After years of intellectual property disappointments, there’s finally hope on the horizon for inventors and innovators. 

Attorney John Squires has been nominated to serve as the director of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

Squires is known for his strong record in defending IP rights and can be counted on to defend the rights of patent and trademark holders. While Squires has raised eyebrows in the IP policy world for his strong denouncements of “patent trolls” lodging “predatory patent assertions,” his confirmation will ensure that innovation is encouraged and protected. 

Lawmakers should swiftly confirm Squires and maintain America’s role as a global IP leader.

It’s been a rough few years for IP policy. Under President Biden, appointees searched for ways to seize patents in the name of “access” and “affordability.” For example, bureaucrats pushed for using “march-in rights” under the Bayh-Doyle Act to take over pharmaceutical patents if producers didn’t cater to unreasonable pricing demands. Given the $2 billion cost in bringing medications to market, shaking down producers on price is a recipe for less innovation and fewer drugs entering the research and development pipeline. 

On his way out of office, Biden did the unthinkable and snuck these foolish patent policies into National Institutes of Health guidelines. This obscure last-minute guidance dictated that producers seeking to commercialize patented discoveries from NIH labs must ensure their products’ “affordability, availability, acceptability, and sustainability.” In other words, the government can render patents useless if it has any issues with the producers’ commercialization plans.

Unfortunately, the Biden administration also made it more difficult for owners of “standard-essential patents” — covering technology related to international compliance with technical standards — to protect their inventions through court injunctions. The less recourse that innovators have to protect their ideas, the less likely they are to keep churning out game-changing products.

Squires understands this truth. As far back as 2007, Squires praised the transformative role that patents have played in financial sector innovation and championed a broad view of patent eligibility. He’s dealt closely with IP assets during corporate sales, led litigation in a variety of IP matters, and testified before Congress on patent reform. Perhaps most important, Squires has spent time  contemplating how IP applies to a range of cutting-edge technologies, including artificial intelligence, blockchain and fintech/regtech.

Not all of Squires’ IP views are encouraging. He believes that over-patenting is a serious problem and so-called “patent trolls” are abusing IP rights by holding onto far too many patents. Yet, for all the consternation around “patent trolling,” there is little evidence that it is a widespread problem. 

In 2014, the New York attorney general investigated a company called MPHJ Technology Investments, which supposedly attempted to extract patent-related payments from hundreds of small- and medium-size businesses. Prominent inventor advocate Paul Morinville notes, “The NY AG conducted a nationwide search for nefarious demand letters (issued by MPHJ) that would lead them to more patent trolls. After several months of investigation, the NY AG found six examples of nefarious demand letters in a multi-month nationwide search. That’s right — six — only six. Yet, the patent troll remained the narrative

driving the passage of (anti-patent legislation) …”

Molly Metz, a former five-time world jump rope champion and sporting manufacturer, has cataloged her efforts to try to find a definitive list of patent trolls but has repeatedly come up short in her attempts. According to Metz, the response by even the most seasoned subject matter experts has been, “No one has ever asked for this information before; I am not sure if we have it. I will have to get back to you.”

It is hoped Squires minimizes this misguided focus on “patent trolls” and keeps his eyes on the prize of strengthening IP. There is little doubt he will make an excellent USPTO director and keep America innovating.

Ross Marchand is a senior fellow at the Taxpayers Protection Alliance. He wrote this for InsideSources.com.