The America Invents Act shifts patents from a 'first to invent' to 'first inventor to file.'
The U.S. Senate on Sept. 8 passed legislation to drag the web of U.S. patent laws into the Internet age and spur high-tech innovation, sending the measure to President Barack Obama to sign into law.
In a rare show of bipartisan unity of purpose, the Democratic-held chamber voted 89-9 margin to approve the measure, which cleared the Republican-led House of Representatives by a similarly lopsided 304-117 margin earlier this year. "This is bipartisan, commonsense legislation that will spur the innovation that drives the American economy," cheered Democratic Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy, a key author of the legislation.
"The America Invents Act will ensure that inventors large and small maintain the competitive edge that has put America at the pinnacle of global innovation," he said, amid deep worries about 9.1% unemployment.
Leahy's main partner in the House, Republican Judiciary Committee Lamar Smith, called the vote "a victory for America's innovators and job creators who rely on our patent system to develop new products and grow their businesses."
Smith said the measure was "the most significant change to US patent law in 175 years" and called it "one of the most significant jobs creation bills enacted by Congress this year."
The bill, which Obama was expected to sign quickly, shifts U.S. patents from a "first to invent" to "first inventor to file" system while reducing a backlog in applications and curbing what its authors described as frivolous lawsuits.
A statement on the official website of Smith's committee warns that "this year, for the first time, China is expected to become the world's number one patent publisher, surpassing the U.S. and Japan in the total and basic number of patents."
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