The US Supreme Court is riding shotgun with Tesla Motors down the open road. The top US tribunal unanimously ruled on Thursday that abstract ideas, even if run through a computer, can be freely adopted. Elon Musk, meanwhile, last week opened up the technology from his electric carmaker. Both decisions spread an important message to the vicious world of patent fighting: Share, don't hoard.
The court has long said mere concepts like mathematical formulas can't be patented. A derivatives-market operator argued, however, that using a computer to track counter-party payments was an innovation deserving protection.
All nine justices disagreed, opining that the idea would have to, say, make the computer work better to be concrete enough to qualify. The decision does, however, preserve patents on truly substantial software.
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Those fees account for almost a third of a smartphone's price, for example, according to a new study by law firm WilmerHale and Intel attorneys.
America's top intellectual property court, the Federal Circuit, deserves blame for blessing patents on business methods, simple medical observations and other fuzzy concepts that encourage litigation. The Supreme Court has repeatedly tried to rein in the lower court, most recently by making it easier for infringement-suit targets to recover their legal costs.
Musk is a high-octane ally, if not a completely altruistic one. Opening Tesla IP should speed development of batteries, charging stations and other technology integral to the industry's - and, therefore, Tesla's - success. And the automaker can still use patents as leverage against infringement suits.
Like the Supreme Court ruling, however, Musk's move is an acknowledgment that enforcing patents can stifle progress, entrench slow-footed corporations and enrich lawyers. Entrepreneurial history provides a guide. Sharing inventions and expertise helped Silicon Valley eclipse Boston's Route 128 as the nation's high-tech epicentre.
A savvy technologist like Musk is more apt to understand the dynamics than aged jurists often derided as Luddites. Their alignment is an encouraging sign.