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Automating Invention is Robert Plotkin's blog on the impact of computer-automated inventing on the future of invention and patent law.
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« The Blue Brain Project and Creation of an Artificial Brain | Main | The Case for Software, but not Literary, Patents »
September 3, 2009
Reports of the Death of Peer-to-Patent Are Greatly Exaggerated
I recently reported that the U.S. Patent Office had shut down the Peer-to-Patent pilot project. Now I have been informed by Bob Ambrogi that the project has only been suspended, not ended, while the Patent Office makes a final decision about its future. For more information, check out the interview that Attorney Ambrogi recently held with Professor Mark Webbink about Peer-to-Patent.
Posted by Robert at September 3, 2009 3:18 PM
category:
Intellectual Property Law
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