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@article{bessen2003patent,
title={Patent Thickets: Strategic Patenting of Complex TaechnologiesTechnologies},
author={Bessen, J.},
journal={Available at SSRN 327760},
industry={General, ICT},
thicket_stance={Pro},
thicket_stance_extract={#A, #C1-T, This paper argues that patent thickets can reduce R&D incentives even when there are no transaction costs, holdup or vertical monopoly problems.}, thicket_def={#A, #C1-T, References Heller/Eisenberg, References Shapiro, Dubious Patents, Diversely-Held, Transaction Costs, Strategic Patenting (Bad)},
thicket_def_extract={The problem Baker describes is often called a "patent thicket." These occur when each product may involve many patents, in contrast with the one-to-one correspondence between products and patents that is assumed in the patent race literature. Recent commentators suggest that lower patenting standards encourage patent thickets, creating difficulties for innovators (see Gallini, 2002, for a review). When innovators must negotiate with large numbers of patentholders, they may face excessive transaction costs (Heller and Eisenberg, 1998), "holdup," and problems of vertical monopoly (Shapiro, 2001).},
tags={#Core Paper, Private Mechanisms, Cross-licensing, Pools, Firm Strategy, Blocking Patents, Sequential Innovation},
pages={1617},
year={2006},
abstract={The network may be the metaphor of the present era. A network, consisting of \"nodes" and \"links," may be a group of individuals linked by friendship; a group of computers linked by network cables; a system of roads or airline ights { flights or another of a virtually limitless variety of systems of connected \things." The past few years have seen an explosion of interest in \network science," which seeks to move beyond metaphor to analysis in �elds from physics to sociology. Network science highlights the role of relationship patterns in deter- mining collective behavior. It underscores and begins to address the di�culty of predicting collective behavior from individual interactions. This Article seeks �rst to describe how network science can provide new conceptual and empiri- cal approaches to legal questions because of its focus on analyzing the e�ects of patterns of relationships on collective behavior. The Article then illustrates the network approach by describing a study of the network created by patents and the citations between them. Burgeoning patenting has raised concerns about patent quality, re ected in proposed legislation and in renewed Supreme Court attention to patent law. The network approach allows us to get behind the increasing numbers and investigate the patterns of relationships between patented technologies. We can then distinguish between faster technological progress, increasing breadth of patented technologies, and a lower patentability standard as possible explanations for increased patenting. We �nd that, since the late 1980s, the disparity in likelihood of citation between the most \citable" and least \citable" patents has grown, suggesting that the least citable patents may represent increasingly trivial inventions. One possible explanation of this increasing strati�cation is increasing reliance by the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals on the widely criticized \motivation or suggestion to combine" test for nonobviousness, which is at issue in the case of KSR v. Tele ex, currently pending at the Supreme Court. We also discuss how network science may be employed to address other issues of patent law.},
discipline={Law},
research_type={Discussion, Measures},
@article{von2012incidence,
title={Incidence and Growth of Patent Thickets-The Impact of Technological Opportunities and Complexity},
author={von Von Graevenitz, G. and Wagner, S. and Harhoff, D.},
journal={Journal of Industrial Economics},
year={2012},
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