against Apple – a case involving the assertion of patents essential to the implementation of 3G mobile communications standards – is closer to finalisation, with an initial part of the trial likely to be held in July, and the remainder of the case to be heard in September.

APPLE’S AUSTRALIAN ASSAULT

As Samsung’s lawyers have argued, the scale of Apple’s patent infringement claims is unprecedented in Australia.  A case involving the alleged infringement, and challenges to the validity, of 22 patents is a massive exercise for both parties, and for the court.

With the benefit of hindsight, however, it is clear that Apple has been building up its Australian patent arsenal for a number of years.  It might therefore have been possible to anticipate that Apple would pick this country as one of its chosen venues for an assault on Android and – as it turns out – Samsung, should anyone have been looking for the signs.

05 February 2012

Microsoft Once Again Heads Australian Patent Recipient List

Australian Patents Granted, 1992-2011

The chart to the left shows the total numbers of patents granted in Australia on an annual basis between 1992 and 2011. While there have always been fluctuations over time, the number of patents granted in the past two years has reached unprecedentedly high levels.
As we did around this time last year, we have once again taken advantage of our helpful colleagues in the Information Services Department at Watermark Intellectual Asset Management to obtain statistics on patents granted in Australia during the 2011 calendar year.  And again, it is interesting to compare the results with the corresponding data for US patents issued during the year, as compiled by patent research company IFI CLAIMS Patent Services.

First and second places in Australia once again went to Microsoft and LG Electronics, although the total number of patents granted to both companies fell by nearly 40%.  Pharmaceuticals and healthcare company Novartis gained two spots to come in at number three, only one patent behind LG!

However, both Microsoft and LG bucked the overall trend in Australia, with the total number of patents granted moving to 19471, up from 15877 (+22.6%) in 2010.  This makes 2011 the fifth consecutive year of growth in patent grants.  The increase over 2010 is the largest year-on-year gain since 1998.  By contrast, the US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) issued only 2% more patents in 2011 than in 2010.

17 May 2011

Australia Has Third Best IP Regime in the World, Says Survey

European-based IP law firm, Taylor Wessing, has released its third Global Intellectual Property Index (GIPI) report, which rates 24 jurisdictions according to their support for obtaining, exploiting, enforcing and challenging IP rights.

According to the GIPI report, which is available free for download (subject to registration), Australia ranks third in the world, after Germany and the UK, and ahead of the USA, Canada and the Netherlands, which round out ‘tier 1’.  New Zealand comes in at number 11, just scraping into ‘tier 2’.  At the bottom of the list, in ‘tier 5’, are Brazil, China and India.

This is all very well, but what (if anything) does it all mean?  In this article we take a look at just one aspect of the GIPI – the patent index – in which Australia also happens to rank third.

11 February 2011

Microsoft Tops Australian Patent Grants for 2010

‘Tis the season for statistics, as everybody looks back on the year that was 2010!

As we previously briefly reported, patent research company IFI CLAIMS Patent Services recently released its annual list of top US patent recipients for 2010.  Notably, companies in the information and communications technologies (ITC) sector dominated the list, which was headed by IBM with an astonishing, and record-breaking, 5896 US patents issued in 2010. IBM has now topped the US patent charts for 18 consecutive years.

This got us to wondering – how would the corresponding statistics for Australian patent grants compare?


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