Obama slams patent trolls and admits AIA needs improvement

Managing IP is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Gardens, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Obama slams patent trolls and admits AIA needs improvement

obama-barack-45.jpg

US President Obama has admitted that patent trolls are a problem and said the AIA only goes “halfway” towards fixing issues in the patent system

President Obama

Obama made the comments in an online broadcast on Google on Thursday, in which he answered questions submitted in advance by members of the general public.

The President accused patent trolls of “trying to essentially leverage and hijack somebody else's idea and see if they can extort some money out of them”.

But he added: “We also want to make sure that patents are long enough, and that people's intellectual property is protected. We've got to balance that with making sure that they're not so long that innovation is reduced.”

Obama also stressed the importance of protecting privacy and civil liberties and ensuring that the internet “stays open”.

“But I do think that our efforts at patent reform only went about halfway to where we need to go,” he said. “What we need to do is pull together additional stakeholders and see if we can build some additional consensus on smarter patent laws.”

Obama did not answer a question about copyright law, submitted by non-profit organisation Public Knowledge, which was the eighth most popular question by public vote. The organisation asked Obama if he would support a fix to the DMCA which would allow people to use copyrighted products they had paid for however they prefer, for their own personal use.

Other IP-related questions submitted by users concerned the SOPA and CISPA bills and the “revolving door between lobbyist and legislators” for organisations such as the MPAA, the RIAA and the US Copyright Office.

Patent reform and the AIA will be discussed at next month’s US Patent Forum in Washington DC.

Speakers at the Forum include Judge Paul Michel, Teresa Stanek Rea - USPTO, James Pooley – WIPO, Ray Niro and Richard Rainey – GE and many more. The Forum is free for in-house patent counsel: information and registration.

more from across site and SHARED ros bottom lb

More from across our site

Sources say the judge could return to a disputes or mediation-focussed role, though others have questioned whether the Texas court will remain a litigation hotspot in his absence
Sheppard, which has hired 14 IP partners in the last 12 months, has cited client demand for expert counsel in SEP, ITC, and district court disputes
Tingxi Huo joins our ‘Five minutes with’ series to discuss boosting the value of clients’ IP and the importance of reflection
Hefty legal teams assembled for a three-day hearing in what was the court’s first foray into SEPs since Unwired Planet v Huawei
IP firm's new base will be located inside the tallest office space in the UK's ‘second city’
Practitioners at four firms across Asia and Europe share the do’s and don’ts of mindful networking ahead of the INTA Annual Meeting
Brand Action explains why the IP community can be a force for good in the world as thousands of professionals prepare to head to London for INTA’s Annual Meeting
The firm, which has also hired a senior trademark leader to lead operations in the region, believes greater China to be one of the most important IP jurisdictions
Attorneys at Gibson Dunn share why plaintiffs’ growing reliance on DMCA anti-circumvention claims in AI scraping cases exposes a critical vulnerability
Tom Carver, who spent the last 18 months sailing the Mediterranean, tells Managing IP why he’s ready to return to land
Gift this article