• The Four Hundred
  • Subscribe
  • Media Kit
  • Contributors
  • About Us
  • Contact
Menu
  • The Four Hundred
  • Subscribe
  • Media Kit
  • Contributors
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • IBM Wins U.S. Patent Count Again as Vendors Build Up Patent War Chests

    January 15, 2007 Timothy Prickett Morgan

    Some stories in the IT business have their seasons. About this time of the year, it is typical for the United States Patent and Trademark Office to put out a press release trumpeting the number of patents that were issued in America during the prior year just ended. But this year, USPTO didn’t put out a release, and I called up the public affairs office to find out why.

    To my astonishment and amusement, I was politely told by the public affairs officer that USPTO was concerned that the industry was focusing too much on the quantity of patents awarded and wanted to shift the dialog out there in the tech world over to the quality of the patents awarded each year. She then hung up the phone.

    At first, I wanted to laugh, and then I got angry, and as it typical when you are surprised by a situation, I didn’t think of the comeback line until a half-second after she said goodbye. Which is: If the USPTO was concerned about the number of patents being issued, then maybe the patent officers and lawyers who are awarding the patents could say “No” once in a while? Maybe they could admit publicly that a patent system that allows DNA and processes that can only vaguely be called software to be patented is in desperate need of fixing? Maybe USPTO could say something intelligent about the patent war chests that companies are building up merely to defend against and offend with lawsuits with their rivals?

    Even though the USPTO didn’t put out a press release on patents awarded in the United States for 2006, IFI Patent Intelligence, which has created a searchable database of patents called CLAIMS, did its own analysis of the patents awarded last year.

    According to the company’s analysis, America awarded 173,772 patents last year, up nearly 21 percent from 2005 patent count. The count of issued patents was actually down in 2004 and 2005, and this seems to indicate that companies are renewing their efforts to secure patents for defensive and offensive maneuvers. It also suggests that USPTO is making some progress on working down its backlog of patent applications. What the CLAIMS database did not show is how many patents were denied in 2006, which would be a very interesting statistic to see.

    As it has for the past 14 years, IBM once again topped the list of patent holders, with 3,651 patents awarded last year, according to IFI’s analysis. Samsung Electronics, the Korean electronics manufacturer, came in a distant second with 2,453 patents, followed closely by Canon with 2,378 patents, Matsushita Electric (which we know by the Panasonic brand) gained 2,273 new patents last year. The number five on the patent list was Hewlett-Packard, with 2,113 patents, followed by Intel, with 1,962; Sony, with 1,810; Hitachi, with 1,749; Toshiba, with 1,717; and Micron Technology, with 1,612. Software giant Microsoft came in at number 12 on the list, with 1,463 patents awarded in 2006, just behind Fujitsu, which had 1,513 patents.

    Incidentally, companies based in the United States only took seven out of the top 20 slots, compared to nine for Japanese-based companies applying for U.S. patent protection for their inventions. The electronics industry still dominates patent awards, The number of biotech patents was up 29 percent compared to 2005, and pharmaceutical patents (which are in a distinct category) grew by 22 percent, according to IFI’s analysis of the numbers.

    Of equally important note, IBM is the only company in history to ever have more than 2,000 patents issued to it by Uncle Sam in a year–until 2006. The remaining top four patent holders–Samsung, Canon, Matsushita, and HP–all broke 2,000 patents for the first time in their histories.

    Do I hear 3,000 for 2007? How about 4,000? The sky’s the limit.



                         Post this story to del.icio.us
                   Post this story to Digg
        Post this story to Slashdot

    Share this:

    • Reddit
    • Facebook
    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter
    • Email

    Tags: Tags: mtfh_rc, Volume 16, Number 2 -- January 15, 2007

    Sponsored by
    VISUAL LANSA 16 WEBINAR

    Trying to balance stability and agility in your IBM i environment?

    Join this webinar and explore Visual LANSA 16 – our enhanced professional low-code platform designed to help organizations running on IBM i evolve seamlessly for what’s next.

    🎙️VISUAL LANSA 16 WEBINAR

    Break Monolithic IBM i Applications and Unlock New Value

    Explore modernization without rewriting. Decouple monolithic applications and extend their value through integration with modern services, web frameworks, and cloud technologies.

    🗓️ July 10, 2025

    ⏰ 9 AM – 10 AM CDT (4 PM to 5 PM CEST)

    See the webinar schedule in your time zone

    Register to join the webinar now

    What to Expect

    • Get to know Visual LANSA 16, its core features, latest enhancements, and use cases
    • Understand how you can transition to a MACH-aligned architecture to enable faster innovation
    • Discover native REST APIs, WebView2 support, cloud-ready Azure licensing, and more to help transform and scale your IBM i applications

    Read more about V16 here.

    Share this:

    • Reddit
    • Facebook
    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter
    • Email

    Original Adds Some Manual Features to Testing Suite IBM Patches Security Flaw in OS/400 V5R3

    Leave a Reply Cancel reply

TFH Volume: 16 Issue: 2

This Issue Sponsored By

    Table of Contents

    • IDC Says Global IT Spending Will Kiss $1.5 Trillion By 2010
    • IBM Wins U.S. Patent Count Again as Vendors Build Up Patent War Chests
    • LTO Consortium Spins Ultrium 4 Tape Format with Native Encryption
    • USDA Farm Service Agency Wants to Consolidation 2,384 AS/400s
    • Information is Useless: Survey
    • IDC Says Global IT Spending Will Kiss $1.5 Trillion By 2010
    • Reader Feedback on The System iWant, 2007 Edition
    • Mad Dog 21/21: Between y o u and i
    • Next Generation ERP and the Rise of the Agile Organization
    • Why the Number of Women in IT Is Decreasing

    Content archive

    • The Four Hundred
    • Four Hundred Stuff
    • Four Hundred Guru

    Recent Posts

    • Liam Allan Shares What’s Coming Next With Code For IBM i
    • From Stable To Scalable: Visual LANSA 16 Powers IBM i Growth – Launching July 8
    • VS Code Will Be The Heart Of The Modern IBM i Platform
    • The AS/400: A 37-Year-Old Dog That Loves To Learn New Tricks
    • IBM i PTF Guide, Volume 27, Number 25
    • Meet The Next Gen Of IBMers Helping To Build IBM i
    • Looks Like IBM Is Building A Linux-Like PASE For IBM i After All
    • Will Independent IBM i Clouds Survive PowerVS?
    • Now, IBM Is Jacking Up Hardware Maintenance Prices
    • IBM i PTF Guide, Volume 27, Number 24

    Subscribe

    To get news from IT Jungle sent to your inbox every week, subscribe to our newsletter.

    Pages

    • About Us
    • Contact
    • Contributors
    • Four Hundred Monitor
    • IBM i PTF Guide
    • Media Kit
    • Subscribe

    Search

    Copyright © 2025 IT Jungle