Thursday, November 10, 2005

Patent for antigravity

Ok, I've been travelling a bit, so the blog has been quiet. But here I'm back with a great one. The US PTO has broken what many considered the law by granting a patent for an antigravity device. It breaks the fundamental scientific laws, but yet now Boris Volfson has the right to stop others from practicing his methods. What is next? And what does this mean for the credibility of the patent system? Makes one wonder -- should we get patents now on theoretical things because one day, we might be able to break gravity? And if it's within 20 years, we'll have the right to stop others? Find me a patent attorney.

1 Comments:

At 1:40 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

How do we know it breaks the laws of physics? Gravity is the most pervasive yet least understood phenomenon in the universe. Tell me how we know how it works.

 

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