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Stars and Sand Podcast

Podcast de Stars and Sand

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Most patent commentary simply tells you what the rules are. This podcast argues about what they could mean — the cases that set precedent, the proposals that nobody has mapped yet, and the decisions that impact the world.

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8 episodios

Portada del episodio Uncodified Prior Art: The Search Gap That Rewrote Global IP Law

Uncodified Prior Art: The Search Gap That Rewrote Global IP Law

In March 1995, the US Patent and Trademark Office granted a 20-year monopoly on using turmeric for wound healing to the University of Mississippi. The knowledge was 4,000 years old. The patent was valid. Both facts are true simultaneously — and that is the precise mechanism this episode maps. The USPTO's search architecture cannot find prior art it was never built to retrieve. Patent examiners query electronic databases filtered to English-language scientific literature and prior patents. Knowledge preserved in Sanskrit, Urdu, or Hindi does not register. Knowledge transmitted through community practice does not register. The statute says the novelty check covers prior use anywhere in the world. The examiner's desk covers a much smaller territory. The episode walks through the full legal fight: the six-claim application, the CSIR re-examination strategy, the 32 prior art references, and the single 1953 paper from the Journal of the Indian Medical Association that broke the patent open. It then covers the paste-versus-powder counterargument, the functional equivalents ruling that ended it, and what the $2 million revocation cost proved about reactive defense at scale. The second half covers the architecture India built in response — the Traditional Knowledge Digital Library and its classification bridge, the TKRC, which mapped 2.26 million ancient formulations directly into IPC codes. Not translation. Engineering. And the 2024 WIPO Treaty, which shifted the burden of proof from defender to applicant for the first time in the history of the modern patent system. After this episode, you will understand why translating prior art into English does not protect it, what IPC classification codes are and why they determine whether prior art exists to an examiner, and what the 2024 WIPO mandatory disclosure requirement means for any R&D pipeline drawing on traditional or uncodified knowledge. Stars and Sand is produced by former US patent examiners. Nothing in this episode constitutes legal advice. Stars and Sand is not a law firm and does not provide legal services. Consult qualified patent counsel before making filing decisions. — Stars and Sand | US Patents. From the Inside. Strictly For Educational Purposes Only Stars and Sand is an educational digital media publisher, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice, 1:1 consulting, or filing services of any kind. All articles, podcasts, videos, and written materials published by Stars and Sand are for informational and educational purposes only and do not constitute legal advice. No attorney-client relationship is formed by consuming our content. If you require legal advice regarding your intellectual property, retain licensed legal counsel in your jurisdiction.

19 de may de 2026 - 33 min
Portada del episodio Software Design Patents: The 2026 Rule Change Is a Trap

Software Design Patents: The 2026 Rule Change Is a Trap

In 1992, the Patent Office rejected an Apple icon because the designers failed to draw a computer monitor around it. That single administrative decision forced every software company in the world to pretend it was manufacturing hardware. For thirty-four years. On March 13, 2026, the USPTO issued supplemental guidance. Examiners can no longer require broken lines of a display panel. The word "for" is now accepted in title lines. The industry declared the problem solved. It is not solved. The new guidance explicitly states that a digital image not tied to a physical host device remains a transient picture — legally unpatentable. The hardware requirement was not removed. It was relocated from the drawing sheet to the title line. The physical hardware leash remains. The office changed the clip, not the collar. This episode maps the exact mechanics of the trap and the two strategies for bypassing it. The under-resourced player needs one specific word swap to detach a pending application from its hardware limitation before the next office action arrives. The well-resourced player needs a parallel filing structure that uses both compliance mechanisms simultaneously to produce enforcement coverage that neither application achieves alone. Thirty-four years of institutional neurosis survived a policy update. What changed is where the examiner looks for the hardware. What did not change is that they still require it. Stars and Sand is produced by former US patent examiners. The content of this episode reflects the hosts' analysis of publicly available USPTO materials and does not constitute legal advice. Consult qualified patent counsel before making filing decisions. Strictly For Educational Purposes Only Stars and Sand is an educational digital media publisher, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice, 1:1 consulting, or filing services of any kind. All articles, podcasts, videos, and written materials published by Stars and Sand are for informational and educational purposes only and do not constitute legal advice. No attorney-client relationship is formed by consuming our content. If you require legal advice regarding your intellectual property, retain licensed legal counsel in your jurisdiction.

5 de may de 2026 - 26 min
Portada del episodio The $3 Million Rule: How Patent Law Transfers Wealth from Inventors to Capital

The $3 Million Rule: How Patent Law Transfers Wealth from Inventors to Capital

The United States patent system does not reward the origin of an idea. It rewards the precise act of isolation, formal documentation, and — critically — the capital required to enforce the resulting rights in federal court. This episode maps the mechanical sequence through which that outcome is legally produced. The analysis opens with the 1954 Eli Lilly extraction of vinblastine and vincristine from the Madagascar rosy periwinkle — a plant the indigenous Malagasy population had utilized as a diabetes treatment for generations. Lilly did not invent the plant or discover its biological utility. They isolated the active alkaloids, identified a novel oncological application, and filed a composition-of-matter patent. The resulting pharmaceuticals generated over $100 million annually for the duration of the monopoly. The Malagasy received nothing. The system did not fail. It executed its primary directive. The episode works through the two statutory pillars that produce this outcome. Section 112 of the Patent Act — the enablement clause — requires complete disclosure of any invention in exchange for federal monopoly protection. That disclosure is permanent and public. Section 102 — the novelty requirement — determines what qualifies as prior art capable of defeating a new application. Foreign oral knowledge, undocumented traditional practice, and quietly deployed manufacturing methods do not meet the rule of print. A patent examiner operating under a 19-hour review window and constrained to Boolean searches of indexed databases cannot find what was never formally published. The combination creates the trivial modification vulnerability. A well-resourced competitor reads a properly filed patent, introduces a single synthetic step — a specific solvent, a narrow temperature range, chlorinated rather than standard water — and files a legally distinct application covering the modified process. The examiner's hands are tied by the statute. The original inventor holds the broader base patent but cannot afford the $3M baseline cost of federal litigation required to enforce it. Capital enforces the monopoly. The paper does not. Listeners will understand the specific mechanical sequence that converts disclosure compliance into competitive vulnerability, and the divergent strategies available to undercapitalized versus well-capitalized entities operating within the same statutory framework. This episode is produced for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a licensed patent attorney before making any IP filing decisions. Strictly For Educational Purposes Only Stars and Sand is an educational digital media publisher, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice, 1:1 consulting, or filing services of any kind. All articles, podcasts, videos, and written materials published by Stars and Sand are for informational and educational purposes only and do not constitute legal advice. No attorney-client relationship is formed by consuming our content. If you require legal advice regarding your intellectual property, retain licensed legal counsel in your jurisdiction.

28 de abr de 2026 - 25 min
Portada del episodio The Disclosure Trap: A Rejected Patent Hands Your IP to Competitors

The Disclosure Trap: A Rejected Patent Hands Your IP to Competitors

A United States patent application is a legal obligation to hand over your complete technical blueprint — your source code, your engineering architecture, your best mode of implementation — before the Office decides whether to grant you anything in return. When the application is rejected, the disclosure doesn't go back. It becomes public record. The blueprint is now available to every well-capitalized competitor with a team of lawyers monitoring the patent office database for exactly this moment. This is not a flaw in the system. It is the system. This episode maps the mechanics of two IP postures — the only rational ones available under a $4 million average litigation defense cost. The Sand Strategy is the only viable option for the undercapitalized innovator: complete operational secrecy, trade secret discipline, zero exposure to the disclosure trap. The Stars Strategy is the exclusive domain of the conglomerate: flooding the zone with overlapping hardware-software patent combinations — the loophole formally validated in Diamond v. Diehr — until litigation becomes mathematically irrational for any competitor. Gottschalk v. Benson demonstrates the disclosure trap in its purest form. Benson and Tabet satisfied Section 112 in full. The Supreme Court ruled the algorithm unpatentable. The documentation entered public domain. Conglomerates collected the blueprint for free. Diamond v. Diehr established the mechanism conglomerates have used ever since: anchor the algorithm to a physical machine, cite Diehr, and secure a patent on what is, in engineering terms, a formula stapled to conventional hardware. After this episode, you will understand why engaging with the USPTO without tens of millions in litigation reserve is not a calculated risk — it is a structural trap with no undo button. Stars and Sand is an IP intelligence publisher operated by former US patent examiners. This content is produced for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Stars and Sand is not a law firm and does not establish an attorney-client relationship. Consult a licensed patent attorney before making any filing decisions. — Stars and Sand | US Patents. From the Inside. Strictly For Educational Purposes Only Stars and Sand is an educational digital media publisher, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice, 1:1 consulting, or filing services of any kind. All articles, podcasts, videos, and written materials published by Stars and Sand are for informational and educational purposes only and do not constitute legal advice. No attorney-client relationship is formed by consuming our content. If you require legal advice regarding your intellectual property, retain licensed legal counsel in your jurisdiction.

21 de abr de 2026 - 34 min
Portada del episodio The Patent Dollar: Bypassing SWIFT Won't Save Your Supply Chain

The Patent Dollar: Bypassing SWIFT Won't Save Your Supply Chain

In 2022, Saudi Aramco secured 963 US patents — tying for first place in the Houston metropolitan area — while ExxonMobil filed 281, an 8% decline. That asymmetry is not an energy story. It is a signal about where the next war is being fought. This episode maps the structural transition from petrodollar hegemony to what we call the patent dollar: the deliberate weaponization of US intellectual property enforcement as the primary mechanism of global economic control. As BRICS+ nations deploy mBridge and BRICS Pay to bypass SWIFT and dollar-denominated clearinghouses, the United States is not retreating — it is relocating the chokepoint from the financial routing layer to the physical border and the courtroom. The enforcement stack is precise. The UFLPA's rebuttable presumption standard places the entire burden of supply chain provenance on the importer — down to the specific quartz mine. PAIPA grants the executive branch authority to impose BIS Entity List designation, Export-Import Bank denial, and asset blocking with zero judicial determination. The SAFE Act of 2025 cuts federal STEM funding to any researcher with a history of collaboration with China's Seven Sons of National Defence, sealing the upstream knowledge pipeline. The Protecting Our Courts from Foreign Manipulation Act of 2023 targets the $16.1 billion TPLF industry after the Purplevine IP/Samsung case illustrated how foreign state actors use the discovery process as a legal extraction mechanism. The counter-argument — that BRICS+ financial sovereignty renders US IP enforcement irrelevant — fails at the port. Patent enforcement does not require access to bank accounts. A USITC Section 337 exclusion order is entirely agnostic to whether the cargo was settled in e-CNY over mBridge or physical gold. By the close of this episode, the listener will understand that financial routing strategy and IP strategy are not the same architecture. Conflating them is the operational error that ends companies. The Sandscript is published by Stars and Sand. Stars and Sand is not a law firm. Nothing in this episode constitutes legal advice. All IP strategy decisions should be made in consultation with qualified patent counsel in the relevant jurisdictions. Strictly For Educational Purposes Only Stars and Sand is an educational digital media publisher, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice, 1:1 consulting, or filing services of any kind. All articles, podcasts, videos, and written materials published by Stars and Sand are for informational and educational purposes only and do not constitute legal advice. No attorney-client relationship is formed by consuming our content. If you require legal advice regarding your intellectual property, retain licensed legal counsel in your jurisdiction.

14 de abr de 2026 - 52 min
Soy muy de podcasts. Mientras hago la cama, mientras recojo la casa, mientras trabajo… Y en Podimo encuentro podcast que me encantan. De emprendimiento, de salid, de humor… De lo que quiera! Estoy encantada 👍
Soy muy de podcasts. Mientras hago la cama, mientras recojo la casa, mientras trabajo… Y en Podimo encuentro podcast que me encantan. De emprendimiento, de salid, de humor… De lo que quiera! Estoy encantada 👍
MI TOC es feliz, que maravilla. Ordenador, limpio, sugerencias de categorías nuevas a explorar!!!
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App ligera, eficiente, encuentras rápido tus podcast favoritos. Diseño sencillo y bonito. me gustó.
contenidos frescos e inteligentes
La App va francamente bien y el precio me parece muy justo para pagar a gente que nos da horas y horas de contenido. Espero poder seguir usándola asiduamente.

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