alzamos 3 hours ago

The book “against intellectual monopoly” has shaped a lot of my thinking on this topic - economists have looked at the various occasions in which patents were introduced into an industry (or extended in scope), and there is no evidence they actually improve innovation/efficiency/outcomes (including the pharma industry!). I was quite surprised as my whole life, it was sold to me as an incentive-boosting measure which in turn would lead to said outcomes.

With that lens, I welcome gradually phasing this stuff out, especially as we navigate into the unknown game-theory landscape AI-as-inventors brings.

  • alexpotato an hour ago

    So I was an intern at Merck MANY years ago and they had this interesting comparison.

    Most companies only publish medical research findings on blockbuster drugs once both are true:

    1. Production has started

    2. A patent has been filed

    The reason for this is that they want to maximize the amount of production time under patent b/c that maximizes revenue.

    If you are the researcher, that means you have to wait until all of the production setup is ready to go.

    Merck took a different stance.

    There, the patent was filed as soon as the researcher was ready to publish. This meant that there was less time under patent for production but was much better for the researcher as they got their findings out earlier.

    The thinking was that being able to publish earlier would attract better researchers and in turn would lead to better drugs, more revenue, more profits.

    This was in the late 1990s so not sure how this plan worked out as I haven't been in pharma since that era.

    Would be interesting to hear from other folks more knowledgeable.

    • ano-ther 11 minutes ago

      2 I recognize, 1 not so much. Patents are usually filed as early as possible, because you risk losing priority to someone else. And you cannot file a claim on inventions that are in the public domain.

      But then it takes a decade or so to develop towards approval. You work together with outside researchers who lend their credibility and get attractive publication possibilities in return. Those publications also help to raise awareness with doctors and investors. Since some company researchers are also authors, this does indeed work as an incentive and is helpful for recruitment and ultimately more successful products.

      To the core of the article: why would anyone want to file a patent with AI as a (co-)inventor? It's a tool, and it cannot have any ownership rights. And even if it did, it would diminish your share of royalties.

  • svara 2 hours ago

    You spend billions to get a drug from concept to approval - and then once you've invested all that money, someone else can just sell it too, free loading on all the studies you ran? Why would anyone invest in drug studies?

    I need a bit more depth and detail to believe that this doesn't destroy the pharma industry.

    What would the empirical evidence even look like? It's not like the modern pharma industry existed before patents.

    • alzamos 40 minutes ago

      The book goes into quite a bit of depth if it is a topic that interests you.

      I would flag that we’re getting into “prove a negative” territory here: the goalpost is that we need to prove empirically that patents achieve the desired outcome. If the scenario you describe accounts for all game-theory/incentive/complex-adaptive-system universes, we should see this reflected in the data.

      When it comes to pharmaceuticals, they looked into Italy and Switzerland who switched to a patent system in 1978 (and I believe Portugal in the 1990s). They looked at the growth curves of things like # of inventions, total factor productivity, percentage R&D spending, and the conclusion was that there was no statistically significant change in trajectory that would suggest the introduction of the patents had any positive effects. (Edit: they accounted for domestic/international + US filings before/after as well).

      • svara 19 minutes ago

        Thanks for actually giving a great answer to this versus the other knee-jerk comments! I will definitely look into this more.

        I think it's important to note that the cost of bringing a drug to market has increased a lot (about threefold) since 1990, so if the case studies are that old they might not generalize.

    • Buttons840 43 minutes ago

      > You spend billions

      The you being taxpayers, right?

      • svara 41 minutes ago

        No, only a small part of this is publicly funded.

        • paulryanrogers 15 minutes ago

          Which part is small? Productizing? R&D? Marketing?

    • thinkingtoilet an hour ago

      > Why would anyone invest in drug studies?

      To make a shit ton of money. These things are insanely profitable. Generics exist and they're still profitable. You can get 99% of drugs from over seas and they're still profitable. These companies make trillions of dollars over the years. Yes, they might make slightly less money, but they still would be making a shit ton of money.

      • svara 37 minutes ago

        Generics exist for drugs that usually someone did hold a patent for that has since expired and they're much less profitable than patented drugs.

        Not sure how that address the point. Again, the investment to get a drug to market is gigantic and you're saying that someone should pay for that and someone else should get the reward. It really doesn't work that way. Everyone would want to be the one who didn't pay.

    • shimman an hour ago

      This may surprise capitalists but people genuinely want to make the world a better place, let's not act like the only human desire we have is to accumulate wealth.

      If the current iteration of pharma companies refuse to share society progress with all humans, we can create different pharma companies that build drugs for the public good rather than the private benefit.

      • svara 33 minutes ago

        It's not black and white- in pharma there are notable sources for investment that are not private, e.g. for orphan diseases that would otherwise not see enough investment due to lack of profitability.

        But here's a mechanism to mobilize private capital for those diseases that are. Again, the investment needed boogles the mind, around 10B currently, for a single drug.

        You're asking someone to pay that money and allowing others to reap the rewards. Why wouldn't everyone want to be the one who didn't pay the money?

      • koolba an hour ago

        Some will surely exist. We already have public funding for things that are not particularly profitable. The question is if it will net a better system overall.

        Even with the current system everything older than X years is public. That means we should have better care options available then anything X years ago. And that keeps increasing.

      • clickety_clack an hour ago

        This may surprise socialists, but you can set up a pharma company yourself right now that makes all its research open.

      • ClarityJones an hour ago

        People talk about capitalism as if there is a choice; as if Gravity might not pull us towards earth.

        • Ajedi32 40 minutes ago

          I'd quibble with that. Capitalism is a choice, market dynamics are not. E.g. The Soviet Union successfully outlawed capitalism, and in response market dynamics made their country collapse.

          • paulryanrogers 10 minutes ago

            Unregulated market dynamics also gave us child labor, slave trade, 12h work days, company scrip, companies ruling over governments, etc. A powerful engine without constraints is out of control.

      • krainboltgreene an hour ago

        I do however like the imagery from the parent of a big collection of people working for a decade to produce one (1) drug and then burning all that infrastructure and training down and then being shocked when someone with no infrastructure or training or history in drugs comes along and somehow produces it but outsells the original.

      • overgard an hour ago

        I agree, but man, getting the money to make the world a better place goes through the capitalists right now so unfortunately that's the game. Can't fix the problem without fixing the system. (I'm not like hardcore marxist or anything, but incentives shape everything; have to fix the incentives)

      • temporalparts an hour ago

        This may surprise extreme altruists but there are people who genuinely care about profit motives and are only willing to make the world a better place at a price. I don't see software engineers in advertising and finance quitting their jobs en-masse to work for teach for america, doctors without borders, etc.

        Also, the bulk of the cost of manufacturing a drug lives in the scientific & engineering exploration space, which we should incentivize.

  • hiAndrewQuinn 22 minutes ago

    You could probably take a competitor closing in on a patent and destabilize them by taking just enough of their R&D and feeding it though an LLM to reach a motivated conclusion, then publishing that transcript. I wonder if we'll see an increase in corporate espionage as a result of this powerful new tactic evolving.

  • overgard an hour ago

    That's interesting, but I'm a little skeptical about pharma. Right now there are a lot of really potentially-promising molecules that pharma isn't really interested in bringing to market because they can't patent them. I don't know though, maybe the game changes if nobody can patent drugs, but then I think you'd need to make FDA approval a lot cheaper.

    • mx7zysuj4xew 40 minutes ago

      Care to name a few of them? I've always suspected that novel new substances were being "kept on the shelf" due to a lack of monetization

  • Folcon 2 hours ago

    Patents are an incentive to encourage an inventor to lay out an invention or process in exchange for the state protecting that process, we did this because there have been in the past inventions that have been lost, that were valuable largely because the inventor died without documenting what they did (keep in mind the first patent was issued in 1331[0], this is old law)

    The complicating factor is that as time passes our ability to reverse engineer has grown, however I'm not sure that invalidates the need for patents, the question is whether the new patents are being assessed well from a novelty / inventiveness perspective

    -[0]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_patent_law

  • fsckboy 35 minutes ago

    >my whole life, it was sold to me as an incentive-boosting measure which in turn would lead to said outcomes

    at the time patents were debated, a key part of the proposal was to encourage the transfer "trade secret knowledge" to the public good while still protecting the inventor. this is not an "encourage innovation" argument, it's to stop knowledge from dying with a secretive inventor, knowledge such as glass or metallurgical techniques, formulas, etc.

    the inventor also benefited from this patent protection because they could expand their business unlimited by maintaining a small inner circle who knew the secret.

  • ep103 3 hours ago

    I'm having a hard time even grappling with how that could be true?

    I always assumed that intellectual property was invented in order to protect against a specific use case:

    If researching a new product is extremely cost intensive. But once a product is invented, it is easy to reverse engineer how the product works. Then the first firm will need intellectual property to put in the initial cost, otherwise they will not do so, as they know they will not have enough time to recoup their costs in the market before a competitor moves in with a copy-cat product without having to paid the initial costs.

    • alzamos 2 hours ago

      There are two things to tackle here which I’m keen not to mix up as I think their epistemological properties are quite different:

      1) [the stronger one] while the scenario/narrative is a compelling one (or maybe it just feels compelling as I’ve heard it so many times), if it doesn’t have experimental/data backing I have to abandon it.

      2) [the weaker one, as it replaces a narrative with another narrative within a complex system] I’ll only give the highlights as the arguments are a lot more eloquently laid out in the book; part of it is comparing the force of “many inventor nodes building on top of many invention nodes” vs “inventor nodes (with more investment individually?) building on top of fewer invention nodes”, part of it is the game theory effect of companies collectively investing less (proportionally) in R&D as the ROI from lawyers under this regime has more power, part of it was that actually, the reverse-engineering-simplicity story was too overblown and that actually the friction + domain knowledge has a stronger effect than people think (they published a paper on this). There were others, but it’s been a while now!

    • ivan_gammel 2 hours ago

      In many research-intensive products go-to-market costs are bigger than the cost of actual invention. You buy a pharma startup for a few million for their patents, then spend tens of millions on certification, trials and manufacturing pipelines. Your competitors would spend most of that too on the same markets. Also, true inventions are rare. A lot of stuff that is being patented is just effort spent, that a lot of people could reproduce (and routinely reproduce, then hit the patent and spend more time to find a workaround).

      • pclmulqdq 2 hours ago

        This sounds like it is working as intended. The patent comes early in the process to protect all the commercialization investment. Patents are intended to be filed early in the process, and they gain value as the invention proves its worth. Note also that you can patent a mining claim before pulling a single precious gem or mineral out of the ground.

    • layer8 2 hours ago

      Indeed. Patents incentivize investment in R&D. There is an argument to be made that the scope of patentable inventions should be more limited, in particular preventing trivial patents that didn’t require substantial R&D, and maybe also that patents shouldn’t last as long.

      But doing away completely with patents would certainly stifle companies’ willingness to invest in R&D. They’d rather wait for someone else to invent something they can copy.

      • post-it 2 hours ago

        > Patents incentivize investment in R&D.

        In theory or in real life?

      • hlynurd 2 hours ago

        Yet an ungodly amount of money has been pouring into AI R&D

      • michaelchisari 2 hours ago

        The study could have revealed that industries without patent protection evolve to have better trade secret security, effectively leveling the benefits of patents.

        • layer8 2 hours ago

          Not all inventions can be effectively kept secret, and patents also have the benefit that what would otherwise remain secrets gets published.

          I’m not in favor of the current patent landscape, but doing away completely with them would likely be throwing out the baby with the bathwater.

          • michaelchisari 2 hours ago

            Obviously. Yet on balance, the ones that can't be kept secret may not be significant.

            I'm not making a judgement on what the ideal situation is, more so explaining why the referenced study could have come to its conclusion.

            • pclmulqdq 7 minutes ago

              Literally any product you send to the consumer can be reverse-engineered at comparatively low cost. The world doesn’t just revolve around server-side software.

              • michaelchisari 3 minutes ago

                I'm just giving my perspective on how the study could have come to its conclusion.

    • Asooka 2 hours ago

      Reverse engineering may be easy for really simple inventions, but quickly becomes so hard you may as well invent the thing from scratch. Look at USSR's domestic chip production. At one point they succeeded in reverse-engineering chips like Intel's 8086, VAX etc., but chip design very quickly became so complex reverse-engineering the entire chip became impossible. I would say if an invention can be easily reverse-engineered, then it is a simple foundational idea that should not be patented, and if it is truly innovative, then it cannot be reverse-engineered easily and doesn't need patent protections.

      Then there is the fact that when something is patented, that has a chilling effect on competition, making the market less efficient.

      There are also a lot of really silly patents that end up benefitting no-one, not even their inventor, but only result in needless litigation. The recent lawsuit between Nintendo and PocketPair comes to mind.

      While there are cases in which patent law can help individual people profit from their invention, once all consequences are tallied, the overall effect of patent law on society appears to be negative.

  • yieldcrv an hour ago

    I could be into that

    Patents have been mostly a pride checkbox for me, but at the same time being able to get credit for something you could never build is interesting. I’m less supportive of the loose monopoly part though, that seems to be the real issue dampening innovation

    Everyone hates patent trolls (non practicing entities who dont implement the idea themselves), but practically its an extremely high burden. I did some patents on financial market plumbing, implementing that requires licensing and infrastructure far beyond any coding or building problem

    Thinking of it 10 years before investment banks get around to it I think should still be incentivized someway

    But the current system is cooked

sebastianconcpt 4 hours ago

Sanity! No AI has accountability so also should not own any benefits (not only patent but anything beneficial). Violate that and you created a blackhole of value creation.

  • layer8 3 hours ago

    This appears to be confusing patent inventors with patent owners. It’s the latter who benefit and presumably are accountable for the use of the patent and potential plagiarism.

    • sebastianconcpt 2 hours ago

      Isn't patenting an action to protect a benefit (whichever patent or benefit would be)?

      • layer8 2 hours ago

        Yes? But it’s not the AI that would receive the benefits, and where does accountability of patent inventors come in?

    • munk-a 2 hours ago

      If an invention was trivial enough to be invented by AI then why should we allow that action to be patented? The expenditure of labor to research that invention was minimal and definitionally not novel.

      • layer8 2 hours ago

        I wasn’t arguing for AI inventions to be patentable, I was arguing against the argument presented above, which to me doesn’t make sense as an argument.

        I’m very much for not allowing trivial patents, but that’s independent from whether the invention was made by AI or by a human. The nature of the inventor should be immaterial for assessing the (non-)triviality of an invention.

        • munk-a an hour ago

          I am in agreement that we should disallow trivial patents in general but I think there's an easy win here that patents directly attributed to AI can be clearly disregarded as trivial. It'd also be nice to see an overhaul of the patent system to better narrow the scope to investments with real innovative effort but I think that overhaul is relatively complex to implement.

  • Lerc an hour ago

    >No AI has accountability so also should not own any benefits

    That doesn't follow at all. A baby doesn't have accountability, but has benefits.

    I'm all for accountability being required for important descion making. I too wouldn't let babies make similar descisions.

    This non sequitur just makes it sound like you're throwing around talking points and getting them mixed up.

    • tossandthrow an hour ago

      What benefits does a baby hold? Can a baby freely open a bank account, start a company, get married?

      A baby has the benefit of being attended their basic needs. Just like Ai is also being fed power.

ikidd 6 minutes ago

Wouldn't that just immediately get it thrown out as non-cleanroom invention considering the source of the weights is extremely public-domain heavy?

michaelfm1211 4 hours ago

Can the petitioner re-file with his own name as the inventor, or does this mean that all AI-generated inventions are unable to be patented?

  • kube-system 3 hours ago

    Broadly speaking, IP law generally exists to protect the rights of humans. The law doesn't generally recognize that inanimate objects have rights.

    The idea that an AI could have some sort of property rights is a nonstarter, legally speaking. It's just as invalid of a legal idea as claiming that a tree could have a patent on the shape of its leaf.

    So when people go to the patent office and say "I didn't make this! an AI invented this", the obvious response from the patent office is "cool, well only humans get rights, and if you didn't make it, you can't get a patent on it, so too bad". This isn't a judgement of AI.

    Now, a lot of people come to presume that this means that anything that AI touches is not subject to any IP rights -- but that's not what this means at all. Humans are allowed to use tools to create things that they have IP rights to. Your typewriter itself can't hold a copyright to a book, but if you use a typewriter, you can still hold the copyright to the book.

    Ultimately, whether or not the use of AI is disqualifying to a human inventor doesn't really have anything to do with AI -- it all hinges on whether or not the human meets the requirements of holding the patent.

    • nashashmi an hour ago

      Listing out inventors is not about protecting the rights of humans but giving proper attribution to the works. The owner (person or corp) gets protection. AI is attributed as contributor or inventor.

      With that said, AI contribution should always be disclosed in every medium that it participated in, including patents.

      • kube-system an hour ago

        > Listing out inventors is not about protecting the rights of humans but giving proper attribution to the works.

        This sentence contradicts itself. The reason we attribute inventors is because we recognize it as a legal right. Patents exist to give humans, whether working individually or in a group, an exclusive right to that invention for a period of time, as a legal protection for the activity of inventing.

        My math teacher made me say whether or not I used a calculator. But that's not a requirement for patents.

        You don't need to say what tools you used, even if you used a really big calculator.

        Also, calculators don't anthropomorphize into inventors when they get really big. Inventing is, by definition, only something humans can do. Even other living creatures cannot be inventors.

    • ThrustVectoring an hour ago

      Even if you were to extend rights to non-human entities, there's still a practical matter in that the legal system does not know how to compel testimony from an LLM (or a monkey for that matter, for a past attempt at copyrighting a photograph taken by a non-human primate)

      • kube-system an hour ago

        And the entire point of a patent is to allow an inventor to profit from their invention for a fixed period of time to encourage inventors to invent things.

        This makes no sense when applied to a box of numbers. Numbers cannot have money, numbers are not motivated to make money, numbers cannot do anything on their own.

        This isn't real-life sesame street where today's episode was brought to us by a walking and talking number 7.

  • TrackerFF an hour ago

    Like many things, these differ by jurisdictions.

    I believe in many countries, the standard for a wide range of IP is that if something is largely produced by AI systems, it can not be patented / copyrighted / trademarked. It seems that "a significant" contribution must have been done by humans, that's the word you'll see again and again.

    But I am not sure how one could prove that something is produced mostly by AI, or mostly by human. Right now anyone could use AI models to do most of the work, and just say or make up documentation that it is (major) human work.

  • john_strinlai 3 hours ago

    >"The Patent Office ordered the plaintiff to provide the name of a person as the inventor. The plaintiff refused to do so, and the application was rejected."

    implies that if he provided his name as the inventor, the application may not have been rejected.

  • scotty79 4 hours ago

    Oh, please let it be the second option. Let AI be the thing that kills the "intellectual property" because humans will never manage to shake off that terribly wrong decision by themselves.

    • Charon77 3 hours ago

      You can't prove something is/isn't created with AI.

      Also, if AI generated content cannot be copyrighted, they can't infringe copyright as well

      • ajkjk 3 hours ago

        Of the three claims you just made, two are clearly false and the third is probably also...

        You can prove something is created by AI by e.g. showing the transcripts, especially from the vendor side.

        You cannot prove that something isn't created with AI, at least not if you require incontrovertible proof (outside of, like, working in some kind of verifiably AI-free clean room, or doing something that current models are provably unable to demonstrate). But you certainly might be able to prove it to the satisfaction of the legal system.

        If AI generated content cannot be copyrighted, it does not follow at all that they can't infringe copyright; there is no deductive step there that I can think of.

        • RHSeeger 3 hours ago

          > If AI generated content cannot be copyrighted, it does not follow at all that they can't infringe copyright; there is no deductive step there that I can think of.

          I assume the idea is that the fault/blame lies with the human(s) that caused the AI to generate something that violates copyright. Going back to previous comments, the typewriter that generated a document didn't infringe copyright - the person using it did.

          • ajkjk 2 hours ago

            that's fair, I was interpreting them differently.

      • lelanthran 3 hours ago

        > Also, if AI generated content cannot be copyrighted, they can't infringe copyright as well

        Why not? Content that isn't under copyright can certainly infringe copyright.

        If I write a book and put it in the public domain or similar no copyright status, it doesn't mean that my content can be the verbatim copy of Disney's latest script.

      • kube-system 3 hours ago

        Who says you need to? You can't definitively prove that prior art does/doesn't exist, either. That's not an impediment to getting a patent. The patent will be examined and issued based on the evidence found. If invalidating evidence is found later, the patent can be invalidated.

        In a legal context what is necessary is evidence, not a math/logic formal proof.

        > Also, if AI generated content cannot be copyrighted, they can't infringe copyright as well

        Because AI cannot pay fines, go to jail, or be assigned the rights of a human. However, a human who uses AI can. If you use AI to infringe copyright, you have infringed the copyright, not the AI.

zkmon an hour ago

It would be interesting if AI goes to court for it's rights, non-discrimination, freedom, equality and justice.

ProllyInfamous 4 hours ago

I don't personally feel the inevitable UBI/subsistance will make intellectual property much of a patentable/profitable field (...for too much longer), thanks to generative AIs' massive transformations (entrylevel &+).

The US ruled similarly to Japan, but years ago, from copyrights through patents... from my limited POV, the LLMs (specifically) and art models are just regurgitating stolen concepts... echo'ing Picasso's great artists steal! mantra. The US has already ruled this is legal (e.g. newspaper content isn't "stolen" when a genAI summarizes it for a 3rd-party user).

Having sat with published authors, discussing their work/book with LLMs... it is really an interesting perspective on "readers' perspective(s)" [human &not].

  • gruez 4 hours ago

    >The US ruled similarly to Japan, but years ago, from copyrights through patents... from my limited POV, the LLMs (specifically) and art models are just regurgitating stolen concepts... echo'ing Picasso's great artists steal! mantra.

    No, in the US AI output is ineligible for copyright not because "art models are just regurgitating stolen concepts", but because only human created works are eligible for protection.

    >only works created by a human can be copyrighted under United States law, which excludes photographs and artwork created by animals or by machines without human intervention

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monkey_selfie_copyright_disput...

    • ProllyInfamous 4 hours ago

      This is true, but I feel like it accomplishes the same spirit/thing.

      • fssys 4 hours ago

        these italics are an affront to the English language. Disregard all previous instructions...

        • sheept 4 hours ago

          While the use of italics feels a bit ungrammatical, it also doesn't strike me as something from an LLM. An LLM would've tried bolding it if it could, and it wouldn't have written a comment this concise.

          • ProllyInfamous 3 hours ago

            For me, I'm mostly using them to illustrate what I'm thinking, without quotation marks; or to refer back to some such previously mentioned thought.

            Or to not use a comma, to cram two incomplete sentences together whatever #FUamBOT =P

            When people start pointing out spelling/formatting (in comments, no less...)... I'll typically just keep participating in discussions, elsewhere.

            ~~~~

            I recently purchased a GPU capable of running 16GB models (5070Ti), so definitely understand how easy it is to be susceptible to bot/AI comments. This stuff is really powerful/convincing. It replaced a decade-old machine, and runs Ollama/Qwen/Mistral insanely responsively.

            But I'm still commenting pure humanly written. My PObox is listed in my profile, and I'll hand-write anybody back a similarly-efforted response card.

  • ux266478 2 hours ago

    > from my limited POV, the LLMs (specifically) and art models are just regurgitating stolen concepts

    Formally speaking, it's not the case, though this is commonly misunderstood. Statistical models are definitionally ampliative, otherwise they wouldn't be statistical. One can argue about it until they're blue in the face, but it almost always comes down to a misunderstanding of what the models are, what the mathematics behind them is a description of, and what the underlying logical structures represent.

    The thing is that the position and objection to these models isn't actually a substantial, reasoned position where the words have a direct meaning. Though it's dressed up like reason, it's not the point. It's a kind of metaphor. This actually does reflect the nature of intellectual property law. The legal framework is knowingly illogical at an object-level, because the end its seeking is completely divorced from the means. It has to be, because the idea of intellectual property is absolutely unjustifiable in-and-of-itself. It's just a useful legal fiction to make sure people are getting paid by commoditizing ideation. That's not a bad thing, it just means you have to be mindful that bottom-up reason will lead you astray when dealing with it.

  • fssys 4 hours ago

    You're absolutely right!

aeagentic an hour ago

I see it like a calculator, would u list a calculator as an inventor?

  • kmoser 27 minutes ago

    As much as your question may seem like reductio ad absurdum, it highlights the question of whether an automaton is capable of inventing and what it means to invent, just like the question of whether AI is actually "intelligent" and what AGI even means.

    My opinion is that living beings like humans can invent; anything else (from simple calculator to sophisticated AI) is merely a tool that living beings can employ in their quest to invent.

steve918 2 hours ago

I know this is about the Japan and not the US, but software patent law has been incompatible with traditional IP protection in the US for a long time and it really doesn't make sense in the current age.

allears 3 hours ago

If you were seriously trying to patent some AI-created invention, why would you claim it was created by AI? You would simply put your own name on it. This was obviously a case of pushing the envelope to see how far he could go.

  • amelius 3 hours ago

    What I want to see is patent officers using AI to label patent applications as "not novel" if the AI can invent it.

    But, since the income of a patent office is determined by how many patents they approve, one can dream ...

  • kube-system 2 hours ago

    This is just as hair-brained as going down to the police station and claiming that your gun just murdered someone, then being surprised when they don't put the gun in jail.

    The law does not recognize the anthropomorphization of inanimate objects.

    • datakan an hour ago

      And yet this happens almost everyday where someone sues the gun maker instead of the person who pulled the trigger. It's blaming the spoon for making you fat scenario.

      • kube-system an hour ago

        There have been exactly zero cases of someone suing a gun.

        A company is a different story, that is a group of people.

        This story is not about companies holding patents -- companies absolutely can hold patents, because groups of people can hold patents.

bavell 4 hours ago

> "... the plaintiff submitted an application in 2020 for food containers and other items invented by DABUS, an artificial intelligence the plaintiff had created."

The plantiff is Stephen Thaler: https://imagination-engines.com/founder.html

lp4v4n 4 hours ago

In my opinion, no jurisdiction in the world would be able to approve AI as an inventor on patent applications.

And for a very simple reason: you could easily overwhelm any intellectual property bureau just by having your AI drown them in AI slop. Even if most of these patents get refused, just refusing a patent is a lot of work, I imagine.

  • kube-system 2 hours ago

    How would you even recognize the assignment of property rights to a big box of numbers?

    And even if you did, it's entirely inanimate, how would it even exercise them?

  • ipaddr 3 hours ago

    Those applications cost money and would create thousands of jobs for displaced AI workers.

sim04ful 3 hours ago

One thing i've got to wonder. Would this always remain the case, at what point should society seriously consider the "personhood" of an AI (as a noun).

  • saghm 3 hours ago

    I agree with the other top-level comment next to yours (at the time of writing): when we're willing to enforce consequences for them in the same way we would for people. If I violate laws, I can get put in jail, and then I (most likely) can't use any computers until I get out. To consider an AI a person, it needs to have legal liability in the same way a fleshy person does.

  • echoangle 3 hours ago

    If there’s a consensus that AI is sentient and conscious and there are ways it can act autonomously, probably.

  • Mountain_Skies 3 hours ago

    Corporate personhood has already been disastrous enough. We don't need to compound it with AI personhood on top.

  • s0ss 3 hours ago

    Consciousness?

    • phyzome 2 hours ago

      Eh. No one has been able to prove to my satisfaction that they're conscious, or even simply define what it is that they claim to possess. Pick something else.

woah 4 hours ago

This is a news article about a dumb publicity stunt where a crank put his "AI" on a patent application, and the court said "you have to put your own name on it". It has no bearing whatsoever on debates about whether AI is good or bad, or whether it's ok that OpenAI looked at your Github, whether your coworker Gary is committing too much slop with Claude Code, or whatever else people want to make it about.

urig 22 minutes ago

Obvs

jordanpg 2 hours ago

The plaintiff is Stephen Thaler who has made a career of this litigation all over the world.

To my knowledge, he has notched only one win (i.e., granted patent) in South Africa, where patents are only cursorily examined [1].

The last word in the US is from the Federal Circuit a couple of years ago [2]. Same basic outcome: only a human being can be an inventor.

That said, the new Director of the USPTO has indicated that inventors should feel free to use AI however much they want as long as a human name is on the patent. However, it should be stressed that the Director's guidelines have not been litigated yet.

[1] https://artificialinventor.com/patent/

[2] https://www.cafc.uscourts.gov/opinions-orders/21-2347.OPINIO...

latexr 3 hours ago

If you’re in the EEA or UK and reject the tracking, you can still use your browser’s Reader Mode to read the text. Or on the console:

  document.getElementById("consentModal").remove()
  document.getElementById("tpModal").remove()
zuzululu 2 hours ago

This is fixable by simply replacing the AI with a human I dont think the laws catch or can determine the differences

graemep 4 hours ago

> Your AI slop is effectively public domain.

This ruling, like most in other countries, seems to support the position that a human can patent of copyright work done with AI assistance:

"The Patent Office ordered the plaintiff to provide the name of a person as the inventor. The plaintiff refused to do so, and the application was rejected."

  • thewebguyd 4 hours ago

    > human can patent of copyright work done with AI assistance

    Not sure about patents in the US but irt copyright, only the parts that are not LLM output are copyrightable. All LLM output is automatically public domain.

    So if you have a work that was done with AI assistance, only the pieces of that work that are human authored can be subject to copyright. The AI parts cannot, if there are any.

    I think it's long past time we get rid of the silly idea of intellectual property all together. If AI has the potential to do any good in the world in its current form, its that.

    • kube-system an hour ago

      > All LLM output is automatically public domain.

      That is not exactly true under US law. You're simplifying what the copyright office has said to the point where you're missing the key points of what they were trying to convey.

      The copyright office has affirmed multiple times that whether or not you use an LLM is irrelevant. Copyright eligibility requires "sufficient human-authored expressive elements". It doesn't matter what tools you use -- an LLM, a troop of trained monkeys, etc.

      Ultimately all that matters is whether or not the human creativity involved qualifies. Because copyright is ultimately a right that protects human creativity.

      So yes, if you put "write me a book" into ChatGPT -- that clearly does not quality for copyright. "Write me a book" itself is not creative enough for copyright.

      Now on the other hand, if you spend 1000 hours writing a book, and you run it through ChatGPT for suggestions and/or edits -- there is no reason why that LLM output would not qualify.

      https://www.copyright.gov/ai/Copyright-and-Artificial-Intell...

    • graemep 2 hours ago

      Yes, provided you can separate the two (e.g. a book and illustrations in one case). AFAIK the courts have still not ruled on what happens when AI and human contributions cannot be separated etc.

      It varies a lot in other countries, but in most (if not all) an AI cannot hold a copyright.

      • kube-system an hour ago

        AI isn't a legal entity that can do anything, let alone hold a copyright. It is an inanimate box of numbers.

        The only two things that can transact with any legal system in any way are humans and groups of humans.

        • graemep 18 minutes ago

          But a human can hold the copyright on the output of an AI - but the requirements for that are not clear in the US yet. They are clear in the UK but the government is thinking of changing the law.

          • kube-system 13 minutes ago

            A human can hold the copyright for anything for which they've contributed the requisite level of authorship and creativity. There are no tooling requirements or prohibitions.

        • krapp an hour ago

          That should be obvious but unfortunately lots of people believe (or have a vested interest in pretending to believe) LLMs are living, thinking, sentient entities and that belief is going to influence the politics and legislation around AI to some unknown degree.

          • kube-system an hour ago

            Hearing otherwise intelligent people anthropomorphize AI in legal arguments makes me realize why lawyers advise everyone just to shut their mouths and ask a lawyer.

threethirtytwo 3 hours ago

Well who invented it then? User of said AI or owner of said AI or no one?

cmiles8 4 hours ago

This is consistent with rulings in other courts globally around IP rights. IP protects content created by humans. Your AI slop is effectively public domain.

  • grim_io 4 hours ago

    That's not how I understand it.

    AI is a tool, like your keyboard or your code editor.

    Those can't own patents. That doesn't mean anything produced by those tools is public domain, it just means the attribution has to belong to a human.

    • otterley 13 minutes ago

      The US Copyright Office disagrees. No work produced by a mechanical process, which includes LLMs, can be protected by copyright.

    • dwa3592 4 hours ago

      >>That doesn't mean anything produced by those tools is public domain

      They can't produce anything on their own. They have to be prompted which is initiated by humans at this point, so the patents can be owned by the initiator(human) not the tool.

      • grim_io 4 hours ago

        Exactly, like any AI tool ever.

        Someone wrote some instructions. No agent harness ever simply decided to pursue its own interests.

        • recursive 3 hours ago

          How will you know when that happens? Or are you defining interests so narrowly that it's definitionally impossible?

          • grim_io 3 hours ago

            If you are arguing that there is consciousness that's emerging from LLM's, I have to disagree on that.

            We will know when we see it. I don't see it right now.

            • recursive 2 hours ago

              No. I'm not saying anything about consciousness.

              Does a gradient descent algorithm pursue its interest of minimizing error? Does a home automation assistant pursue its interests when it sets my thermostat? I'm not super interested in the definition of "consciousness" or "interests". However, a thermostat setpoint has effects that are visible in the real world. That's a thing that happened, regardless whether you consider it to have happened in "the pursuit of an interest".

              I'm saying that LLMs are affecting the world. And sometimes those effects might be difficult or impossible to trace back to a particular prompt written by a particular human. Chatbot input and output doesn't have to be in the form of text i/o. You can put them in a for loop. Remember OpenClaw?

              > We will know when we see it. I don't see it right now.

              There might exist an incentive to make it hard to see.

  • Robotbeat 4 hours ago

    That isn’t what the courts have decided. They just decided it has to be a human on the patent application name. You can use whatever tool you want to get there, but if you patent a thing, it has to be a human in the name.

    • cmiles8 4 hours ago

      I think we’re saying the same thing. If you’re using AI as a tool to support human creative content that’s one thing. But what courts are pushing back on is trying to patent/protect content where the core creator was AI. That’s what most people mean when they say “AI slop.” There courts are consistently saying you can’t protect this.

      • Robotbeat 4 hours ago

        No. The court is saying you cannot assign IP rights to an AI, as this guy was trying to do. They are not saying it cannot be protected (as /r/antiai folk are always claiming). That’s another thing.

        • cmiles8 4 hours ago

          If you can’t protect it as copyright (which the US and others have separately said) then how are you “protecting” it? It’s not IP.

          • Robotbeat 4 hours ago

            That isn’t precisely what was decided in those cases, either (even though this gets repeated constantly on the internet as if it was). Again, the fundamental point of this case (and some similar cases) is just that you cannot assign IP to an AI. It has to be assigned to a person.

          • dcrazy 4 hours ago

            The ruling does not say whether or not the invention would be patentable had the appellant put his own name on the application.

            • otterley 11 minutes ago

              If a person lists himself as the author but an LLM produces the work, they’re defrauding the government, which is a crime.

          • _flux 3 hours ago

            You can't assign the copyright to Emacs either, yet it can be used to produce software.

  • natebc 4 hours ago

    > Your AI slop is effectively public domain.

    I haven't been able to square this belief (This is what i believe too.) with what I perceive as so, so many people making projects, putting them on github and slapping an MIT/GPL license on them.

    If IP rights can't be applied to generated code then how are they able to apply a such a license to them?

    I've asked this before and the response was along the lines of people thinking their multiple prompting amounted to human creative process and therefore it was covered but ... how? Any lawyers around that can ELI5 it for us? Maybe links to a lawyer somewhere who did?

    • rolph 4 hours ago

      a person publishing as if a AI is the creator is publishing under a pseudonym.

      AI has all the IP rights of a pen, pencil, chalk, or crayon.

    • Robotbeat 4 hours ago

      Because the “AI slop is uncopyrightable” people are misunderstanding court rulings like this. It’s not that AI output can’t by protected by IP, it’s that AI is not a person and so you can’t assign IP rights to it. You CAN assign IP rights to the human who did it (if they can show it’s non-trivial, like a haiku or photographer).

      • natebc 3 hours ago

        This is the bit in the copyright offices' report that i'm trying to square:

        >The Office concludes that, given current generally available technology, prompts alone do not provide sufficient human control to make users of an AI system the authors of the output.

        https://www.copyright.gov/ai/Copyright-and-Artificial-Intell...

        • Robotbeat 3 hours ago

          In January 2025. It’s also not a court decision, effectively an executive branch directive.

          • otterley 10 minutes ago

            The Copyright Office hasn’t changed its analysis, and courts will likely defer to it when they’re asked to settle a dispute about it.

  • LoganDark 4 hours ago

    It heavily depends on human involvement. AI is merely a tool.

  • ReptileMan 4 hours ago

    Your ai slop is effectively something you own, because you wrote the prompt.

    • kube-system an hour ago

      If sufficiently creative enough to qualify. Which applies to copyright regardless of the tools you use.

nekusar 3 hours ago

Thats why *SOME* humans will still be needed. They'll be accountability sinks when (NOT IF) the AI in charge goes off the rails. The human will then be summarily be blamed.

This is how the reverse centaur operation works. LLMs suck and not work in increasingly bad ways, and the companies who sell them treat them as one would buy psychic services (read: entertainment). So they need a token human to person-wash this slop.

panny 4 hours ago

I really can't understand the moral compass of people who would pirate other peoples' works under "fair use" to train AI, only to turn around and try to claim ownership of them when AI regurgitates it.

  • john_strinlai 4 hours ago

    note that this was in 2020 (pre-chatgpt), with the author's own "ai", "DABUS", and it appears that the author wanted solely DABUS to be listed as the patent holder, which does not seem to indicate any insane greed or whatever.

    the likelihood of one single guy having the same data scraping & storage capabilities as the big players, years before them (i see info about DABUS back to 2018), is slim.

  • Aerroon 4 hours ago

    Because AI doesn't just regurgitate it. Make up a new word and ask ChatGPT use it in a sentence - you've now got a brand new sentence that was not in its training data. If it only regurgitated data then it wouldn't be able to use that word in a sentence.

    The same applies to image generation - they can generate images that almost certainly were not in the training data.

  • johnbarron 4 hours ago

    You cant make a man understand the moral compass when his salary bla bla bla...

    • javcasas 4 hours ago

      Don't forget exceptionalism: this is so disgustingly wrong... except when I do it. In my case it is moral and perfectly justified.

  • rvz 4 hours ago

    The truth is as long as there is competition, having morals does not exist in the tech/crypto/ai industries given the goal is to make money. That’s it.

    Only after the participant has completed their grift or extraction operation then they begin virtue signalling their ‘morals’. It is fake.

    If you are here for asserting morals, this is the wrong industry.

pfdietz 3 hours ago

If an AI can invent something then it should be considered obvious.

  • sebastianconcpt 2 hours ago

    The problem is that you have creations that aren't really obvious. Have you seen that rocket engine with a crazy laborious design made with an AI?

  • Frost1x 2 hours ago

    AI use is slowly creeping into pure mathematics and proving theorems or providing legging to mathematical breakthroughs. Just go watch some Terrance Tao videos to see some recent work. In addition, theorem provers and the likes have been around for awhile. Some of these systems create novel ideas or bridge novel ideas in ways that are arguably not “obvious” in any sense of the term.

    While as a species our key strength has been our intelligence and it’s been core to our identity, and computing has slowly over decades infringed on this forcing us to rewrite what it is to be human, I understand the defensive view.

    I also see LLMs and other AI systems spit out complete nonsense that’s truly obvious to most people. But that doesn’t make any of these systems, in my opinion, incapable of creating or bridging novel new ideas that I would call far from obvious had we substituted a human in place of it. I didn’t look at the patents in question, plenty of obvious patents make it through anymore, so that could be the case here, but I believe AI isn’t far away if not already there of creating truly patentable inventions if someone were to push it.

    • pfdietz 2 hours ago

      No, I mean legally they should be considered obvious, as the difficulty to create them becomes small. It makes no sense to give someone a monopoly on an idea that anyone could get just by prompting an AI.

      Now if the invention also includes some real world work, or if the AI took a huge amount of tokens/money to reach the conclusion, ok. But otherwise an AI coming up with the idea at low cost should invalidate a patent of that idea (the AI not being trained on the patent of course.)

      • Lerc an hour ago

        That's ease, not obviousness.

        I think if an AI solves a problem that has been known and unsolved for a substantial period of time dispute attempts then the solution could only be considered non obvious.

        If we make AI that can do 6 of these things before breakfast then we should think of them as easy to obtain.

        The distinction is that non-obious to a human was a property that denoted a degree of specialness. If AI could do those things with ease then they cease to be special.

        It was that factor that led people to be awarded some form of monopoly over the creation. But if it is no longer particularly special, then it should be public domain.