BizarroLand
yesterday at 5:15 PM
You cannot patent a prompt.
Anyone who attempts to do so will either need to be secretive and bribey to pull it off and will then also have to hope that no one ever finds out because if they did, then in any legal proceedings that come due to said patent, (which is the entire point of a patent), the outcome will be that their patent is invalidated by the court and the case thrown out.
The point of a patent is to make it so that, while the patent lasts, no one else can use said patent without licensing it from you, and if they do so without the license they open themselves up to civil penalties that can exceed any potential profits from the illicit licensing.
1: Prompts have no value in and of themselves.
2: The ownership of raw AI generated materials is in a grey area. It might be public domain, it might be owned by the person who prompted it, we don't have clear hard guidelines on that.
3: AI is trained on a dataset of billions of pieces of other peoples work. Any novelty (novelty is a requirement for a patent) that comes from AI is at best an accident of the same variety as the colors produced by spilling paint, where it has taken a slice from one person and a slice from another person and mixed them together.
So, all in all, AI prompts and their output are almost certainly not patentable, at least as long as one sane person is in the pipeline somewhere.
slaw3
yesterday at 8:01 PM
> Anyone who attempts to do so will either need to be secretive and bribey to pull it off and will then also have to hope that no one ever finds out because if they did, then in any legal proceedings that come due
What do you mean by this? What aspects of their conduct would someone need to be secretive about?
BizarroLand
yesterday at 8:12 PM
A patent can be challenged in court. Newegg has had a couple of loud victories over this, and in some cases have challenged the validity of the patent, basically asking the court to review whether the original patent that is at the crux of the case should have been issued in the first place.
If the patent, on review in court, fails the originality, novelty, or lack of prior art review, the patent can be dissolved.
https://www.retaildive.com/news/newegg-the-bane-of-patent-tr...
https://www.newegg.com/insider/newegg-vs-patent-trolls-when-...
A patent filed on a prompt would most likely fail the novelty/prior art review phase of the patent application, so the only way a patent could succeed being granted in the first place would be through extreme secrecy and probably bribery of a patent agent to push the patent through.
slaw3
yesterday at 9:02 PM
All patents issued by the USPTO are public though. For you to get a utility patent you need to publicly share exactly what is done. This is supposed to be the reason patents exist in the first place. And in return for publicly sharing, you get exclusive rights for some period of time. In that regard there really isn’t any secrecy
Just because you have the patent does not mean you will win all infringement claims though, as you noted with those Newegg cases
BizarroLand
yesterday at 9:24 PM
I agree. Patents are only useful in a court of law, and as a deterrent to prevent deep pocketed outsiders from stealing your idea (out of fear that they would lose any infringement lawsuits and therefore a lot of money).
If your patent is crap, like the one that could feasibly be put on a prompt, then there is only the thinnest veneer of protection for your prompt idea, so it's pointless to make one if there is any value more than the 10-30 lawyer hours needed to take it to court and destroy it.