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Abstract

An invention within close reach of multiple inventors differs from an invention within distant reach of a lone inventor. The differences between these two archetypes of invention -"reinventables" and "singletons"- remain unexploited under current U.S. law. Should we reform the law to exploit the differences? Mark Lemley and I agree that we should. To date, those economists who have closely examined the issue concur. What are the differences between reinventables and singletons? First, reinventables can be brought into existence with incentives of lower magnitude. This suggests that we can obtain reinventables at a lower price than we currently pay-i.e., with less monopoly loss than we incur today. Second, reinventables generate disproportionately more haste and redundancy, as the rival inventors race and duplicate each other's efforts. This suggests that we already pay more, in rent dissipation and lost opportunity, for reinventables than for singletons (holding all other things equal). Third, reinventables generate disproportionately more litigation as the race winners, or the "trolls" to whom the winners transfer patents, eat up time and resources suing the inventors who finished a close second or third. This suggests that we already pay more in administrative costs for reinventables than for singletons. The angel is in the big picture in that there is consensus among those who have closely examined the issue that we should reform the law to exploit these differences. The devil is in the details of just how to reform it. Naturally, professional economists have elided the law-related details, focusing instead on their models-models that show an increase in social welfare if the law is reformed so that reinventables hold out the prospect of shared duopoly. Lemley and I, in contrast, take a stab at some of the details of how legal reform could take shape. My proposal is that we regard an independent inventor ("reinventor") as exempt from the first inventor's patent, provided that the reinventor completed the invention before receiving notice that the first inventor had already completed it. Lemley expresses three reservations about my proposed reinvention defense, and then offers four alternative proposals.

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