Google Partners with USPTO to Sherpa Bulk Data
BY Nancy Scola | Wednesday, June 2 2010
Part of Google's 2007 application for a patent on a "Gpay" system, via bragadocchioFor patent geeks -- and really, why wouldn't you be? -- this is some major and encouraging news. The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has, reports National Journal's Juliana Gruenwald today, partnered with the folks at Google to build a new publicly-accessible online system for bulk downloads of patent and trademark information, including applications and assignments. Importantly, notes Gruenwald, we're talking about a free database here, rather than the for-free arrangement currently up and running. (Here's Google's home for the project.)
That patent information can be a treasure trove for inventors, entrepreneurs, and other folk. USPTO's partnership with Google has shades of the arrangement back in the early '90s that got the Securities and Exchange Commission's EDGAR database of corporate filings up online, something that has proven to be a boon for investors small and large, and researchers too. Carl Malamud worked with SEC to get the data up, and once the public got a taste for that good stuff, handed EDGAR back over to the SEC and said, in effect, "Your move, Uncle Sam." Malamud had proven that running EDGAR was technologically possible and at a reasonable cost. Brining Malamud into the situation was a way to outsource the leap of faith it would have taken a bureaucracy to commit to doing its business online. (Or, as the USPTO put it in its press release: "This arrangement is to serve as a bridge as the USPTO develops an acquisition strategy which will allow the USPTO to enter into a contract with a contractor to retrieve and distribute USPTO patent and trademark bulk public data.")
Advocates can take on the role of sherpa, leading government where it needs to go. In the SEC's case, it was Malamud. In the USPTO's case, it might prove to be Google.