term “patent troll” negatively predisposes readers, courts Study: Media use of the term “patent troll” negatively predisposes readers, courts
By Bruce Berman May 8, 2016 “Patent troll,” the term employed by leading newspapers, magazines and online publications to describe how some patents are owned and used, provides a prejudicial impression of patent licensing that unfairly influences attitudes towards disputes.
This is among the findings of the research conducted by Illinois Institute of Technology – Chicago-Kent College of Law Professor, Edward Lee. Writing in the Stanford Technology Law Review, Professor Lee says that while “some courts have even barred the use of the term [patent troll] altogether during patent trials on the ground that the term is unfairly prejudicial. But, among the mainstream media, the term is pervasive.”
Moral Panic
Patent Trolls: Moral Panics, Motions in Limine, and Patent Reform, published on April 22, is the first empirical study of how the term patent trolls is treated in the media. Its findings confirm what some courts have already stated: patent trolls is an inaccurate and often misleading term best left in the slag heap of derisive and prejudicial descriptions.
Professor Lee’s article states that starting in 2006, the U.S. media surveyed used “patent troll” far more than any other term, despite the efforts of scholars to devise alternative, more neutral-sounding terms (see table). The tipping point came during the combination of the controversial Blackberry and eBay patent cases in 2006 — prior to that time, “patent holding company” was the most popular term.
Table 1: Total Number of Uses of Each Term and Contested Uses
Since then, the article states, the media more often portrayed such patent entities in a one-sided, negative light with very little analysis or factual support.
Until now, few works have provided statistics or discussion of any studies to support their negative portrayal. Practically no articles using the term mentioned the lack of a working requirement in U.S. patent law, which permits all patentees the right not to practice their inventions, should they so choose. Professor Lee’s findings provide support for the recent judicial decisions that have barred, at trial, the use of the term “patent troll.”
Table 3: Top Seven Sources Reporting – All Works
Deeper Dive
A useful next step would be to drill down below this Professor’s Lee’s excellent initial work to determine which reporters at what types of publications have used patent troll and other misleading terms, and when.
This type of media analysis – sorely lacking in the IP space – will be conducted by the Center for Intellectual Property Understanding, a non-profit education organization that was recently established with several thought-leaders.
CIPU board members include Marshall Phelps, Keith Bergelt and Harry Gwinnell. Retired Chief Judge for the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, Hon. Paul Michele, also a supporter, assisted in the formation. The Center for IP Understanding focuses on improving attitudes towards patents through better awareness and innovative education.
Table 2: Types of Works Describing Entities in Positive or Negative Light.
“The findings of this study,” concludes Professor Lee, who is Director of the Program in Intellectual Property Law at IIT, “suggest that the term may operate as a moral panic in a way that is detrimental to reasoned analysis and consideration of the root problems related to the issue of abusive patent litigation tactics.”
To obtain a copy of Patent Trolls: Moral Panics, Motions in Limine, and Patent Reform, go here.
Figure 3: Relative Uses of Terms Describing Entity Per Year, Weighted Proportionally by Use in Works. Image source: Stanford Technology Law Review.
https://www.ipwatchdog.com/2016/05/08/media-use-term-patent-troll-negatively-predisposes-readers-courts/id=68944/