Chris Dixon

Thomas Jefferson on Patents

If nature has made any one thing less susceptible than all others of exclusive property, it is the action of the thinking power called an idea, which an individual may exclusively possess as long as he keeps it to himself; but the moment it is divulged, it forces itself into the possession of every one, and the receiver cannot dispossess himself of it. Its peculiar character, too, is that no one possesses the less, because every other possesses the whole of it. He who receives an idea from me, receives instruction himself without lessening mine; as he who lights his taper at mine, receives light without darkening me.

That ideas should freely spread from one to another over the globe, for the moral and mutual instruction of man, and improvement of his condition, seems to have been peculiarly and benevolently designed by nature, when she made them, like fire, expansible over all space, without lessening their density in any point, and like the air in which we breathe, move, and have our physical being, incapable of confinement or exclusive appropriation. Inventions then cannot, in nature, be a subject of property.

Society may give an exclusive right to the profits arising from them, as an encouragement to men to pursue ideas which may produce utility, but this may or may not be done, according to the will and convenience of the society, without claim or complaint from anybody. Accordingly, it is a fact, as far as I am informed, that England was, until we copied her, the only country on earth which ever, by a general law, gave a legal right to the exclusive use of an idea. In some other countries it is sometimes done, in a great case, and by a special and personal act, but, generally speaking, other nations have thought that these monopolies produce more embarrassment than advantage to society; and it may be observed that the nations which refuse monopolies of invention, are as fruitful as England in new and useful devices.

- Letter from Thomas Jefferson to Isaac McPherson

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  • http://www.linkedin.com/in/eyalgoldwerger goldwerger

    Such powerful metaphors! Love it.
    Eyal

    • http://www.cdixon.org chris dixon

      Yeah, particularly the “nature” / “fire” metaphor is great IMO.

      • http://daleallyn.com Dale Allyn

        Right, Chris. And I especially love this element: “expansible over all space, without lessening their density in any point”. 

        Great post, Chris. 

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  • http://avc.com fredwilson

    awesome

  • http://jackdempsey.me Jack Dempsey

    Wonderful piece. It sparked a conversation with my fiancé who knows the topic a bit, and lead to this interesting analysis http://cti.itc.virginia.edu/~meg3c/classes/tcc313/200Rprojs/jefferson_invent/patent.html

  • Patrick Lee

       Jefferson, who died at age 83 and deeply in debt, might have lessened his financial distress if had patented some of his inventions … the moldboard plow, the swivel chair, the combined walking stick/stool, etc. Instead, he chose to offer them freely to others, as he described in this letter. His possession in these ideas was not decreased while others’ benefit was increased.
        Learn more about Jefferson’s views on a variety of subjects at
    http://thomasjeffersonleadership.com/?page_id=68.

    • http://www.cdixon.org chris dixon

      Or he could have just cofounded companies that commercialized those
      inventions. How about actually building something instead of just getting a
      government monopoly on the right to sue someone who does actually build
      something.

      • Anonymous

        Two scenarios: 1) troll with no desire to build sues a builder for infringment; 2) large entrenched incumbent beats a small innovator to market after hearing the idea

        1) is offensive to builders. 2) is offensive to everyone.

        Tough one for politicos. No obvious winning principle. And the lawyers lobby pretty fierce!

        FWIW – P&G has adopted 2) as their mainstream business strategy (partnering with innovators and specializing in scaling).

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  • http://rocrastination.com/ Ro Gupta

    Terrific quote, Chris. Had no idea Jefferson ever said something like this. Fits kind of perfectly with a draft post I have about patentability. Proceeding to steal it..

  • http://sco.tt Scott Yates

    It’s a great quote, but doesn’t really capture the whole history. Jefferson personally approved the first few patents issued by the U.S. government.
    http://www.ideafinder.com/history/inventions/uspatent.htm
    And then went on to “invent” the patent office.

    Presidential patent trivia: Who was the only president granted a patent? Lincoln.

    I own a patent, so I’m probably biased in favor of the patent system. I do think the whole software patent problem is huge, but I don’t think throwing out the whole system is going to create the fix we are looking for.

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  • http://www.facebook.com/davejoeranallo Dave Ranallo

    Andy Grove says the same thing - http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20090504/1119284741.shtml.  Patents along with subsidies, tariffs and copious regulation that entrench status quo interests are crushing innovation and competition.  Adapt or die.

  • http://www.24pagebooks.com MartinEdic

    I think the important thing here is his concept of the ability to transfer an idea without diminishing your own ability to utilize it. Software patents attempt to preserve ideas that are easily copied and repurposed for uses for which they were never made for- does this mean the originator of one idea now has a monopoly on any other use of it, even if they never imagined that use? If I put an idea out there, do I own all new ideas it engenders? I think not. I hope not.
    And Chris is right- it is the use and application of ideas that values them, not their mere invention.

  • http://twitter.com/jkeramidas Jason Keramidas

    I think the key statement is this: “Society may give an exclusive right to the profits arising from them, as an encouragement to men to pursue ideas which may produce utility, but this may or may not be done, according to the will and convenience of the society, without claim or complaint from anybody.” The issue isn’t with the concept of patents, that documentation simply serves to acknowledge the people who had the idea so that they may be compensated accordingly for their innovation. It is the use of ideas without said compensation where the lawsuits arise.

  • http://www.adela.vn/dich-vu/thiet-ke-profile-cong-ty.html thiet ke profile

    thanks for this great article

  • http://profiles.google.com/mutakubwa muta jon

    thoughtful article. Incidentally i have been reading about the Apple and HTC lawsuit and some news outlets are even saying android is now in big trouble because of the ruling. And by reading this am thinking that it is better for people to co-found companies that commercialise brilliant ideas instead of suing people who do just that.In that way perhaps we can have more brilliant inventions

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  • http://www.startupboyo.com/ RichardF

    I am not a fan of patents at all.

    But given that the Industrial Revolution (which started in Britain) was getting into swing when Jefferson wrote this he was plainly incorrect about new and useful devices coming from England. 

  • http://twitter.com/YotpoOfficial Tomer Tagrin

    Amazing

  • http://www.facebook.com/smak420 Ronald Dishmon

    Subject: hopefully a blessed opportunity
    I’m Ronald Allen Dishmon born in Las Vegas, NV. on 9/11/1979. I come from the gutter of Las Vegas, where the streets claimed both the lives of my parents from drugs (heroin/crack) and The Aids Viris. I have siblings that were born with the virus. One of my siblings is Hydeia Broadbent, (http://www.hydeiabroadbent.com/) who is a famous speaker in America on HIV and Aids Awareness. She was left by my mother in the hospital when she was born then adopted by a judge and his wife in Las Vegas. Her tragedy turned out to be a blessing for the world. I would like to do the same thing with my life by turning my tragedy into a blessing as well. I wasn’t cursed like my siblings being born with the HIV virus, but I did have to survive my parents life style and damaging choices. So as I grew up just like my parents, I chose the street life. I was fostered from home to home, lost a football college scholarship opportunity, and ended up in prison for four years from my decisions and acts. I saw a lot and I grew up tremendously. The way I started to see things in life turned me into a person with true understanding and unique wisdom on life. I believe I have the power through screen plays, music, entertainment, books, and inspirational speeches to somehow help not only the black community, but the HIV/ Aids community, the unaware community, the selfish community; and also the ignorant community . When I arrived home from prison I was sent through a series of events that shaped me into the letter that I am corresponding to you this very moment. I would like to take all the ideas that I have, all the people I have come across from the city of Las Vegas and else where, and present what I see and have seen to the world. The #8 best Entertainment Attorney in the world Jordan Yospe has agreed that in the event I should recieve funding for my project, he will be my personal Attorney ($625.00 an hour).To show you how powerful this movement could be, following are examples of my ideas (one of each) from each area of screen play/books, music and entertainment. For starters in the area of music genre – hip hop/reality TV:I was fortunate to meet two of the hottest young rappers in the city of Las Vegas:Rugar Rico (http://www.reverbnation.com/rugarrico) and D Cross (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X1GJ96hC0VE). They are very talented artists and writers. My vision is directed towards a reality show. Majority of rap artists are noticed when they are already in their rich-jerkish mind sets, but no one sees how they are before they make it and living within poverty just simply broke. The moments of ones trials and tribulations while becoming famous are unknown and unseen.. It would be awesome to have a reality program showing the true rags to riches realities and battles. One of the great reasons to get into the music industry is that it’s a $40 billion dollar a year industry. If the finances are available it’s very easy to get into this industry and this is how:We need a new unsigned artist and sign that artist under our independently owned record lable, RAD T.V Records (which will be a company under the parent company of T.E.A.M Inc. “Together Everybody Achieves More”)Then pay our way into the industry with 1 single.We take our new artist & find the hottest producer in music for the genre of music & fan base we want for that song; FOR EXAMPLE: Dr. Dre is the best producer ever! for his services we would need $200,000. We would also need a featured artist for that song; FOR EXAMPLE: Eminem is the hottest rapper in the industry at the moment, for his services would need $100,000. After we have a finished song, then we must make the song sellable to promote & sell the song.Now, once we put the song on iTunes, Amazon, Napster etc., we get $2 per song, with the producer & featured artist that we have paid to guarantee us nothing less than a platinum selling song (platinum is when you sell a million copies of your song or album).So, we spent between $350-$375,000 to bring the song to life, we sold 1,000,000 copies of our song for $2 each. Thats $2,000,000 just for that 1 song, nice profit, don’t you think so?Second idea involves the screen play film area: The film industry is a $65 billion dollar a year industry.“El Regalo” about a dedicated devoted husband with a beautiful family who has a 20 yr plus marriage. Has never cheated on his wife and job consist of many business trips. On one business trip he comes across the most beautiful women he’s ever seen in his life. But he never speaks to her but sees her in the upcoming monthly business trips. After months of business trips on this trip he happens to stop for a drink and sees the lady and still doesn’t speak to her. He doesn’t have sex with her at this point. He returns home to his wife. He can’t stop thinking about this lady and convinces himself that he is in the wrong and to stop thinking about her. Basically, everything leads up to him on another business trip and at the bar with the same lady, finally converses with her, and has sex with her. The lady repetitiously asks if he feels doubtful and if he us definite of them sleeping together. She reassures him that he does not have to do this but he still goes through with it. After the sex she informs him that he will never be seeing her again because she won’t be making anymore trips. Although she wants to leave him with a gift that she states is very important to her. She requests that he not open it until he gets home. In the process of leaving each other from the waves goodbye at the airport and the departure from the plan trip home; to the cab ride he begins to feel very guilty and starts to think about his wife and children. He can’t wait to get home now. When he gets home he is so excited to see the family. The sorrow he felt turns into passion shared with his wife causing him to forget about the gift he was suppose to open when he got home. He and his wife have a great night of lovemaking causing him to be late the next morning for work. As he rushes to work and enters his office he places his briefcase on his desk taking a sigh of relief that he made it there. He then opens the briefcase and sees the gift. He decides to open the gift while memories of the wrongful but worth sexual encounter flashes in his mind. The memories fade away as he realizes what the gift was, a miniature coffin. As he opens the coffin a card with red letters appears. The letters slip out his mouth slowly and say, Welcome to my World the Wonderful World of Aids. In an instant his wife and children flash before his eyes and the scene goes into darkness. That is one of many screen plays or book ideas not to mention my life story with my sisters and parents. $20,000 for Screenplay start upThere is plenty of talent & business opportunities in the city of Las Vegas besides the strip, through my mind and profitable ideas. In addition, I also have a Social Network site called 15 minutes of fame, ( http://www.15minsoffame.ning.com ) it would be just as big or bigger than FaceBook and Twitter combined. We would need to hire a computer programmer an additional $20,000 to build the Social Networking site. As well as a theory for economic human social reform. Would need $15,000 to 20,000 to put the theory in book form. This is just a small summary of something that could be realistically accomplished. I need someone “willing” to take a chance on me & becoming the 1st entertainment company to open the door for Vegas-HipHop, and economic change. If you may have any questions or concerns, or anything that could further help my cause, please contact myself (Ronald A. Dishmon) @ 702-324-0750 or email> dishmonronald@yahoo.com Thank you for the time you have giving me, & Please have a Good Day… Sincerely, Ronald Allen DishmonRonald Allen Dishmon

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  • http://www.facebook.com/bullfighters Mike Kijewski

    I agree with Jefferson’s sentiment on a philosophical level, but you need to remember that he wrote this letter before the FDA. Government-supported monopolies wouldn’t be necessary if companies didn’t need to jump regulatory hurdles instituted by that very same government.

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  • Anonymous

    wow very perceptual quote.. I like it. Chris, I have a social media business idea I’d like to share with you to ask for your advice and support. I’d ask for a meeting but since I live in Boston, I’d love to send you a business plan you can read to reply with next steps. Please shoot me an email if you’re interested: leeama@bc.edu (couldn’t find your email address).

  • Anonymous

    wow very perceptual quote.. I like it. Chris, I have a social media business idea I’d like to share with you to ask for your advice and support. I’d ask for a meeting but since I live in Boston, I’d love to send you a business plan you can read to reply with next steps. Please shoot me an email if you’re interested: leeama@bc.edu (couldn’t find your email address). -David

  • http://about.me/bryanjwilson Bryan J Wilson

    Steven Johnson’s book on innovation (Where Good Ideas Come From) goes into this in more detail. Well worth checking out for those interested.