In article <UJSdna7gzKAQghXYnZ2dnUVZ_h-3nZ2d@insightbb.com> rjack
<rjack@ixwebhosting.com> writes:
Lee Hollaar wrote:
In article <p-2dnd2ROpZXYxrYnZ2dnUVZ_segnZ2d@insightbb.com> rjack
<rjack@ixwebhosting.com> writes:
The application of U.S. Patent Law should properly be restricted to U.S.
territorial jurisdictions (importation) unless by International accord.
Since the provision in question, 35 USC 271(f) has been a part of
United States patent law since November 8, 1984, it is hard to see
what the rant below contributes to the discussion.
Birdbrain Bush announced the U.S.'s unilateral expansion of criminal
jurdiction to foreign sovereign's territories. This policy will one day
return to bite innocent U.S. citizens in the ass when other countries
reciprocate with similar "preemptive" policies.
. . . [I]t is hard to see what the rant below contributes to the
discussion.
Perhaps you should wipe the cruel sneer from your hauty visage
and read the BRIEF FOR THE UNITED STATES AS AMICUS CURIAE:
Even without a sneer, it is hard to see how your anti-Bush rant
has anything to do with an amendment to the patent statutes that
was made by Congress in 1984.
3. If there were any doubt about the proper interpretation
of Section 271(f), the presumption against extraterritoriality
would resolve it. As this Court observed in Deepsouth,
“[o]ur patent system makes no claim to extraterritorial
effect,” and our laws “correspondingly reject the claims
of others to such control over our markets.” 406 U.S. at
531; accord Dowagiac Mfg. Co. v. Minnesota Moline Plow
Co., 235 U.S. 641, 650 (1915). That venerable principle follows
not only from the text of the Patent Act, which generally
grants rights only within the United States, see, e.g., 35
U.S.C. 154(a)(1), but also from considerations of comity, as
courts must “assume that legislators take account of the
legitimate sovereign interests of other nations when they
write American laws.” F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd. v.
Empagran S.A., 542 U.S. 155, 164 (2004). Foreign conduct
is generally the domain of foreign law, which may embody
different policy judgments.
Need I say more?
Well, you could explain how the Deepsouth decision, which was in
1972, tells us anything about how to interpret an amendment to
the patent statutes in 1984 that was made, in part, to overturn
Deepsouth.
The section at issue, 35 USC 271(f), is directed precisely at
foreign conduct -- in particular, the assembly of a patented
article from components produced in the United States. It
makes the supplying of the components from the United States
a form of contributory infringement. Therefore, it does not
go to foreign conduct, but instead conduct within the United
States.
I would be more impressed with the government's brief if they
looked to what the patented invention -- as denoted by the
claims -- when determining whether something is a component
of that patented invention. In the case of a Beauregard-type
claim, where the claimed invention is a computer medium storing
a particular program, it is hard to see why the program is not
a component of the claimed invention when it is, in fact, the
key component.
And the reproduction of the Microsoft "gold disk" in that case
would not produce a copy of the program which would be a component
of the claimed invention, but produces the claimed invention
itself.
See "The Form of a Software Claim Makes a Big Difference" in
BNA's PTCJ, November 7, 2006, reprinted at:
http://digital-law-online.info/papers/lah/PTCJclaims.pdf