this post was submitted on 08 Nov 2024
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This is about a bad patent that is preventing slicers from making brick-layer prints that would increase strength enormously, despite the fact that there is clear prior art that has expired for nearly a decade. The patent is full of bad references to the prior art and clearly shouldn't have been approved - even if the person saying it isn't a lawyer, it's obvious.

The new bad patent from 2020 would keep the invention away for another 20 years, and do real harm to the development of 3d printing.

The creator asked viewers to share this with people in the FOSS slicer community. I don't know if that's anyone here, but lemmy is pretty FOSS-happy. Also the FOSS communities here might be interested to hear about how this patent is hamstringing development of FOSS features. I don't have the time right now to search through the communities so any crossposts would be welcome.

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[–] FuglyDuck@lemmy.world 8 points 1 week ago (8 children)

aren't patents supposed to be "non obvious"?

[–] Excrubulent@slrpnk.net 3 points 1 week ago (7 children)

If you're saying this one is obvious, there is maths and research involved, not just "hey lay it down like this.

The basic concept is easy, the implementation details are not.

[–] FuglyDuck@lemmy.world 11 points 1 week ago (6 children)

The basic concept is easy, the implementation details are not.

Coding a slicer to stagger layer lines is definitely tedious, and frustrating. But in that case, the patent doesn't patent brick-layering techniques. It patents a specific technique of achieving that.

But when they're supposed to judge "non-obviousness" it's a bit more than just "is it simple". the question is, would somebody else see it as obvious (if they had never looked at your work,). staggered layers are obvious. Anyone with any amount of experience in structural engineering would be like "Well, yeah".

Now this is where the non-obvious gets fun. If any one whose reasonably knowledgeable in the system would follow the same technique you used. there has to be something "special" about it. And since the patent itself is based on significant past work; the argument could be made that anyone following that past work would arrive at the same techniques should be okay. (Except they're patent trolls and patent law lobbyists for said trolls have fucked everything over.)

there's a second caveat here that's worth mentioning. you can lose your patents if you don't exploit them. as far as I know there's no slicer- paid or otherwise- using their patent.

[–] DrunkenPirate@feddit.org 3 points 1 week ago

„A specific technique on how to achieve it“, it usually a process patent. This can be circumvented and erases the protection. If the defined process is A>B>C>D and your process is A>E>C>D, then this does not touch the patent as it’s a different process.

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