Over 90% Of The Most Innovative Products From The Past Few Decades Were NOT Patented

from the patents-are-not-a-proxy-for-innovation dept

We’ve pointed out over and over and over again that patents are not a proxy for innovation. In fact, there’s little to connect the two at all, except potentially for how patents can hinder and hold back the pace of innovation. A new study really helps to drive home how little patents have to do with innovation. Pointed out to us by James Bessen, the study looks at “R&D 100 Awards” from the academic journal, Research & Development from 1977 to 2004. As you might expect, the R&D 100 Awards are given out each year by the journal in an attempt to name the top 100 innovations of the year. If patents were instrumental in driving innovation, you’d certainly expect most of these innovations to be patented.

But you’d be wrong, as the reports authors, Roberto Fontana, Alessandro Nuvolari, Hiroshi Shimizu and Andrea Vezzulli, quickly discovered.

A stunning 91% of all of the technologies receiving the prize were not actually patented. That’s covering approximately 3,000 technologies winning this award as the most innovative advancement of the year over a period of about three decades. What’s interesting to me is that this actually matches very closely with one of my favorite studies on patents, from economist Petra Moser, who looked at historical patenting rates from the 19th century using data on products displayed at the Crystal Palace exhibition of 1851 and the Centennial exhibition in Philadelphia in 1876, which against showed very few of the “economically useful” inventions were patented. Over 80% were not patented. Of course, you might think that back in the 1800s there was less interest in patenting, but this new study suggests a rather similar rate to what Moser found from 150 years ago.

The R&D 100 certainly seems to be a good way to look at key innovations. It’s judged by a distinguished panel of experts, looking at two key criteria: i) technological significance (i.e., whether the product can be considered a major breakthrough from a technical point of view); ii) competitive significance (i.e., how the performance of the product compares to rival solutions available on the market). Both of these would seem like significant indicators of innovation. And, as the authors note, many big innovations can easily be found on the list:

Throughout the years, key breakthroughs inventions such as Polacolor film (1963), the flashcube (1965), the automated teller machine (1973), the halogen lamp (1974), the fax machine (1975), the liquid crystal display (1980), the printer (1986), the Kodak Photo CD (1991), the Nicoderm antismoking patch (1992), Taxol anticancer drug (1993), lab on a chip (1996), and HDTV (1998) have received the prize.

Tellingly, even to apply for the award, innovators have to show just how much the innovation was an improvement on what else was available on the market, They have to submit a “competitive matrix” showing this. In other words, these prize-winning innovations tend to be actual innovations in the market that drive the state of the art forward. You could suggest that they are innovations that truly “promote the progress,” as (unlike our patent system) to get this award you literally have to show how the innovation promotes further progress.

As you can see from the key findings, very, very little of the innovations that won the prize was also patented either three years before or three years after the prize was awarded:

Even when you take out “non-corporate” innovations (which have less propensity to be patented), looking at corporate only innovations over 87% were not patented.

Of course there are some differences depending on what industry the innovation happened in, as well as where the innovation was originated. The researchers broke down all of that information as well:

As you can see, the US actually has a lower patenting rate than Europe and Asia for the most part, which runs counter to the narrative often being told about how the US’s leads the world with our patent system, and that Asian innovators have less respect for patents. Though, on that point, the researchers note that most of the patents in the “Asian” section are Japanese, so it’s possible that other countries in Asia, mainly China (along with known tech hubs Taiwan, Hong Kong and Singapore) do, in fact have a much lower propensity to patent.

Of course the point that stood out as most interesting to me was the very low rate of patenting in the “chemistry” industry. This covers pharmaceuticals as well. And, of course, we’re always told that this industry really “needs” patents because of the ease of copying as compared to the cost of innovating. That doesn’t seem to be supported by the data at all. Yes, it’s the highest percentage patented in the US, but still only 14% of such innovations are patented in the US.

All in all, this is a really interesting paper and a significant contribution to the discussion over whether or not patents are really a good judge of innovation. It would seem from the data available that the answer is a very loud “no.” In fact, it would appear that very few of the most significant and important innovations are being patented. That should, at the very least, raise considerable questions concerning those who argue that our patent policy is necessary to encourage innovation, or those who argue that numbers from the patent system are a good judge of innovation.

Filed Under: , ,

Rate this comment as insightful
Rate this comment as funny
You have rated this comment as insightful
You have rated this comment as funny
Flag this comment as abusive/trolling/spam
You have flagged this comment
The first word has already been claimed
The last word has already been claimed
Insightful Lightbulb icon Funny Laughing icon Abusive/trolling/spam Flag icon Insightful badge Lightbulb icon Funny badge Laughing icon Comments icon

Comments on “Over 90% Of The Most Innovative Products From The Past Few Decades Were NOT Patented”

Subscribe: RSS Leave a comment
37 Comments
Ninja (profile) says:

VHS. Revolutionized the movie industry and drove further developments in its field that made it obsolete. Cassette tape. Ditto. World Wide Web. Do I really need to state how much development it allowed? Java, Flash, HTML, FTP (natural development?), cloud services, online shopping etc etc etc. Recently there was that article about how the ‘open source’ genome project generated much, much more activity and research than its proprietary competitor… We can go on and on here and I’d guess we’d be unable to find many cases, if any, where patents actually did promote innovation and progress.

A few who benefit from the system will disagree. And lobby heavily to maintain their dominion.

yaga (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

http://www.pcworld.com/article/242046/sun_was_close_to_licensing_java_patents_to_google_for_28m.html

According to that article there are over 2000 patents on Java. Just takes a little effort to find information. There’s something called the Internet that has a ton of it. Just be careful because not everything that is said on the Internet is true. Especially in the comments sections of stories and blogs.

raindog469 (profile) says:

Re: Re:

FTP (natural development?),

FTP actually appeared about two decades before Tim Berners-Lee wrote the first HTML page. I was using it myself about 6 years before the Web was invented. I even downloaded music with it, in huge but tinny-sounding .au files (a Sun workstation format) starting around 1990. Believe it or not, people were leaking advance copies of albums that way; one concrete example I remember was “Roll the Bones” by Rush. Took all night to download from some Italian server at 9600 baud. Hey, it sold a record for them when it finally came out.

FTP was also not patented, of course. I think it influenced the design of HTTP by providing TBL with an example of what not to do.

out_of_the_blue says:

Well, most of these aren't breakthroughs:

Polacolor film (1963) — neat, but not much use; expensive
the flashcube (1965) — just puts FOUR in one package
the automated teller machine (1973) — not much more complicated than a Coke machine, and had to wait on secure ID systems
the halogen lamp (1974) — I’m the only one here knows what the improvement is (hint: re-condensing)
the fax machine (1975) — actually very slow-scan TV, nothing new
the liquid crystal display (1980) — fair enough
the printer (1986) — ?????? a word must be left out
the Kodak Photo CD (1991) — whee! pictures on a CD!
the Nicoderm antismoking patch (1992) — or one could quit
Taxol anticancer drug (1993) — pass as one area I’m not up on, but overall cancer deaths rise steadily…
lab on a chip (1996) — incremental, just an exposed IC, practical only when chips cheap enough to throw away
HDTV (1998) — not new, just settled on a standard; resolution on any TV is limited by allowed spectrum space (all debated in the 40’s, kids), HD is practical only with computing power to un-compress

So anyhoo, I’m not awed.

The important point about patents is that — in principle — it tries to protect the investment of time and money that are risked to develop gadgets. Just because the system is increasingly abused by The Rich and grifters doesn’t affect the good purpose at base.

Also, try to remember that the system is necessarily more complex to sort through after so many gadgets have been made. — That’s why I say go back to requiring a working model.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Well, most of these aren't breakthroughs:

Umm….then by that note some of the panel members aren’t able to do speak…Not that they’re unqualified, but that’s the point, they are qualified even though they haven’t done things as groundbreaking as some of the items on the list.

I agree with your premise that he’s wrong in dismissing these items…but don’t resort to such a simple argument as that. Try instead to enumerate how each of these were actually breakthroughs.

You could speak of how the ATM required extensive security and is much more complicated than a coke machine and he’s being glib on that note. Or how Taxol used a novel delivery method that has become standard or pushed us forward because it approached anticancer drugs in a different direction, etc…

Or you could ask about the 9.9% of patented items and how were they significant or not just an incremental step forward.

Or you could argue that all innovation is incremental steps (something he was really pointing out without realizing) and that’s why patents get in the way of quite a bit of work. If the lab on a chip had been patented by someone it wouldn’t have been as influential because it may not have been cheap enough due to licensing required (despite chips being cheap enough to throw away).

But for the love of god don’t trot out tired and useless arguments like “you have to be better than someone else to judge them”.

Arthur Treacher says:

Re: Judgement calls

hey, are you OOTB1 (shill and propagandist, probably with legal education) or OOTB2 (my hard work entitles me to ownership)?

Either way, I’m fascinated that your judgement on “innovation” better than the “R&D Journal’s” judgement? What standard did you adhere to in making these judgements? Can I see a copy, so that I can re-create your findings, or do I have to defer to you, The Bull Goose Innovation King to get a determination? If the former, can the US PTO get a copy, so they can avoid issuing patents to non-innovative inventions? And the Copyright Office, they should definitely get a copy.

I congratulate you on your supreme Intellectual Property Achievement. Likely, The R&D Journal will be in touch with you. Give them our best!

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Well, most of these aren't breakthroughs:

I like how you say “most” but then go on to list about twenty examples out of the literally thousands of inventions.

Statistically, this is like me saying “Most of OOTB’s family appears to suffer from some kind of mental condition, let me list the afflicted members:

Out of The Blue

My what a nest of cuckoos they must be.”

It’s misleading and dishonest on your part, furthermore; I always find it hilarious how many people think that incremental scientific progress is bad. I’m not surprised you’re among them, OOTB.

I could picture OOTB on ye ol techfilth saying the following:

“Electric Transistors? It’s nothing the handy vacuum tube couldn’t do to begin with. The patents on these things have expired so I’m sure no one found any real use for them anyway”

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Slightly corrected: Patents are only used as a method of getting money from people when you have exactly 1 idea.

It is a propagation of the understanding that you don’t need to be rich or clever to get a company sold, but being clever and self-sustaining economically gives you more than a single chance to get sold for vast sums of money.
Disregarding trolls, patents deter further innovation in an area for a time-period unless a big company is involved in which case it is an ace in limit hold ’em poker.

horse with no name says:

Better answer is:

I think the better answer here is that the selection committee may have particularly avoided patent ideas and advances, or may have not considered them as “new” if they were patent in one year and then actually used in the next.

I also think that much of what was selected wasn’t innovative, as much as splashy. As Nicci mentioned, there were printers before 1986. Splashy design advances are not really innovative.

JP Jones (profile) says:

Very few things can be considered “truely innovative.” Most innovation is a result of collaborative idea exchange. Typically, it goes like this:
1) Someone, or a group of someones, encounter a problem that they want to fix.
2) They come up with an idea to fix it. It doesn’t work or works poorly.
3) Someone else sees them trying to fix the problem, and comes up with a better idea.
4) …
5) Innovation!

I can’t think of a single thing that wasn’t created accidentally that was a result of one person spontaneously coming up with a great idea that everyone wanted to use. Everything comes from people building on the works of others, whether it’s inventions, art, politics…all these things are inherently part of society and not part of individuals.

I personally believe the U.S.’s insane copyright laws (and they are insane, as in not based on logic or reason) is at least partially due to our extreme idealism of individualism. The U.S. believes that the individual surpasses everything else, and that individuals are responsible for these creations. It’s a romantic idea, but it’s completely false. No piece of art, science, or technology exists without the influence of the society that created it, period.

That’s reality. What we have is the ideal (copyright, you have the right to *your* idea/art/invention) conflicting with reality (your idea/art/invention isn’t really yours, it’s created from the culture you live in). And it’s creating extremely wonky results.

Unfortunately, copyright is as strongly ingrained into U.S. ideology as other myths, such as eating fats will make you fat and that the world is facing overpopulation.

Oh no, if that doesn’t get people riled up I don’t know what will. If even one person gets angry, goes online to look it up and prove me wrong then I’ve suceeded in opening a mind.

But I’m not going to hold my breath.

Raymond Van Dyke (profile) says:

Here we go again

Yet another screed against the patent system. What else is new? The correlation of a robust patent system to economic prosperity of a nation have been demonstrated, most recently in Ron Cass’ and Keith Hylton’s book, Laws of Creation.

My personal views on this study in this article agree with some of the conclusions, but by no means all. “Innovation” is often hard to pin down for patenting, and patent rights are often lost due to the innovators’ ignorance of the patent process or other market forces. Jonas Salk, for example, lost out on patenting his vaccine because of prior art – yet, he spun a nice tale afterward. I suspect that behind many of these “innovations” is a similar tale.

Also, patents are but one factor in “innovation,” which here seems to mean solely critical or popular innovations. This article and its ilk demonstrate that those anti-patent have little understanding of the value of a patent system.

This being said, I fully recognize that corporations have warped the intent of the Founders toward patents somewhat, and we must be sensitive to this. Still, we cannot throw the baby out with the bathwater here. Our patent system is vital to our society, and we are in the midst of a vast recalibration. Perhaps, we should wait awhile before attacking the patent system anew.

Ray Van Dyke
Patent Practitioner and Educator

staff (user link) says:

another biased article

‘Pointed out to us by James Bessen’

The word on the street is Bessen is a paid puppet of some of the worlds biggest invention thieves.

Masnick and his monkeys have an unreported conflict of interest-
https://www.insightcommunity.com/cases.php?n=10&pg=1

They sell blog filler and “insights” to major corporations including MS, HP, IBM etc. who just happen to be some of the world?s most frequent patent suit defendants. Obviously, he has failed to report his conflicts as any reputable reporter would. But then Masnick and his monkeys are not reporters. They are hacks representing themselves as legitimate journalists receiving funding from huge corporate infringers. They cannot be trusted and have no credibility. All they know about patents is they don?t have any.

http://truereform.piausa.org/default.html#pt.

Karl (profile) says:

Re: another biased article

For the record: Bessen’s bio is here, and his CV is here. Unless you count MIT, Harvard, and BU as “some of the worlds biggest invention thieves,” you’re full of it.

It’s also noteworthy that Bessen had absolutely nothing to do with the report. He only alerted Mike to its existence.

The posts that are sponsored through the Insight Community are always clearly labeled as such. No conflict of interest here.

Furthermore, those same companies are not just patent defendants, but instigate patent infringement lawsuits as well. (And I notice you didn’t mention Oracle, who is involved in pretty famous patent litigation against Google.) Some of them (UPS) haven’t been involved in patent litigation at all, as far as I know. Calling them “huge corporate infringers” is pretty much a lie.

Of course, as we’ve all seen, lying is your only strong suit. One would think you’d have realized by now that everyone knows you’re a fraud.

jcvillar (profile) says:

There’s not much use for patents when you can get cheap labor and underprice your competition. Now that Asia has opened up as a manufacturing center, companies like Jarden are shifting manufacturing operations there and pink-slipping their patent lawyers. Same deal in the 19th century, where the big companies didn’t need the patent monopoly. they already WERE monopolies!

As far as “promoting innovation,” I could care less. In my world a patent or copyright is to grant to someone what he has created, but if that’s not good enough for you then why not take this collectivist theory further. It is well known that title to real-estate doesn’t promote housing construction, so how about we take away all home ownership? In fact, let’s not have ownership of anything? “Property is theft,” right?

Add Your Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Have a Techdirt Account? Sign in now. Want one? Register here

Comment Options:

Make this the or (get credits or sign in to see balance) what's this?

What's this?

Techdirt community members with Techdirt Credits can spotlight a comment as either the "First Word" or "Last Word" on a particular comment thread. Credits can be purchased at the Techdirt Insider Shop »

Follow Techdirt

Techdirt Daily Newsletter

Ctrl-Alt-Speech

A weekly news podcast from
Mike Masnick & Ben Whitelaw

Subscribe now to Ctrl-Alt-Speech »
Techdirt Deals
Techdirt Insider Discord
The latest chatter on the Techdirt Insider Discord channel...
Loading...
Older Stuff
09:00 Awesome Stuff: Monitor Everything (5)
09:00 Awesome Stuff: Cool Components (1)
12:42 Tech Companies Ask European Commission Not To Wreck The Internet -- And You Can Too (4)
09:00 Awesome Stuff: Play & Listen (1)
09:00 Awesome Stuff: Beyond Chiptunes (12)
09:00 Awesome Stuff: Updated Classics (3)
09:00 Awesome Stuff: Celebrating Cities (1)
09:00 Awesome Stuff: Crafts Of All Kinds (5)
09:00 Awesome Stuff: One Great Knob (13)
09:00 Awesome Stuff: Simple Geeky Toys (2)
09:00 Awesome Stuff: Gadgets For The New Year (18)
09:00 Awesome Stuff: A Post-Holiday Grab Bag (0)
13:34 How Private-Sector Innovation Can Help Those Most In Need (21)
09:00 Awesome Stuff: Towards The Future Of Drones (17)
09:00 Awesome Stuff: Artisanal Handheld Games (5)
09:00 Awesome Stuff: A New Approach To Smartphone VR (5)
09:00 Awesome Stuff: Let's Bore The Censors (37)
09:00 Awesome Stuff: Open Source For Your Brain (2)
09:00 Awesome Stuff: The Final Piece Of The VR Puzzle? (6)
09:00 Awesome Stuff: The Internet... Who Needs It? (15)
09:00 Awesome Stuff: The Light Non-Switch (18)
09:00 Awesome Stuff: 3D Printing And Way, Way More (7)
13:00 Techdirt Reading List: Learning By Doing (5)
12:43 The Stagnation Of eBooks Due To Closed Platforms And DRM (89)
09:00 Awesome Stuff: A Modular Phone For Makers (5)
09:00 Awesome Stuff: Everything On One Display (4)
09:00 Awesome Stuff: Everything Is Still A Remix (13)
09:00 Awesome Stuff: Great Desk Toy, Or Greatest Desk Toy? (6)
09:00 Awesome Stuff: Sleep Hacking (12)
09:00 Awesome Stuff: A Voice-Operated Household Assistant (19)
More arrow