Do patents help or hinder innovation? Instinctively, they would seem a blessing. Patenting an idea gives its inventor a 20-year monopoly to exploit the fruit of his labor in the marketplace, in exchange for publishing a full account of how the new product, process or material works for everyone to see. For the inventor, that may be a reasonable trade-off. For society, however, the loss of competition through the granting sole rights to an individual or organization is justified only if it stimulates the economy and delivers goods that change people"s lives for the better. Invention, though, is not innovation. It may take a couple of enthusiasts working evenings and weekends for a year or two—not to mention tens of thousands of dollars of their savings—to get a pet idea to the patenting stage. But that is just the beginning. Innovations based on patented inventions or discoveries can take teams of researchers, engineers and marketing experts a decade or more, and tens of millions of dollars, to transfer to the marketplace. And for every bright idea that goes on to become a commercial winner, literally thousands fall by the wayside . Most economists would argue that, without a patent system, even fewer inventions would lead to successful innovations, and those that did would be kept secret for far longer in order to maximize returns. But what if patents actually discourage the combining and recombining of inventions to yield new products and processes—as has happened in biotechnology, genetics and other disciplines? Or what about those ridiculous business-process patents, like Amazoncom"s "one-click" patent or the "name-your-price" auction patent assigned to Priceline.com? Instead of stimulating innovation, such patents seem more about extracting "rents" from innocent bystanders going about their business. One thing has become clear since business-process patents took off in America during the 1990s: the quality of patents has deteriorated markedly. And with sloppier patenting standards, litigation has increased. The result is higher transaction costs all found. It is not simply a failure of the United States Patent and Trademark Office(USPTO)to examine applications more rigorously. The Federal Circuit has been responsible for a number of bizarre rulings. Because of its diverse responsibilities, the Federal Circuit—unlike its counterparts in Europe and Japan— has never really acquired adequate expertise in patent law. To be eligible for a patent, an invention must not just be novel, but also useful and non-obvious. Anything that relies on natural phenomena, abstract ideas or the laws of nature does not qualify. The USPTO has taken to requiring a working prototype of anything that supposedly breaches the laws of physics. So, no more perpetual-motion machines, please.
单选题 What can we learn from the first paragraph?
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】解析:推理判断题。第一段结尾部分⑤句谈到了作者对专利的看法:只有(only if)当专利授予刺激了经济发展,生产出商品,从而改善了人们生活时,专利导致的竞争丧失才看似合理,这样的专利才可以被认为是一种福佑,故D项正确。
单选题 The phrase "fall by the wayside"(Line 6, Para 2)most probably means
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】解析:词语理解题。第二段④句表明,将创新推向市场需花费大量的人力物力,接着⑤句And表明另一种并列情况:每一个聪明的创意取得商业上的成功,就有数千个创意fall by the wayside。由此可以推知该短语的意思应与goes on to become a commercial winner相反,即“失败,半途放弃”,故A项正确。
单选题 According to the author, the "one-click" patent and the "name-your-price" patent are
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】解析:事实细节题。根据题干的两个专利定位文章第四段。该段①句可以看出,作者认为诸如亚马逊网站的“一键点击”之类的专利都是ridiculous(荒谬的),absurd(荒谬的)是其同义词,C项为答案。
单选题 The author holds that business-process patents
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】解析:观点态度题。根据关键词business-process patents定位文章第四段。④句表明:随着专利标准日渐下滑,相关诉讼事件日益增加,由此可见作者认为这类专利的标准不够高,故D项最符合题意。sloppy和litigation都是难词,sloppy意为“松垮的”,此处指“下滑”,litigation指“诉讼”。
单选题 According to the text, which of the following is eligible for a patent?
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】解析:推理判断题。根据eligible一词定位文章最后一段。①②句表明:一项发明要想符合申请专利的条件,不但要有新意,还要有用,并且具有非显而易见性。任何依赖自然现象、抽象思维或者自然规律的东西都不合格。根据这点可以推断得出B项最符合题意。