“If the American patent system was a factory, 68% of the products we put out are found defective in a later proceeding.” – John Squires

Earlier today, John Squires, who is President Trump’s pick to become the next Director of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), had his confirmation hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee. For better or worse, the panel today also included nominees Stanley Woodward, Jr. for Associate Attorney General; T. Elliott Gaiser for Assistant Attorney General; and Joseph Edlow for Director of the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services, all of whom attracted more attention and questions than did Squires.
During the hearing, Squires said his focus will be on making sure patents are “born strong” in light of the fact that—according to his remarks—inter partes reviews (IPRs) at the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB) show there is a 68% error rate. In other words, nearly 7 in 10 patents issued by the Office are currently “defective” according to Squires. IPWatchdog reached out to both the USPTO and Squires for confirmation of this statistic. A spokesperson for the USPTO said they were not sure where the number came from, and Squires had not responded as of the time of publication
In response to a question from Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) about whether the PTAB is effectively an arm of Big Tech that disproportionately favors large challengers, Squires surprised many by suggesting the problem is not with a PTAB that is aggressively invalidating issued patents that are statutorily presumed to be valid, but rather that the problem is found on the front end, which leads to poor quality patents routinely being issued by the Office.
“If you look at the data, the concerns are in plain sight,” Squires began his answer to Senator Cruz. “IPRs have a 68% defect rate; if the American patent system was a factory, 68% of the products we put out are found defective in a later proceeding.”
Squires would say that the way to “address it”—presumably the large number of defective patents issued by the Office—is to focus on the input and have patents be “born strong,” which entails improving quality by, among other things, incentivizing prior art to be disclosed during examination. What Squires meant regarding incentivizing the disclosure of prior art is not clear and would lead the casual observer to perhaps believe there is no incentive to disclose prior art during prosecution, which is not the case. Material prior art known by the applicant is already required to be disclosed by applicants pursuant to 37 CFR 1.56, and the penalty for not disclosing such prior art is functionally forfeiture of the patent through a holding of inequitable conduct. Further, patent examiners spend hours searching for prior art themselves.
“Having improved quality, I think, will alleviate many concerns,” Squires told Senator Cruz. A response that again was less clear and direct than it could have been, but which seemed to some to reinforce that Squires believes the problem is not with an overactive PTAB, but rather with low patent quality.
To be fair, the disjointed nature of the hearing, and the numerous questions of DOJ nominees relating to whether they would advise President Trump to ignore a court order—which several also asked Squires—made it at least somewhat difficult to follow. Nevertheless, when responding to Senator Cruz, Squires harkened back to his opening statement where he explained there is a need for more reliable, higher quality patents to be issued by the Office. After characterizing patents examiners as “world class”, Squires would go on to say that one way better patents can be issued is by leaning into the use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) to issue patents of “provable quality”, as well as “to learn from, reduce and remedy mistakes that manifest later”; mistakes that presumably were a reference to the fact that nearly 7 out of 10 patents issued by the Office are defective.
Also, during his opening remarks, Squires discussed the need to move U.S. systems more efficiently into the future. “We want [innovation] to be better, cheaper, faster, more sustainable, to get us to market more quickly with quality and confidence. At present, unfortunately, our system is going in the other direction,” Squires said. “But with ‘born strong patents’ and robust quality marks we can reclaim America’s primacy, revitalize industry and growth, proudly export our culture, boost national security and improve our lives.”
Patent Trolls and Litigation Financing
During the hearing, Senator Grassley asked Squires about his past involvement with the creation of the funding arm of Fortress Investment Group and whether he has represented litigation funders. Squires said he has not been involved with Fortress since 2017 and has never represented litigation funders in any capacity. He also noted that he has been critical of patent trolls in his writings and said that troll practices are exploitative of inventors.
Support for Patent Reform
Senators Tillis and Coons asked Squires about his thoughts on the currently pending patent reform bills they have been spearheading for the last few years—the Patent Eligibility Restoration Act of 2025, the Promoting and Respecting Economically Vital American Innovation Leadership Act (PREVAIL Act), and the Realizing Engineering, Science, and Technology Opportunities by Restoring Exclusive (RESTORE) Patent Rights Act of 2025. Squires said that patent eligibility uncertainty is “costing American competitiveness” and that the recent hearing held by the Senate IP Subcommittee on foreign threats to American innovation demonstrated that China’s patent system “has more expansive subject matter area” than the United States, which “should be troubling to all Americans.”
Senator Coons also asked Squires about PREVAIL, and he agreed the PTAB is in need of reform. “We have 15 years of data since the America Invents Act and it seems to be skewed in favor of one versus the other; reform may help flatten out that curve,” Squires said.
Squires was equally supportive of RESTORE.
Chinese IP Theft
Senator Schmitt asked Squires about Chinese IP theft and how the United States can better combat it, particularly in light of emerging AI models like DeepSeek and recent statements from top government officials about abandoning IP altogether. Senator Tillis interrupted Squires’ answer, however, and ask that he provide a detailed answer in writing for the record instead, which Squires agreed he would do.
What Next?
While consistent with the theme of needing a system that produces better quality patents, Squires saying that 68% of the product of the Patent Office is defective is hard to reconcile. It is hard to reconcile with statements supportive of PREVAIL and acknowledgement that the PTAB needs reform, and even more difficult to reconcile with recent actions by the USPTO under Acting Director Coke Stewart, which are being carried out at the direction of Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick.
So, what next? After a confirmation hearing, the nominees can be expected to receive numerous questions in writing from Senators, which we know will be the case at least with respect to questions relating to theft of intellectual property by China. As Senators, staffers and stakeholders pore over this hearing we suspect that there will be many follow up questions asked of Squires that will give him the opportunity to clarify his testimony in a more complete manner.
It is not inconsistent to hold the opinion that the Office can and should endeavor to constantly do a better job, while at the same time believing the PTAB has gone too far. Striving to be better does not preclude the possibility that the PTAB is incorrect when it finds so many patents to be defective. However, it will be interesting to see how Squires elaborates upon his views and navigates the nuances in response to the written questions he will receive. Particularly the critical question he will no doubt receive in some form, which is whether he personally believes that nearly 7 out of 10 U.S. patents that are currently in force are defective.
Join the Discussion
34 comments so far.
Stephen Schreiner
May 30, 2025 09:29 amFollow up: definitely agree that examiners need more time to examine each case.
Stephen Schreiner
May 30, 2025 09:23 amSorry, I don’t think you can blame patent quality issues on the Biden administration. That issue goes back decades. We all know that. The major issue is the PTAB being quite out of balance with a 70% all-claims kill rate.
R. Kosson
May 29, 2025 05:54 pmIf patent quality is low, it is due to the changes under the Biden administration, 25% less examining time per case, less other time (time for training, studying, meetings), docketers and classifiers replaced by non-functioning software, even telephones, copy machines and Internet taken away. Drew Hirshfeld’s rules were the worst, and K. Vidal understood nothing. Andrei Iancu was loved; we look forward to J. Squires. If you want better patents, give us time to examine, and put the docketers and the classifiers back.
Brad Baker
May 29, 2025 01:26 amWow , Nick is one of the few on point. Or maybe I was just lucky to hire the most corrupt Practitioners. The investigation would be simple. Follow the money and make the Attorneys pay accounts be audited. Does anyone not find it strange that some of these Law firms have a massive number of Assignments to the firm. My situation required stealing my identity, all you needs is a corrupt examiner and Practitioners. Forgery and FRAUD is just doing business as usual. Maybe I’m not up to date but can someone please tell me when Congress past a Bill instead of just writing them that protects inventors . Thank you Nick
Pro Say
May 25, 2025 02:18 pm“I’m just going to close my eyes and just keep my fingers crossed.”
With more than 1,000 independent inventors and SMBs scratching their collective heads over Squires’ confusing testimony, you’re not alone, Stephen.
Far, far from alone.
Stephen Schreiner
May 25, 2025 10:04 amWell, this is a bit disappointing. No criticism of the PTAB’s excessive 68%-70% all-claims invalidation rate. Instead, the PTAB’s high kill rate is evidence that patent quality is terrible at the front end. Also, as I recall, Mr. Squires has numerous publications arguing that patents should be treated as quantifiable assets to be bought/sold/leveraged like any other property. That’s hard to square with the “troll” rhetoric and the apparent disapproval of litigation funders. Well, I’m just going to close my eyes and just keep my fingers crossed.
Lab Jedor
May 24, 2025 12:51 pm“Born strong?” It seems that the strength of an invention (not of a patent application) dictates its chance of survival. That is: the stronger and more valuable and invention, the less likely its patent is going to survive attacks from infringers.
There is an inverse likelihood for a patent to survive. Inverse to its inherent innovation value. Thus the stronger the invention, the less likely its patent will ever reach even beyond toddler years.
Brad Baker
May 24, 2025 06:08 amNobody addresses the turn problem because it would have to expose the USPTO and the Practitioners. Nothing is going to be corrected, because they really don’t want to. It’s all just smoke and mirrors. Not difficult to fix, but you have to want to. As long as Attorneys are in charge it will never happen. Inventors will just have to learn the hard way.
IP Nerd
May 24, 2025 04:50 amThe goal is to become an IP thicket for project management purposes.
Patent analysis provenance still matters post “first to file” since this was the compromise to increase filings but allow IPR for patent verification. However since data custody has become so consolidated in the M7 it’s become a bull target that turns us into a quasi China economy. None of the benefits of a one state solution with all the wild West of corporatization representing communism. The bread lines locations are being contracted as “pay to win” shareholders insist on over playing employees to win now over win more. This leads into salary fixing as contracted markets always lead to price fixing. Founder Chefs rush to IPO to distance themselves as too many Chefs in the kitchen ruin the broth. The result is a massive amount of data condensed to the M7. We traded one Edgar J Hoover for 7. {Husbands getting blackmailed with disinformation for purchasing the wife something special for the 5 year anniversary by men who copy buy for personal use.}
IPR is becoming a data sovereignty issue. 27 months is over generous time frame for the two parties to reach a FRAND deal. If the market entrenched power with massive brand and distribution platforms can’t get a deal done. I declare they are not the father of the innovation baby.
Lack of deal in 27 months by the market entrenched social signals deal stalling and having too many lovers to correctly identify who their children even are. Once USTPO grants that you filed innovation adoption papers the IPR community has more than enough time to object to a stray dog being home bound to its rightful care taker post PGR.
My name is IP Nerd and this where I stand after knelling for years on this moral dilemma.
IP Nerd
May 23, 2025 02:58 pmFrom the eyes of patent marketer to Alice Mayo bitten innovator
The goal is to give value to patent process before they are invalidated by prior art masters ledgers. Big Technology baits the innovator with non disclosure than cripples them after they exhaust their resources to even get to disclosure. IP nerd utility tokens allow value to exchange and build up before Goliath match. The slingshot is you can bring a Mob to big technology obfuscation techniques. This creates sell the news that people rather not buy from entrenched parties as non fair play is exposed. The trail of the century idealistic result is “patent invalidated” is the new “patent pending” to gain credibility with American consumers. We fight to lose at the PTAB to win the commerce wars in the free market.
Examination process remains level. IPR 27 months max. PGR “born strong”. You get a set of Irish triplets to plead your case as why hand setting earns you the right for innovation abortion occurring. Propose or watch the bride walk down the aisle with someone else.
Patrick Kilbride
May 23, 2025 02:21 pmBreeze – re obviousness, Amen! Robert Taylor has had important things to say on that point, too, including at the 2025 IPWatchdog LIVE.
What if the energy that is wasted on obviousness went into 112 and inventors, implementers, and practitioners were forced to confront the ambiguous boundaries of their IP and how they bump up against others’ IP?
For that matter, why is every examiner doing their own prior art searches, rather than have a single office within USPTO – or even one in each art unit – that was responsible for maintaining a consistently rigorous standard?
Anonymous
May 23, 2025 01:07 pmPatents need to be born strong. Squires testified, “We need to be able to incentivize getting the prior art in at the examination stage OR CLOSELY THEREAFTER . . .” What this ought to mean is that Director Squires will use his unreviewable discretion to deny institution of any IPR where the alleged prior art is not brought to the Office “CLOSELY THEREAFTER” a patent issues. Set a time limit and stick to it. Any institution not sought within 18 months (or 2 or 3 years) of a patent’s issue date is not “closely thereafter” issuance and should be discretionarily denied. Anything else is barred due to laches. That’s one way to begin to address Big Tech’s abuse of the PTAB, just as Senator Cruz’s question intimated is a big problem.
https://youtu.be/a9IktV7r9Vs?si=0J8xkRz9ZqUwitIV&t=8187
Breeze
May 23, 2025 12:28 pmAs long as we have a “flexible” (i.e., completely subjective and hindsight driven) standard of obviousness, no U.S. patent will ever be “born strong,” or “strong.” We need to junk the entirety of the U.S. case law on obviousness and start using the PSA standard of the EPO. And we need to do that ASAFP.
Pro Say
May 23, 2025 10:37 amDoreen: “Perhaps the fix is to amend the statute to require IPRs within a certain deadline. Maybe give petitioners a year or 18 months.”
Great idea. Even better is to (also) bar any patent challenges anywhere (PTAB, Reexam, Court, ITC) once a patent is 15 – 20 years old.
Patents should certainly be entitled to quiet title for at least the last few years of their life.
M R
May 23, 2025 10:14 amAttorneys write the claims and argue the Office into the ground to issue them. How is it that they are not the ones to hold accountable for the validity of the resulting patents?
Doug Pittman
May 22, 2025 08:55 pmThis is why we can’t have nice things.
As I’ve said over and over, John Squires has been in the foxholes with me and knows the issues.
As I say behind him at the hearing as an invited guest, all I could think about was how his answers paralleled many of our experiences together as lawyer and client. I understood every answer to the Senators questions.
His answers screamed the “experiences” we had and it spoke to many of the core problems. I would hope people would give the guy and chance
He is great for innovation and investment. Give him some breathing room folks.
And to the jerk who compared Squires to Michelle Lee is it any wonder why people laugh and ignore you now. You’re the most disrespectful human to others that I know. Hearing others laugh at your actions and total classless behavior is sad to me.
Grow up and Do Better fella.
DC
May 22, 2025 07:42 pmSquires can use AI to kill two birds with one stone: pendency and quality. Specifically, use AI to do search and mandate examiners use the search results unless they can produce a 102. Quality will at least be more consistent because search will no longer be a lottery system based on which examiner you get. Improvements can also be made in a more manageable way to the overall system rather than deal with the wide differences in examiner quality. Develop the AI in-house or farm it out to one of the big-techs. Whatever is the case, the bar is really low to beat with that 68% mark…
Doreen Trujillo
May 22, 2025 01:58 pmMike, by “closely thereafter,” I am wondering if he is condemning the ability of petitioners to challenge patents years after issuance. I had thought IPRs were supposed to be more like oppositions that must be filed within 9 months after grant. Instead, that is PGRs. Why were IPRs given no time limit? I do not recall the justification.
I also agree with IPnTN. Make the burden of proof the same as in litigation — clear and convincing evidence.
Perhaps the fix is to amend the statute to require IPRs within a certain deadline. Maybe give petitioners a year or 18 months.
PeteMoss
May 22, 2025 01:45 pm@GeneQuinn
Thank you, Gene. I have never been involved in an IPR, so I appreciate the education.
Julie Burke
May 22, 2025 11:54 amRefreshing to welcome a patent-savvy USPTO Director who deeply cares about patent quality and appreciates the backlog challenge.
It may seem attractive to provide examiners with the latest AI-driven search and examination tools to reduce the backlog.
But leaning into AI and adding new IT tools will likely topple the USPTO’s already-precarious IT system.
IP Nerd
May 22, 2025 10:59 amAnon we on the same page I just used some funky terminology since I entered from the marketing side of the patent space instead of the obtainment side of the patent space that dominates these comments. Rush to establish a file date “good”. Rush to submit a garage patent with worthless claims “bad”. The chop shop firm patents are so useless they never get challenged since their worth is effectively zero.
The link above to online article does an excellent job of the inventors dilemma especially in the tech space. Right now my main focus is solutions to a granted patents that is strong enough to be invalidated and how value can be occurred before the PTAB slayings of the Jedi younglings.
Don Baker
May 22, 2025 10:53 amUse AI to examine patents? And just what Large Language Model would one use? I think we have all seen the highly variable quality and helpfulness of patent examiner’s analysis and comments. Many are very good, some are very bad. Some are just plain unethical and unaccountable. And in the eyes of the USPTO, none of them can do any wrong. The Examiner on one of my recent Applications labeled virtually every clause of every claim “indefinite”, and quibbled over the use of common engineering terms. Not very helpful.
There’s a protest line that I’ve been saving up for some day in Court:
“But Your Honor, there are lawyers involved!”
As demonstrated by the maze of the MPEP, which is so convoluted to ordinary mortals that it can be used to justify almost any position or result. It dearly needs review, streamlining and simplification before being used in any LLM. Just imagine the hallucinations you would otherwise get.
I would rather see AI used in searching prior art. There must be millions, if not billions, of documents which none of us can fully search, including journal articles, college theses and dissertations, and manufacturers’ product guides and manuals. And that needs a lot of work, too. Who hasn’t gone to Google or Amazon and seen the vast number of irrelevant results for every query? Quantity over quality.
I used to get dinged by peer reviewers of my engineering papers for failing to either have a lot of citations or just failing cite their own work. I’d start off working alone on something so I could better understand it, then couldn’t find anything exactly like it when I went looking for similar results to cite. And yet, in my fumbling, I’ve published a few papers that have illuminated basic errors in analysis that had sometimes stood through generations of researchers.
Then again, maybe we will find that AI works a whole lot better on generating fake news and photographs than finding prior art.
chopper
May 22, 2025 10:52 amarguing that 70% of patents challenged at the board being invalidated means 70% of patents overall are bad is like arguing that 90% of federal trials ending in a conviction means that 90% of americans are criminals
Patrick Kilbride
May 22, 2025 10:06 amCoincidentally, just before reading Gene’s article on the confirmation hearing, I saw Paul Morinville’s April 9 piece on would-be infringer/implementers withholding prior art during prosecution. it does put Squires’s comments on that point in a potentially different light, whether or not that was his intention: https://innovationgadfly.com/weaponized-fairness-big-techs-dirty-secret-in-the-u-s-patent-system/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=weaponized-fairness-big-techs-dirty-secret-in-the-u-s-patent-system&utm_term=2025-05-22
IPnTN
May 22, 2025 09:54 amAs a patent attorney and having a recent stint at the office as an examiner, there are a number of things that could help improve quality:
1) have 2 examiners on every case – 1 being a primary examiner
2) require applicants (other than micro possibly) to submit results of a prior art search and use patent optimizer or some other tool to clean up the app so the examiner can focus on finding best art.
3) in my art unit, we had approximately 23 hours to do a full examination and prepare the office action (autonomous vehicles and robotics). The cost burden is not at the PTO but the firms/attorney fees. It is well known in the office that the PTO provides a low budget examination (see the fees that are minimal compared to firm costs)
4) Ai tools could be used to help examination by doing an automated search and providing an initial examination report to examiners as well as potentially mapping claim limitations
5) Number of claims should be limited to force applicants to focus on what the invention actually is. Dependent claims should be examined like the EPO
6) PTAB should be clear and convincing standard
7) get rid of judicial exceptions and just read the plain language of the statute.
There are publications from the 70s that show many of the same issues that occur in the current examination system.
In my opinion, the examination process needs a total overhaul if the patent system wants to rise above the ashes.
Gene Quinn
May 22, 2025 09:45 am@PeteMoss
The PTAB invalidates very little– almost nothing really– under 101 and 112. The reason for that is petitioners are not allowed to bring 101 and 112 challenges in an IPR. The can, however, bring 101 and 112 challenges in PGR. Whether good or bad the reality is PGR is very seldom used.
Anon
May 22, 2025 09:35 amThank you IP Nerd, as that context does help me understand your post a little more.
But let me push back: quite aside from any pitches from the likes of predatory organizations (and quite distinct from any level of cost of services), the aspect of “less rush to submit” simply is foolishness since US law changed to a First Inventor to File scenario.
mike
May 22, 2025 02:41 amCruz: The PTAB was created to improve patent quality and to provide a faster cost-effective alternative to litigation, but in recent years, many small inventors and startups have expressed concern that it disproportionately favors large challengers and undermines the value of their patents, i.e., it’s effectively an arm of big tech.
Q: What is your assessment of those concerns, and do you believe the system is functioning as Congress intended?
Squires: I think if you look at the data, the concerns are in plain sight — that the IPRs themselves have a 68% “defect rate”, if you will. If the American patent system is a factory, 68% of the products we put out are found defective in a later proceeding. So, the way to address it is to have patents — if I can hearken back to my opening statement — born strong. We need to be able to incentivize getting the prior in at the examination stage or closely thereafter, and having the improved quality, I think, will alleviate many concerns. There’s also concern I have with IPRs that — if in fact there is this prior art out there invalidating patents at these great rates — is it, or is it not, getting back into the system in the examination on the front end, so it can be applied when the applicants are asking for rights.
What support does Squires have for this number? 68% of all patents are defective? How so, when the data shows that the vast majority of patents that go to the PTAB for challenge/review are only the patents that are being litigated. Surely he’s not getting his 68% number from this ligitated subset. There are a lot more issued patents than this.
And regarding an “incentive” to get prior art in at the examination stage, I agree with the authors here. “Material prior art known by the applicant is already required to be disclosed by applicants pursuant to 37 CFR 1.56, and the penalty for not disclosing such prior art is functionally forfeiture of the patent through a holding of inequitable conduct.” The incentive already exists. What is Squires talking about?
And then Squires adds “or closely thereafter”. (“We need to be able to incentivize getting the prior in at the examination stage or closely thereafter“.) I thought Squires wanted patents “born strong”? There should be no “closely thereafter” if “born strong” means a strong patent wherein the birth occurs when the patent is issued. Squires’ mention of “closely thereafter” means he’s talking about a post-issuance administrative patent challenge (IPR/PGR). So, Squires is contradicting himself. He either wants patents “born strong” as a result of a rigorous examination, or he wants patents to have more prior art added closely thereafter the examination stage (aka in an IPR/PGR). So which one is it, Squires? At birth, or after birth?
And you didn’t answer Senator Cruz’ two-part question:
1) What is your assessment of the concerns from many small inventors and startups that the PTAB disproportionately favors large challengers and undermines the value of their patents, i.e., the PTAB is effectively an arm of big tech?
(You only mentioned your concerns, which we all question your stats and statements here.)
2) Do you believe the patent system is functioning as Congress intended [with the America Invents Act and the PTAB/IPRs/PGRs]?
(You only mentioned examinations being “defective” on the front end, which we all question again.)
Bad show.
PeteMoss
May 22, 2025 02:27 amStill curious to know what percentage of claims killed by the PTAB are under 101, 102, 103, and 112, respectively. If the kill percentage is mostly 102, there is a prior art searching problem by both the applicant and the Office. This can be readily fixed by Applicants prior to filing. 101 and 112 are drafting problems. These can be readily fixed by the Applicant prior to filing. 103 is subjective and harder to preemptively fix by better searching or drafting. Virtually every improvement is a combination of old things.
Nick
May 22, 2025 12:57 amAs we know, research and development is expensive, and only about 1% of patents ultimately prove to be commercially valuable. However, under the current U.S. patent system, unused patents are often assumed to be “good” simply because they haven’t yet been enforced or infringed upon. Ironically, as soon as a patent becomes useful and innovative, it is quickly labeled a “bad” patent, and the patent owner seeking to license it is dismissed as a “patent troll.” In today’s system, the small fraction of patent owners who hold truly valuable and infringed patents are often wrongly stigmatized.
To understand the deeper issues with the U.S. patent system, we need to follow the money. The core problem isn’t patent quality—it’s that lawmakers have effectively transformed the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB) into a revenue-generating machine. PTAB frequently invalidates patents, which encourages infringement. More infringement leads to more inter partes review (IPR) petitions, and those petitions generate more revenue for the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).
Rather than revenue from innovation flowing to hardworking startups and inventors, it now flows to the USPTO itself, thanks to the growing volume of IPR petitions. The USPTO is leveraging a high patent invalidation rate as a marketing tool—drawing in infringers to file an IPR rather than negotiate a licensing agreement with a patent holder.
The USPTO’s historical mission has been to promote innovation in the United States. But PTAB has fundamentally undermined that purpose. Today, the USPTO seems to have developed a self-serving interest in the patent system, one that favors revenue generation through IPRs over the protection of innovation. It now appears more focused on empowering infringers than supporting inventors.
The USPTO leadership should be recognized—not for progress, but for a strategic shift that has redirected revenue from legitimate inventors into its own coffers. This shift has already harmed American innovation and our broader economy, and it will continue to do so unless the USPTO’s mission is urgently restored to its original intent: to support and protect U.S. innovation and those who create it.
Josh Malone
May 21, 2025 09:30 pmPatents that are challenged at PTAB are the strongest at birth. Most thoroughly searched, most references, most reexamined, most IPR’d, most tested at ITC and District Court. Squires sounds just like Michelle Lee.
IP Nerd
May 21, 2025 06:35 pmAnon no legitimate patent attorney “rush to submit”. It’s a term for predatory patent assertions firms that are patent chop shops.
They attach high priced submission services with patent applications. The fatest pig in this market is InventHelp. They pariah closed to a billion dollars from innovators since company’s inception.
Howard Lutnick at a recent conference said you “have a friend” which was a direct dig on a past InventHelp advertisement campaign.
Anon
May 21, 2025 06:22 pmIP Nerd,
I am having a difficult time understanding your comments, as there is no such “less rush to submit,” and any advice along those lines remains foolish under US Patent Law.
IP Nerd
May 21, 2025 05:20 pmBorn strong patents means combing provisional patents teams is more important than ever when product testing budgets are low. Prototyping companies often times will be prioritized over patent pending farming.
Born strong means inventors next store must be educated that two names on a top 30% patent granted is better than one name of a bottom 70% patent granted.
Patent searches with more thorough disclosures on the latest USTPO and PTAB issues of the day. Less rush to submit and more rush to finish the invention.