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98 Wash. L. Rev. Online 1 (2023)

handle is hein.journals/wlro98 and id is 1 raw text is: 
















WHEN PATENT LITIGATORS BECOME
NEUROSURGEONS



Katie  Chang*


      Abstract: Patent law is where the law meets the most cutting-edge and innovative
   technology of its time. Usually, subject matter experts, with the help of lawyers, are the ones
   applying for patents. But when it comes to granting and enforcing patent rights, the job falls
   onto lawyers and judges, who, for the most part, are likely not experts in the relevant technical
   field. Bridging the gap between technological expertise and legal expertise has been a pain
   point in patent litigation, one that Congress has tried to rectify for many years. This Comment
   primarily examines one of Congress's solutions-the Patent Pilot Program-and discusses the
   changes that such a program could have in the event a similar system is implemented in the
   future. One potential change to note is that such a system should institute a standard set of
   guidelines and rules for each district to follow when it comes to patent infringement cases.
   This would ensure more uniformity across federal district jurisprudence in the field.


INTRODUCTION


   Patent  infringement litigation   has  been   called  the neurosurgery of
litigation.I Judges   note  that patent   cases  take  up  a disproportionate
amount of a court's time compared to other cases.2 After all, patents
handle   the  most   cutting-edge   technology; it follows that trying to
determine   the facts of a patent  case would   take  an inordinate  amount   of
time. How are a   judge  and  jury-who more often than not lack technical
expertise  in the relevant field-to   determine  whether   an alleged  infringer
actually infringes  on a patent right? To make   matters even  worse,  a current
lack   of  uniformity in patent law across jurisdictions means a
disproportionate   reversal rate of district level decisions.3
   Insufficient experience   in patent litigation is an important issue because
the enforcement   of patent rights is fundamental   to encouraging  innovation
in the American legal system. After all, innovation was so important that


  * J.D. Candidate, University of Washington School of Law, Class of 2023. Thank you to Professor

Toshiko Takenaka for her guidance and review of this Comment. I am also incredibly grateful for the
wonderful Washington Law Review Online team, and in particular my editors: Ian, Anna, and Amy.
I could not have done this without everyone's help and support. I decided to go to law school to pursue
patent and IP law. That interest has led me to write this Comment.
  1. Sapna Kumar, Judging Patents, 62 WM. & MARY L. REv. 871, 874 (2021).
  2. See, Jay P. Kesan & Gwendolyn G. Ball, Judicial Experience and the Efficiency and Accuracy
of Patent Adjudication: An Empirical Analysis of the Case for a Specialized Patent Trial Court, 24
HARV. J. L. & TECH. 393, 410 (2011) [hereinafter Kesan].
  3. See discussion infra Part III.


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