Horatius
NWO Kitty Wrangler
- Joined
- May 9, 2006
- Messages
- 29,691
One can patent technology, but not the scientific principles underlying it.
If you patent your start-stop device and start selling it, you'll make money until someone develops a continuous-motion device based on the aforementioned scientific principles.
At that point, you'll make no money at all, because the continuous-motion version is more desirable and marketable.
The developer of the continuous-motion device will make money until someone develops a solid-state device, at which point the continuous-motion device will be as worthless as the start-stop one.
The problem is, your ideas about who would make money are based on a lack of understanding how patents actually work.
"Interesting fact" time. Well, it's interesting if you're interested in patents.
If the continuous version inventor used any of the technology used in the start-stop version, he would be in just such a position. Then, the start-stop guys could either deny him a license, and keep selling their own product, or make some sort of deal, to cross-license the two patents, so everyone could produce both devices, or some intermediate arrangement. Then, the start-stop guys are making money off everyone else who patents later versions, in so far as the later versions are based on their earlier work.
So it still doesn't make any business sense. Assuming your patents are well-written, of course.