[Senate Hearing 118-705]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]


                                                        S. Hrg. 118-705

                     THE RESTORE PATENT RIGHTS ACT:
                          RESTORING AMERICA'S
                     STATUS AS THE GLOBAL IP LEADER

=======================================================================

                                HEARING

                               BEFORE THE

                 SUBCOMMITTEE ON INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY

                                 OF THE

                       COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY
                          UNITED STATES SENATE

                    ONE HUNDRED EIGHTEENTH CONGRESS

                             SECOND SESSION

                               __________

                           DECEMBER 18, 2024

                               __________

                           Serial No. J-118-90

                               __________

         Printed for the use of the Committee on the Judiciary
         
[GRAPHIC NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]         


                        www.judiciary.senate.gov
                            www.govinfo.gov
                            
                                __________

                   U.S. GOVERNMENT PUBLISHING OFFICE                    
61-414 PDF                  WASHINGTON : 2025               
          
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------     
                           
                            
                       COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY

                   RICHARD J. DURBIN, Illinois, Chair
SHELDON WHITEHOUSE, Rhode Island     LINDSEY O. GRAHAM, South Carolina, 
AMY KLOBUCHAR, Minnesota                 Ranking Member
CHRISTOPHER A. COONS, Delaware       CHARLES E. GRASSLEY, Iowa
RICHARD BLUMENTHAL, Connecticut      JOHN CORNYN, Texas
MAZIE K. HIRONO, Hawaii              MICHAEL S. LEE, Utah
CORY A. BOOKER, New Jersey           TED CRUZ, Texas
ALEX PADILLA, California             JOSH HAWLEY, Missouri
JON OSSOFF, Georgia                  TOM COTTON, Arkansas
PETER WELCH, Vermont                 JOHN KENNEDY, Louisiana
LAPHONZA BUTLER, California          THOM TILLIS, North Carolina
                                     MARSHA BLACKBURN, Tennessee
       Joseph Zogby, Democratic Chief Counsel and Staff Director
      Katherine Nikas, Republican Chief Counsel and Staff Director

                 Subcommittee on Intellectual Property

                 CHRISTOPHER A. COONS, Delaware, Chair
MAZIE K. HIRONO, Hawaii              THOM TILLIS, North Carolina, 
ALEX PADILLA, California                 Ranking Member
JON OSSOFF, Georgia                  JOHN CORNYN, Texas
PETER WELCH, Vermont                 TOM COTTON, Arkansas
                                     MARSHA BLACKBURN, Tennessee
             Rajiv Venkataramanan, Democratic Chief Counsel
                  Brad Watts, Republican Chief Counsel
                            
                            
                            C O N T E N T S

                              ----------                              

                           OPENING STATEMENTS

                                                                   Page

Coons, Hon. Christopher A........................................     1
    Prepared statement...........................................    25
Tillis, Hon. Thom................................................     3

                               WITNESSES

Babcock, Jacob...................................................     4
    Prepared statement...........................................    27

Contreras, Jorge L...............................................     9
    Prepared statement...........................................    33

Landau, Joshua...................................................     6
    Prepared statement...........................................    43

Osenga, Kristen Jakobsen.........................................     7
    Prepared statement...........................................    65

 
                     THE RESTORE PATENT RIGHTS ACT:
                       RESTORING AMERICA'S STATUS
                        AS THE GLOBAL IP LEADER

                              ----------                              


                      WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2024

                      United States Senate,
             Subcommittee on Intellectual Property,
                                Committee on the Judiciary,
                                                    Washington, DC.
    The Subcommittee met, pursuant to notice at 2:18 p.m., in 
the Dirksen Senate Office Building Room 226, Hon. Christopher 
A. Coons, Chair of the Subcommittee presiding.
    Present: Senator Coons [presiding], Hirono, Tillis, and 
Blackburn.

        OPENING STATEMENT OF HON. CHRISTOPHER A. COONS, 
           A U.S. SENATOR FROM THE STATE OF DELAWARE

    Chair Coons. This hearing of the Intellectual Property 
Subcommittee of the Senate Judiciary Committee will come to 
order. I'd like to thank all four of our witnesses for 
participating today, and I'd like to especially thank my 
colleague, Ranking Member Thom Tillis, and his staff for 
putting this hearing together, again on a consensus basis.
    This is our 10th Intellectual Property Subcommittee hearing 
of this Congress, the most of any of the Subcommittees of the 
full Committee. We have conducted oversight on the PTO and the 
Copyright Office, analyzed and worked through five different 
bipartisan bills, had a hearing on the intersection of AI and 
IP, and probed foreign threats to American IP.
    We've actually been doing the work our constituents sent us 
to Washington to do, legislating, and at every step, Senator 
Tillis, you and your team have been fantastic partners. Thank 
you, and I look forward, God willing, to continuing our work 
together in the next Congress.
    I expect other Members of this Subcommittee will be joining 
us today. Today's hearing examines the RESTORE Patent Rights 
Act, a bill I currently co-sponsor with Senator Cotton of 
Arkansas. This one-sentence bill would restore the presumption 
that a patent owner should receive an injunction when she 
demonstrates that a defendant has infringed her valid patent. 
This is in no way a new or novel idea. Our Founding Fathers 
made it clear that inventors should have exclusive rights to 
their inventions. In other words, the constitution in its 
script, guarantees to inventors the ability to prevent others 
from using or selling their inventions without their 
permission.
    For more than 200 years, our Federal courts recognized this 
exclusive right, and in nearly 100 percent of cases, courts 
issued permanent injunctions against patent infringers when 
patent owners sought them. This system was predictable and 
orderly. Parties who wanted to use patented technology 
negotiated with patent owners to pay for licenses rather than 
infringing upfront, and then risking a costly injunction 
shutting down manufacturing and distribution operations.
    That changed in 2006 with the Supreme Court's decision in 
eBay v. MercExchange. In that case, the Supreme Court held 
injunctions were not the per se remedy for patent infringement. 
Instead, courts were to apply the traditional four factor 
equitable test before deciding whether to award either money 
damages or injunctive relief. As you can guess, after eBay, 
courts have much more frequently concluded money damages rather 
than injunctions are sufficient to compensate a patent owner 
for infringement.
    Studies conducted since eBay have shown the number of 
injunctions sought, and the number of injunctions granted have 
decreased substantially. Now, the relative decrease in requests 
for permanent injunctions was 65 percent for operating 
companies and 90 percent for non-practicing entities. And even 
when parties did seek injunctive relief, they were awarded it 
less frequently.
    So, grants of injunctions to patent holders who had proven 
validity and infringement dropped from a 100 percent to about 
70 percent. Putting these trends together means courts are 
simply issuing far fewer permanent injunctions against 
infringers than they were before this decision.
    These numbers don't capture the full impact of the eBay 
decision. Predatory infringement and ``infringe now, pay 
later'' model is broadly on the rise. It stands to reason why 
should a potential licensee negotiate with a patent owner of 
good faith when they can infringe now for free and maybe at 
some point later pay a court determined licensing fee. Or 
better yet, maybe the infringer can wear the patent owner down 
with years of repeated litigation and with injunctive relief 
uncertain, extract licensing concessions. Individual inventors, 
universities and startups are especially vulnerable because 
they often lack the significant financial resources to sustain 
prolonged litigation.
    As a result, in my view, the value of a patent has 
diminished. If a patent owner can't be confident that they can 
exclude infringers from practicing the invention, how can they 
sell a high value license? They can't. And the post eBay data 
show a huge increase in lower value non-exclusive licenses, 
meaning patent owners have a tougher time recovering their 
investment, which leads to abandoning innovative ideas or 
reducing R&D investment in the kind of ideas that can propel 
our economy.
    It's for these reasons I introduced the RESTORE Patent 
Rights Act, and as I've said before in a single sentence this 
would restore the rebuttable presumption and undo the harmful 
effects of eBay. In all four of our previous hearings, 
examining specific bipartisan bills, we have witnesses who both 
support and oppose the legislation. We try to hear all sides on 
this, this hearing's no different.
    With Senator Tillis's cooperation, we have a panel with 
diverse views and perspectives, both on the challenge and the 
operational impact of eBay, and this bill, and its potential 
consequence. We want to hear from you about whether you think 
this bill is needed, whether it's crafted the right way, 
although at one sentence there's not a lot of details to work 
through and tell us what you like and what you don't and how to 
make it better.
    Before I introduce the panel of witnesses, I'd like to turn 
it to my friend and colleague, Senator Tillis, for any opening 
remarks.

            OPENING STATEMENT OF HON. THOM TILLIS, 
        A U.S. SENATOR FROM THE STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA

    Senator Tillis. Thank you, Chair Coons, and thank you for 
holding the hearing on the RESTORE Patent Rights Act. Before I 
get to make a few comments and we hear from the witnesses, I 
just want to thank you for another great Congress session 
working together, 10 hearings.
    But what you may not know is how much work goes into those 
hearings for which I think we both are very grateful to the 
staff who do the lion's share of the work. But I also think 
it's important to mention on the broader subject of 
intellectual property, how many meetings, work groups the work 
of this Committee, I would put up against any Subcommittee in 
the U.S. Senate for the past couple of Congresses.
    And a lot of that has been through the cooperation, the 
active involvement of many Members, but absolutely through our 
consensus-based leadership of the Committee and through the 
hard work of the staff. So, I thank you-all for the work that 
you've done.
    We're going to hear from witnesses on both sides of the 
issue today. Whether or not you support or have concerns with 
the bill or oppose what we're trying to accomplish, you all 
know what the bill does, so I'm not going to tell experts what 
it does.
    I'm here as a business person trying to solve problems, and 
I view this as another problem that is a threat to innovation. 
It's particularly a threat to the innovation ecosystem when 
we're talking about some of the smallest, less resourced 
inventors and innovators, there's got to be a way to get it 
right.
    Now, what I do like or what I will tell the witnesses, 
thank you for coming, whether you're on the pro or the con side 
of the bill, either as written or any iteration of it, I thank 
you for coming here. I will tell you that when we have limited 
attendance and we have time, I do sometimes convert my 
questions into sort of an ad hoc debate club. So, if any of you 
happen to hear something and I seem to think that you want to 
respond, I will most likely do that.
    But this is the first time I've actually given people 
notice. That I want a good fulsome discussion. I don't want to 
hear any less from somebody who's opposed to the bill than 
someone who's supports it, mainly because we want to get to a 
good, fair, balanced outcome. But I am convinced that Senator 
Cotton and Senator Coons are onto something here, and I look 
forward to the testimony, and look forward to the engagement 
afterwards.
    Thank you-all. Thank you, Mr. Chair. And also, we apologize 
for starting 15 minutes late. We had a vote that we had to take 
care of. Thank you.
    Chair Coons. Thank you, Senator Tillis. Thank you, Senator 
Hirono, for joining us again. I'd now like to introduce our 
witness panel. First, we have Jacob Babcock, CEO of NuCurrent, 
a 40-person company based in Chicago that works on wireless 
power solutions and has a portfolio of more than 300 granted 
and pending patents.
    Next, we have Joshua Landau, senior counsel for innovation 
policy at CCIA, the Computer and Communication Industry 
Association, where he advises the Association on patent issues. 
Then, Professor Kristen Osenga, professor of law at the 
Richmond School of Law, where she focuses on patent litigation 
and patent law reform. And last, Professor Jorge L. Contreras, 
professor at the University of Utah College of Law, where he 
works on IP issues and directs the law schools program on IP 
and technology law.
    Grateful to have you all here. After I swear in the 
witnesses, you'll each have roughly 5 minutes to provide an 
opening statement. We'll then proceed likely with two rounds of 
questioning depending on attendance and time. So, could you all 
please stand and be sworn? Please raise your right hand and 
repeat after me.
    [Witnesses are sworn in.]
    Chair Coons. Mr. Babcock, you may proceed with your opening 
statement.

               STATEMENT OF JACOB BABCOCK, CEO, 
                  NUCURRENT, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS

    Mr. Babcock. Chairman Coons, Ranking Member Tillis, and 
Members of the Subcommittee, thank you for the opportunity to 
testify today. When I graduated from Indiana University in 
2004, I joined Teach for America to help close the education 
gap. After finishing in 2006, I embarked on a career in tech 
and entrepreneurship. And in the nearly 20 years since, I've 
watched a new type of gap emerge, an innovation and IP gap, 
created by a systematic gutting of our once great patent 
system. This didn't happen by accident.
    Mega tech special interests have driven judicial, 
legislative, and administrative changes that heavily tilt the 
system in their favor. For example, the 2006 eBay decision 
eliminated injunctive relief, leaving inventors with inadequate 
compensation while infringers profit. Other harmful cases have 
included the 2014 Alice decision and the 2018 Oil States 
decisions, which have combined to substantially weaken patent 
rights.
    On the legislator front, the 2011 America Invent Act 
created the PTAB, which invalidates patents at an alarming rate 
and drains inventors resources. Finally, on the administrative 
front, the U.S. PTO has turned patents into paper shields by 
lowering the standard of review, shifting the burden of 
evidence to patent holders, and allowing defendants multiple 
bites at the apple.
    The result is a system that no longer protects innovators 
or provides clarity to investors. Instead, it rewards those who 
exploit our ideas, shifting and stifling competition and 
creativity. Let me share what this looks like to me in a 
practical sense and in my business and as an investor.
    At NuCurrent, the company I founded in 2009, we specialize 
in wireless power and data transfer. We filed over 400 patents, 
and partnered with leaders like HP and Honeywell to bring 
breakthrough products to the market. But despite our success, 
we've experienced firsthand how the system fails to protect 
innovators. A major Korean OEM stole our patented technology, 
and they enabled their suppliers in China and Taiwan to profit 
from our work. Without injunctive relief, we couldn't block 
them.
    By the time financial remedies arrived years later, the 
damage was already done. Billions of dollars in value flowed 
overseas, and that's value that we would've invested in 
American jobs and innovation. This wasn't just theft; it was a 
systematic failure of the U.S. patent system. And here's the 
bigger problem, the lack of injunctive relief distorts fair 
business dealings.
    Mega corporations know that there's no urgency for them to 
act. Without the threat of an injunction, they can choose to 
``infringe now and pay later'', as you mentioned, if they pay 
at all. A former Apple executive even called this strategy a 
fiduciary obligation because for mega tech litigation is just a 
small tax on doing business. But for companies like mine, it's 
devastating.
    Instead of inventing, building, and creating jobs, we're 
forced to fight endless legal battles. This broken system also 
discourages the next generation of innovators.
    As a founding investor in the 81 Collective Venture Fund, I 
see this every day. Eighty-one percent of U.S. GDP comes from 
industries like manufacturing, healthcare, and energy. 
Industries that are reliant on hard tech. Yet these sectors 
receive less than half of venture capital investment. Why is 
that? It's because investors see the risks of a broken patent 
system outweighing the rewards of making the investment.
    At mHub, a hard tech accelerator where I serve on the 
board, entrepreneurs often ask me, is filing a patent worth it? 
Is it worth the investment? Today, I often have to say no, and 
this may be the biggest tragedy of all. Every time I give that 
answer, I worry we're letting the next Big American innovation 
slip away, only to be exploited by foreign competitors or 
entrenched players. The good news is, we can fix this. The 
RESTORE Act offers a common-sense solution by restoring 
injunctive relief, it gives inventors the ability to stop 
proven infringers. This really isn't complicated in my eyes. If 
you're found guilty of breaking the law, you shouldn't get to 
keep profiting.
    No other area of law works this way except for patents. The 
RESTORE Act will empower inventors to protect their work, 
rebuild trust in the patent system, drive investment in 
critical sectors like manufacturing, energy, and healthcare. 
And this is really about fairness. It's about ensuring that 
when inventors take risks, work hard, and bring groundbreaking 
technologies to life, their rights are respected.
    So, to close, I'll say this; this is our moment. The 
RESTORE Act sends a clear signal, that America values its 
innovators, protects its creators, and will not tolerate IP 
theft, whether from foreign competitors or domestic giants. 
Thank you.
    [The prepared statement of Mr. Babcock appears as a 
submission for the record.]
    Chair Coons. Thank you, Mr. Babcock. Mr. Landau.

STATEMENT OF JOSHUA LANDAU, SENIOR COUNSEL, INNOVATION POLICY, 
 COMPUTER AND COMMUNICATIONS INDUSTRY ASSOCIATION, WASHINGTON, 
                               DC

    Mr. Landau. Chairman Coons, Ranking Member Tillis, Members 
of the Subcommittee, thank you for inviting me to testify on 
behalf of the Computer and Communications Industry Association. 
CCIA has advocated for competition and innovation in the 
technology and communications industries since 1972. Our 
members are leaders in many areas of technology, including 
semiconductors, artificial intelligence, cloud computing, and 
e-commerce.
    CCIA members are also active participants in the patent 
system, often appearing in the top five annual recipients of 
U.S. patents, as well as litigating in district courts and at 
the PTAB. CCIA supports a balanced patent system that promotes 
rather than hinders innovation.
    The eBay decision has helped to ensure that the U.S. patent 
system fairly rewards patentees, without creating excessive 
burdens on innovators or rewarding patentees windfalls. It also 
encouraged innovation and commercialization. After eBay was 
decided in 2006, research and development spending accelerated 
its rate of increase, patent filings likewise accelerated, and 
not just any patent, but patents that were more likely to be 
cited by others and thus more likely to contribute to new 
innovation in the future.
    Some studies have even found an overall increase in social 
welfare due to the eBay decision. eBay did have an impact on 
innovation. It accelerated it. The RESTORE Act would reverse 
these benefits and it would incentivize manufacturing outside 
of the United States, at a time when bolstering domestic 
manufacturing is a national priority.
    It's also simply unnecessary. Prior to eBay operating 
companies, companies that make products, could obtain 
injunctions in almost all cases. And after eBay, those 
companies can obtain injunctions in almost all cases. For 
operating companies, eBay represented almost no change in their 
ability to obtain an injunction. And for inventors that don't 
make anything themselves, but work with exclusive licensees, 
situations like a small inventor partnering with a manufacturer 
or a university working with a startup, injunctions do remain 
available.
    Now, there was a drop in injunctions after eBay, but the 
companies that have a harder time obtaining injunctions are 
companies that create lawsuits instead of products. We have a 
term for those, patent assertion entities, sometimes referred 
to as patent trolls. And contrary to some claims, those patent 
trolls are still out there. In fact, they now represent the 
plurality of all patent lawsuits.
    These are the companies that would significantly benefit 
from RESTORE. Beyond its positive impacts on innovation eBay 
also brought the patent system in line with the rest of 
American law. Injunctions are an equitable remedy, and 
equitable remedies are governed by equitable principles.
    Of those principles, one of the most important is that 
equitable relief is only available when legal remedies are 
inadequate to make a plaintiff whole, when there's some kind of 
harm that money can't fix. This principle is so important that 
Congress wrote it into the first Judiciary Act, so basic that 
the Supreme Court summarized injunctive relief by saying. in 
brief, the basis for injunctive relief are irreparable injury 
and inadequacy of legal remedies. If there's no irreparable 
injury, there's no basis for an injunction.
    This longstanding principle explains both the eBay decision 
and the outcomes in court cases after eBay. Competitor 
litigation seeks to prevent irreparable harms, loss of market 
share, loss of consumer goodwill, loss of your competitive 
advantage, but a patent assertion entity, a company that exists 
only to obtain money through its patents, doesn't suffer those 
harms.
    They can have a complete remedy through 35 U.S.C. 283, 
which instructs the factfinder to award damages adequate to 
compensate for the infringement. Because a patent assertion 
entity's only loss is monetary, there's no irreparable harm. 
There's no reason to grant an injunction. There's also good 
economic reason not to grant injunctions in that circumstance. 
Economic theory finds that the threat of an injunction distorts 
negotiations because injunctions take the entire product off of 
the market.
    That makes sense when a patent covers the entire product. 
But modern high-tech products are complex multi-component 
devices that might involve tens or even hundreds of thousands 
of patents, each covering a tiny aspect of the product. When a 
defendant is faced with the inability to make or sell its 
product, it can't negotiate for the fair value of the patented 
technology, the risk of having your product taken off the 
market entirely is just too high. A patent owner is entitled to 
be made whole for the infringements of their patent, but when 
their injury can be remedied solely by money damages, the 
impacts of the eBay decision, the entire history of the United 
States legal system and economic theory all tell us that an 
injunction is unneeded and inappropriate.
    eBay accelerated innovation. We should not reverse that. 
Thank you for the opportunity to testify today, and I look 
forward to your questions.
    [The prepared statement of Mr. Landau appears as a 
submission for the record.]
    Chair Coons. Thank you, Mr. Landau. Professor Osenga.

    STATEMENT OF KRISTEN JAKOBSEN OSENGA, PROFESSOR OF LAW, 
    UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND SCHOOL OF LAW, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA

    Professor Osenga. Chairman Coons, Ranking Member Tillis, 
and Members of the Subcommittee, thank you for this opportunity 
to speak with you today about why Congress should enact the 
RESTORE Patent Rights Act. This bill, by establishing a 
rebuttable presumption in favor of injunctive relief for patent 
infringement, would bring back a patent system based on 
reliable and effective patent rights that serves as a 
foundation for this country's innovation ecosystem.
    For over 2 centuries, if a valid patent was found to be 
infringed, the patent owner could generally rely on the court 
granting a permanent injunction to prevent further 
infringement. And this stems from the Constitution's grant of 
power to Congress to secure exclusive rights to incentivize 
authors and inventors. A patent grants only exclusive rights, 
no positive rights, just the right to exclude others from using 
the patented technology. If a patent owner cannot stop an 
infringer from using their patented technology, the patent 
loses its value.
    Because of this, prior to 2006, courts would presumptively 
grant a permanent injunction in nearly all cases where patent 
infringement was found. This high grant rate was not just 
aligned with patents grant of an exclusive right, but also 
provided a level of certainty, important to both patent owners 
and infringers.
    In 2006, the Supreme Court issued eBay v. MercExchange and 
dramatically altered the patent landscape. Under the test 
imposed by eBay, injunctive relief is no longer certain. 
Instead, some patent owners can be more certain they will not 
be granted an injunction, and will have to settle for an 
ongoing royalty set by a court while the infringer is permitted 
to continue using the patent owners innovative technology.
    Studies after eBay show that permanent injunctions were 
granted much less frequently than before eBay, especially for 
patent licensing firms. There's some new research that shows 
that patent owners, regardless of business type, are not even 
asking for injunctive relief at the same rate as they did 
before eBay.
    If you take into account these patent owners who don't even 
seek injunctive relief, the decrease in granted injunctions 
where infringement is found, is down 66 percent for operating 
companies and 91 percent for licensing firms. The shift from a 
presumption of injunctive relief to a patent system where 
injunctive relief is uncertain, has serious negative effects on 
the patent system.
    First, the lack of injunctive relief has led to predatory 
infringement, where infringers who know they're unlikely to be 
enjoined, make a calculated decision to ``infringe now and pay 
later''. This forces the patent owner to litigate rather than 
negotiate, to obtain payment for use of their patented 
technology. A predatory infringer is basically a squatter 
living in a room of your house without your permission. This 
rewards the infringer in a number of ways.
    First, they may never face litigation and they can use 
someone else's patented technology for free. Second, even if 
they face litigation and lose, they will have been using this 
technology for free for a number of years, basically getting an 
interest free loan during their period of infringement and 
infringement cases are expensive and take many, many years to 
conclude.
    And third, there is empirical evidence, the court 
determined royalty rates are often lower than negotiated fees. 
So, after years of using the technology for free, infringers 
end up having to pay less than they would've if they had agreed 
to license the patent upfront. What is a win-win situation for 
the infringer, who is a bad actor, is a lose-lose situation for 
the patent owner, decreasing the value of their patents and 
depriving them of revenue that could be used to further 
innovate, or even expand their business.
    Second, where injunctive relief is uncertain, licensing 
negotiations are distorted and push patent values lower. When 
an injunction is available, a patent owner can say, no, I will 
not license this to you at that price. To use the technology, 
the other party will need to pay the asking price or will need 
to design around or use a different technology. But when an 
injunction is unlikely to be granted, the other party has no 
need to negotiate in good faith or even at all. Some may choose 
to engage in predatory infringement, but even those who choose 
not to infringe end up negotiating in a market in which patents 
are devalued as an asset class.
    One recent study showed exclusive licenses, which are 
typically high value, have decreased post eBay, while non-
exclusive licenses, which are typically lower valued have 
increased. The problems created by eBay can be fixed by 
enacting RESTORE, which in fact restores the patent system to 
the state it was prior to eBay. Injunctions would be generally 
granted, unless there were a compelling reason not to do so.
    Certainty and injunction serve as a deterrent to predatory 
infringement and facilitates fair negotiations. With these 
qualities the patent system provides effective and reliable 
patent rights, which in turn drive the United States innovation 
ecosystem.
    Thank you and I look forward to your questions.
    [The prepared statement of Professor Osenga appears as a 
submission for the record.]
    Chair Coons. Thank you, Professor. Professor Contreras.

   STATEMENT OF JORGE L. CONTRERAS, JAMES T. JENSEN ENDOWED 
     PROFESSOR FOR TRANSACTIONAL LAW; DIRECTOR, PROGRAM ON 
 INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AND TECHNOLOGY LAW, UNIVERSITY OF UTAH, 
       S.J. QUINNEY COLLEGE OF LAW, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH

    Professor Contreras [inaudible]. Chairman Coons, Ranking 
Member Tillis, and distinguished Members of the Committee, I'm 
a professor of law and have 33 years of experience practicing, 
teaching, and studying intellectual property law, including 
remedies in patents. In these opening remarks, I'd like to 
offer some perspectives on sometimes heated debate concerning 
injunctive relief in U.S. patent cases, particularly the 
Supreme Court's 2006 decision in eBay v. MercExchange.
    First, every empirical study----
    Chair Coons. Professor, is your microphone on?
    Professor Contreras. Oh, sorry. Oh, now it says ``Talk.'' 
Sorry about that. I'll just continue, that was intro.
    Every empirical study to date shows that even after the 
eBay decision, permanent injunctions are still issued and 
roughly 75 percent of patent infringement cases, thus 
legislative measures responding to complaints that patent 
injunctions are lost or off the table are hardly necessary.
    Second, concerns that courts are allowing hordes of patent 
infringers to continue to violate patents with impunity are 
grossly exaggerated. My own work shows that during the 15-year 
period from 2006 to 2021, courts have authorized continued 
infringement in exchange for an ongoing royalty after denying a 
permanent injunction only 32 times, that's just twice per year 
across thousands of patent infringement lawsuits in this 
country, hardly an avalanche of infringement that will derail 
the innovation economy.
    Third, there are already strong legal mechanisms in place 
to deter what has been called holdout and predatory 
infringement. These include recovery of litigation costs and 
enhanced damages under the Patent Act in which a judge can 
penalize an infringer up to three times the awarded damages for 
willful infringement.
    Following the Supreme Court's 2016 decision in Halo v. 
Pulse, it has become even easier to get enhanced damages. And a 
recent study shows between 2016 and 2020, willfulness was found 
in approximately 65 percent of patent infringement cases. The 
very real likelihood of such damages multipliers is a 
significant deterrent to patent infringement even without the 
threat of an injunction that does not meet the eBay standards.
    By the same token, there is no evidence that eBay has 
depressed patent damages awards. If you exclude default 
judgments, median patent damage awards significantly increased 
in the years after eBay. So, let me turn briefly to the 
proposed RESTORE Patent Rights Act. The Act claims that it is 
intended to help undercapitalized entities, individuals, and 
institutions of higher education, which are entirely worthy 
goals, but these entities are not likely to be the principal 
beneficiaries of the Act.
    The entities that will most benefit are for-profit patent 
assertion entities, or PAEs, whose main source of revenue is 
suing larger companies for patent infringement and many of 
which are based offshore. As reported by Bloomberg in 2022, all 
10 of the top 10 filers of patent litigation in the United 
States were PAEs. The top filer was single-handedly responsible 
for suing 179 separate defendants.
    In contrast to targets of PAE litigation are typically 
large domestic companies that employ millions of American 
workers, and create the product and services that fuel the 
American economy. For example, in 2022, the top defendants in 
patent infringement suits included Walmart, AT&T, Amazon, 
Apple, Microsoft, Google, Cisco, and Verizon.
    The Act's creation of a presumption of irreparable harm 
would make it significantly easier for PAEs to obtain 
injunctive relief and use that leverage to extract higher 
payments from American companies at the cost of consumers.
    It has also been argued that firms that don't readily enter 
into patent licensing agreements with PAEs are acting in a 
predatory or unethical manner. Some have gone so far as to 
decry this refusal as contrary to the rule of law. Yet far from 
being unethical, it's entirely reasonable for a firm to resist 
a PAE licensing demand that involves patents of questionable 
validity, where as is often the case, patents are not even 
mapped to the allegedly infringing products.
    Finally, critics claim that the eBay framework has made the 
U.S. an outlier in terms of international patent enforcement, 
especially compared to jurisdictions like Germany that have a 
reputation for issuing injunctions automatically when a patent 
is infringed.
    But if this were ever the case, things have changed. In 
recent years, other countries, including Germany, have 
implemented their own rules regarding the need for 
proportionality when considering patent injunctions. As a 
result, the eBay framework has placed America in a position of 
global leadership in the reform of patent remedies.
    So, in conclusion, I believe that courts should be 
permitted to continue to judiciously apply the eBay four-factor 
analysis when continuing the issuance or considering the 
issuance of permanent injunctive relief in patent cases. This 
analytical framework has served American businesses and the 
economy well over nearly 2 decades and has done so in an 
effective, clear, and exemplary manner. Seeding these benefits 
to patent searchers, many of which are foreign corporations and 
PAEs, would cause more harm than good to the American economy.
    Thank you.
    [The prepared statement of Professor Contreras appears as a 
submission for the record.]
    Chair Coons. And thank you-all. I look forward to our 
questions and your answers. I'm going to start by just 
exploring the use and efficiency of injunctions, so I better 
understand your testimony, in a second round of questions I'll 
get to the legislation itself and its likely impact.
    Mr. Babcock, we just heard two witnesses really 
predominantly focus on patent assertion by entities outside the 
United States, predominantly extractive, not contributing 
anything to American innovation and manufacturing and they are 
the principal target of the concerns expressed by two of the 
witnesses. Do you make anything?
    Mr. Babcock. Yes, we design, we invest a lot in R&D. And we 
design wireless power, and data circuits, and components that 
are then built into products for our customers. So, one thing 
that's unique about us is that we work in an arm's-length 
relationship with the engineering organizations, with our 
customers, which is usually distinct from what they're calling 
PAEs, which are just patent holders that usually are buying the 
patents from companies that have been put out of business 
because they couldn't get arm's length deals done.
    Chair Coons. So, could you tell us a little bit more about 
how you discover your IP was stolen and what were the legal 
remedies available to you? Because as you described it, a 
Korean entity stole a critical piece of IP and was literally 
able to generate, I think you said, billions in value, before 
you were able to find any meaningful relief.
    Mr. Babcock. Yes. thanks for asking too, because the 
timeline is one of the most egregious elements here. So, we 
didn't really even discover the infringement until a few years 
after it started where the technology was put into phones. So, 
it'd already been put into a couple hundred million phones at 
that point.
    Then by the time we filed a lawsuit, worked through some of 
those issues and ultimately decided to settle with them, it was 
about 7 years after the initial infringement. By that time, 
their suppliers were enabled with the technology, and they had 
proliferated it not only to the company that we sued, but also 
to others in the cell phone industry. The cat was out of the 
bag and we couldn't put it back in.
    Chair Coons. What difference would it have made if you'd 
had a presumption of injunctive relief in your toolkit as you 
proceeded?
    Mr. Babcock. I believe that it would've made the companies 
more seriously consider who the suppliers of technology were 
and whether they had a license or the legal ability to provide 
that technology. It was basically a free for all on the 
technology, and those companies got to benefit, but it didn't 
return the benefit to us, the inventors.
    Chair Coons. And you talked a little bit about as did 
Professor Osenga, efficient infringement, what's the order of 
magnitude difference between your company and the Korean 
company you're describing that ultimately then took advantage 
of your technology?
    Mr. Babcock. Multiple orders. These companies have 
trillion-dollar market caps right now. And despite the increase 
in investments in venture capital over the past 10 years, I 
think if you look at increases in valuations of hard tech 
companies, you're not going to see a significant uptick in 
investment or in valuation. So, we're talking, you know, three, 
four, five orders of magnitude differences.
    Chair Coons. Professor Osenga, you used the term predatory 
infringement. Why I think an Apple executive was cited is 
talking about efficient infringement or the obligation to 
shareholders to engage in infringement. What do you mean by 
predatory infringement? What do you mean by that term?
    Professor Osenga. Thank you for the question and I think 
it's important because efficient infringement makes it sound 
like it's good. We like efficiency, efficiency is a positive 
thing. I think by continuing to name intentional purposeful 
theft of other person's intellectual property as efficient, 
we're sort of blessing it.
    So, I'd like to change the narrative to predatory 
infringement, because what we often see is a larger company 
that is better resourced, able to use the intellectual property 
of a smaller company who has less resources, may not be able to 
find the infringement, may not be able to sustain litigation to 
stop the infringement. That seems rather more predatory than 
efficient.
    Chair Coons. You use the example of someone being a 
squatter in your home. I think that's accessible to people, the 
idea that your home is your property and someone manages to get 
into a room of your house and just live there until you're able 
to physically evict them, which would be the equivalent of 
injunctive relief, rather than paying you the rent that they 
decide they'd like to years later which would be a predatory 
infringement.
    Why do you think that intellectual property rights aren't 
treated or viewed the same as physical property rights?
    Professor Osenga. Thank you. Yes, so I think, I believe, 
particularly with homes, if there's a level of personhood, and 
so we're much more attached to our homes. Maybe you'd be less 
concerned if they lived, I don't know, in the corner of your 
yard. But for some inventors, especially small inventors, small 
companies, oftentimes those also represent personhood as well 
as livelihood. So, I do think it's a lot more like homes. I 
think we should think about it as squatters within homes. I 
think it's a mistake to not think about intellectual property 
in the same way that we think about real property.
    Chair Coons. Let me just across the four of you. Does 
everyone agree that injunctive relief is being sought and 
granted substantially less frequently post eBay? Mr. Landau 
asserted that that really only primarily applies to PAEs.
    Mr. Landau. That primarily applies to PAEs. I believe the 
study you're referring to when you said a 66 percent decrease 
in effective rate is by Kristina Acri. I read that study; I 
noted several problems with it. For one, in 2016, she reports 
requests for permanent injunctions in 12 cases, grants in 11 
cases. I independently reviewed 2016 just at random, and 
located 22 cases filed that resulted in not just a request, but 
a grant of that injunction. So, I don't know how trustworthy 
those numbers are.
    The other problem with it is that her denominator is total 
patent cases when she looks at request rate, and changes under 
the AIA in the joinder rules made it so that NPEs filed 
significantly more lawsuits than they used to. Not that they 
were targeting more defendants necessarily, but because they 
couldn't target 10 defendants in one lawsuit. There's a larger 
number of cases overall.
    Operating companies didn't experience that same shift, as a 
result using the operating company request rate, but putting 
the total number of cases at the bottom distorts what the 
actual result is. If you rerun it, there is a reduction, but it 
is much less significant than that reported.
    Chair Coons. Mr. Babcock, you were making an expression.
    Mr. Babcock. Yes, my experience is different. I'm not an 
academic or a lobbyist, I just run businesses and invest in 
them. And my experience working with lawyers in this case is 
they say we're not even going to request injunctive relief in 
cases anymore because we can't get it. It's just not given 
after the eBay decision. And they just want to focus on what 
they think can be achieved, which is financial remedies.
    Chair Coons. Professor Osenga then Professor Contreras 
about whether or not injunctive relief is still sought and 
available to actual manufacturing companies.
    Professor Osenga. I disagree with Mr. Landau's assertion 
that Professor Acri's work is suspect. I think she found a very 
clever way to look at the change in the system after eBay. A 
lot of what the numbers are often based on is how many of the 
requested injunctions are granted, and it really doesn't take 
into account how many cases in which the requests aren't even 
made as Mr. Babcock said. So, I think Professor Acri's study is 
fair and I do believe that the number has gone down 
substantially, both for operating and for licensing firms.
    Chair Coons. Professor Contreras, you get the last question 
of this round.
    Professor Contreras. Yes, thanks very much. I mean, I also 
have some concerns about the study that was cited for many of 
the same reasons as Mr. Landau and a couple of others. But 
rather than go into that I mean, I would say two things and 
first, if the number of requests for injunctions has gone down, 
and I would be willing to concede that it probably has, that is 
probably a good thing, because it probably weeds out meritless 
cases for injunctive relief. And I think that that saves 
judicial resources and makes litigation less expensive for 
everyone.
    So, if we can weed out meritless cases in that way, I think 
that is a positive. That being said, I would disagree with Mr. 
Babcock's characterization of what practicing lawyers are doing 
and saying out in the field. I work with lots of lawyers and am 
involved in many cases involving operating companies and PAEs 
and patents, and I have yet to see lawyers in major cases who 
give up any possible motion that they can file any remedy that 
they can seek. And generally, injunctions are very much on the 
table, very much a threat even under eBay and still shape the 
settlement negotiations in these cases.
    Chair Coons. Thank you for your testimony, Senator Tillis.
    Senator Tillis. Thanks again everyone being here. Mr. 
Landau, I think you mentioned in your opening testimony that a 
plurality of the cases out there now are from patent assertion 
entities or patent trolls.
    Mr. Landau. That's correct. And in some months, it's the 
majority.
    Senator Tillis. Where are the rest?
    Mr. Landau. The rest are primarily operating companies. And 
then to a much lower extent, you have university cases, some 
inventor started company cases, others that are sometimes 
called NPEs, but are not part of that sort of PAE situation.
    Senator Tillis. What do you say to Mr.--Well, first off, I 
actually believe that there are patent assertion entities and 
there are patent trolls. And one of the things we need to do is 
figure out how to distinguish between the two so that we can 
try and downward trend. I don't think any of you would say, 
look, an inventor who has a legitimate case should be able to 
get compensated properly, and at the same time, we shouldn't 
disrupt that innovation being enjoyed and brought to market.
    It's a very difficult thing and I've heard arguments from 
either side, but I think that it's also important to mention 
that we're not all patent assertion entities are bad people 
sometimes, to Mr. Babcock's point, they simply there are 
entities out there that didn't invent, but they own the patent, 
they just simply are an entity that may have the scale to win 
if they pursue a patent infringement. I think we need to be 
realistic about that.
    So, my team will spend a little bit more time really 
getting down into the details so that I better understand the 
good actors, the bad actors, and some of the actors that are in 
the middle. Mr. Babcock, you were the only one who took a few 
notes when Mr. Landau was doing an opening statement. Are there 
any things that you want to get off your chest before I go to 
the academic end of the dais?
    Mr. Babcock. Yes, one thing that really stood out to me, 
again, just from practice as a business person, I'm hearing a 
lot of concern about the PAEs, but I think a lot of the burden 
shifting that's happened over the past decade or so, where the 
time, money and power is now on the side of the infringers, and 
it takes a lot of money and time for these patent holders to 
assert.
    What that's led to is a lot of challenges for those 
companies that might put them out of business or put them in 
jeopardy of getting more funding. And so these PAEs are almost 
a creation of Big Tech by putting companies out of business and 
the patents then end up getting aggregated into more financial 
entities that assert them professionally at the scale you're 
talking about. So, I don't think that gets brought up a lot in 
the discourse.
    It's like there's some belief that there's some like 
natural order that there's some PAE, some NPE, some operating 
companies, some professors that invent. I think these are 
related, and I actually think that some of the evils in the 
system are created by the burden shifting that has happened.
    Senator Tillis. Okay. And now for the professorial side of 
the dais here. I'm kind of curious, tell me about if RESTORE 
Patent Rights Act were to pass, what elements of the eBay 
decision would still, if any, be applicable?
    Professor Contreras. I know the way I understand the act 
and, I do congratulate you on writing a one-sentence statute 
that's very good. I mean, so this would presumably affect only 
factors one and two of the eBay test, right? Whether there's 
irreparable harm can be shown and whether monetary damages 
would be sufficient to compensate the infringer. The third and 
fourth elements of the eBay test, which are balancing of the 
equities between the parties and the public interest, my 
understanding is that those aren't affected by the act. They're 
certainly not mentioned in the act and so I assume that those 
would continue in effect.
    Professor Osenga. Thank you. I believe the way I understand 
it, it's the rebuttable presumption of injunctive relief would 
bring us back to pre-eBay times that wasn't the Wild West. 
During pre-eBay times, what was happening was actually 
injunctions were granted on the basis of equity.
    And so, if there was a reason, perhaps in the public 
interest or otherwise, for an injunction not to issue, it 
wouldn't. And that's that rebuttable part of the presumption of 
injunction. So, I think it doesn't mess with the eBay factors 
at all. It just returns us to a time prior to eBay when 
injunctions were generally granted.
    Senator Tillis. And Mr. Landau, I had a question for you on 
that. I think pre-eBay decision injunction rates were pretty 
high. What are they today?
    Mr. Landau. So, pre-eBay, the injunction rate, it varies 
depending on exactly which study you look at, but the overall 
injunction rate was about 95 percent for operating companies. 
Now, after eBay, it's about, again, looking at different 
numbers, you get slightly different numbers, but about 2 
percent lower for NPEs, for patent assertion entities, it is 
significantly lower than that. Typically, I've seen numbers in 
the twenties.
    Senator Tillis. I see Mr. Babcock agreeing with that.
    Mr. Babcock. I would say disagreeing, I'm just surprised at 
the only 2 percent difference, but.
    Senator Tillis. Seems odd we'll dig into it. Okay. Make 
sure we're looking at the same numbers. It seemed odd to me, 
but I'm not an attorney, so I do ask questions. I don't know 
the answer, to my staff may, but I was just more curious.
    Look to the point. I just I wanted to touch on a point 
because I think it was something said by an Apple executive 
about, they're performing their fiduciary responsibility. I 
don't disagree with that, to be honest with you. They need to 
press the system to the maximum extent possible.
    So, I say that to say, that I'm not demonizing one end of 
the spectrum that I generally enjoy a good relationship with 
because I'm a product of it. I came from Big Tech. But I still 
think we have a problem to solve here. And I know that with a 
one-sentence bill, it's kind of hard to come up with an 
alternative. But I do believe that I would like for cooler 
heads to prevail and try to figure out a way that we're getting 
to the root cause. And this is fundamental fairness for 
inventors here who want to build things, where it seems to me 
the status quo puts some of them at a disadvantage and more 
importantly, the invention that we never get to enjoy.
    I don't know what impact that is, but that's what happens 
when innovation gets stifled and people think that they just 
can't, as a small inventor breakthrough. So, let's figure out 
how we continue the dialog and get to a fair and just outcome. 
Thank you.
    Chair Coons. Thank you, Senator Tillis, Senator Hirono.
    Senator Hirono. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I thank both of 
you for having this hearing and for the panel. I do want to 
start by saying that this Subcommittee does work that tends to 
be bipartisan, so that's more than refreshing. It enables us to 
get things done.
    And on the topic of injunctions, I am a strong supporter of 
patent rights, especially the patent rights of small inventors, 
because I'm also told that a lot of our competitiveness comes 
from the work of small inventors, and I am all for, and 
enabling them, to effectively protect their inventions.
    I co-sponsored the Stronger Patents Act in previous years, 
and am inclined to support this legislation as well. And I 
think back to these many years ago, and I took property law and 
my professor described property law as being a bundle of 
rights. And the most important of these rights is the right to 
exclude, and we won't even get into the rule of perpetuity and 
all that.
    So, property, the right to exclude and that is what we're 
talking about with, I would say, injunctive relief. So, it 
seems to me that I don't see how a decision like eBay could not 
have some sort of an impact on business dealings, because often 
the remedies that are available really turn on who bears the 
burden of going forward.
    So, under eBay, the burden lies with the inventor who's 
already been deemed that his or her invention has been 
infringed upon. And now the inventor bears a burden of showing 
that an injunctive relief should ensue. So, that is a pretty 
tough burden to bear. So, I don't understand how it is that the 
eBay decision could not have the effect of making it a lot 
harder for inventors to protect their patents, if it's much 
harder to get injective relief.
    And I do recognize that Professor Cont, I'm sorry, um is 
it, [points at witness] yes, Contreras. So you cited too, I 
think you cited too, that we don't really have a problem here, 
but I can't see how we don't, so I think I'd like to ask Mr. 
Babcock, the non-lawyer in the group. Right, Okay.
    So, over the past decades, as far as I'm concerned, we've 
seen a number of efforts to weaken patent rights. I, I think 
that's been the impact of some of these laws that we've 
enacted. And I would cite the Supreme Court's eBay decision 
among those, America Invents Act and one of the few people that 
voted against that Act, because I thought it had a negative 
effect, especially on small inventors to the growing number of 
things that are not patent eligible.
    So, for Mr. Babcock, what has the weakening of patent 
rights meant to innovative companies like yours and the 
startups that you support?
    Mr. Babcock. Yes, thank you for the question. And I want to 
go back to something Mr. Tillis said and add to it. The 
inventions that we don't see are the most important ones that 
we're missing, and it's really hard to quantify those. But 
where I think you see it showing up is in the lack of venture 
capital that goes into those businesses, because venture 
capitalists and angel investors cannot rely on patents as 
strong property.
    If venture capitalists were able to rely on intellectual 
property, they would be able to invest in the most promising 
people and the most promising technologies, because they could 
do the scientific diligence to understand if this is 
meaningful.
    But the problem is today, you can invest in great, 
meaningful, exciting technology, but you don't know as a 
business person if you'll ever have the ability to monetize it. 
So, I think it's not showing up as big of a problem as it 
actually is because It's really hard to measure what's missing.
    Senator Hirono. I tend to agree with you. So, what would 
passing this measure mean, both financially and symbolically? 
If you want to think of it that way to innovators.
    Mr. Babcock. Yes, I think it's one step in the right 
direction. I think the pendulum has swung dramatically over the 
past 20 years. You mentioned the legislation, you've mentioned 
some court cases, and there's also administrative changes that 
have happened.
    This would be a step back in the right to direction, get 
the pendulum swinging back toward a more moderate middle 
system, and there's more that needs to be taken care of. I 
think the PTAB is particularly problematic, but this would be a 
very good starting point because it shifts the burden back to 
the defendants. They can still avoid injunctive outcome. But 
they have to be the ones that prove it. And I think that's a 
fair way to put it.
    Senator Hirono. I agree with you because I don't see why 
the infringer should not have the burden of going forward 
regarding whether an injunction should ensue. Thank you, Mr. 
Chairman.
    Chair Coons. Thank you, Senator Hirono. Mr. Babcock said 
that time, money, and power have shifted to, and I may 
mischaracterize, ``Big Tech Infringers.'' Mr. Landau most of 
the largest technology companies, household names Apple, Meta 
are members of your association. I'd be interested in your 
perspective on the impact of the RESTORE Patent Rights Act on 
members of your organization. And are there any revisions to 
this bill that, in your view, could make it better?
    Mr. Landau. Yes, so I think I'll start at the end of your 
question with the revisions point. At the end of my testimony, 
I actually do propose a revision that I think would really 
address a lot of the concerns you're hearing from myself, from 
Professor Contreras, while also strengthening that providing a 
presumption of injunctive relief, and that would be to attach 
it to some form of working requirement.
    To say, you get the presumption if you are making a 
product, or if you're working with an exclusive licensee to 
make a product. If you're working with a startup to make a 
product. If you're doing something with your patents, you get 
the presumption, otherwise you have the eBay test as we have it 
today. You can still receive an injunction. It might just be a 
little harder to receive.
    Chair Coons. Thank you. Mr. Babcock, you talked both about 
your company and also about mHub, an incubator that supports a 
lot of small startups. And part of your assertion, let me make 
sure I understand it correctly, is that the cost and the 
uncertainty and the length of litigation, were key barriers to 
pursuing injunctive relief. How important is making sure that 
this system is balanced and that injunctive relief is available 
to small startups of the type that mHub supports?
    Mr. Babcock. It's critical because it gives some balance to 
those smaller companies that are, let's just face it, when 
you're a small company, it's unlikely you're going to be 
successful. And so stacking more chips against those companies 
makes it less likely that they will raise the money they need 
to bring their innovations to market. So, giving them a small 
arrow in the quiver of competitiveness would be essential.
    Chair Coons. Well, you could give them a bigger arrow in 
the quiver.
    Mr. Babcock. Yes, please.
    Chair Coons. Professor Osenga, some have argued that the 
RESTORE Patent Rights Act doesn't go far enough because it 
establishes only a rebuttable presumption rather than finding a 
mandate that upon a finding of infringement, there must be 
injunctive relief. What do you think of the balance that the 
current statute or the proposed bill, what do you think of the 
balance that it strikes? Does it go too far? Does it go far 
enough? And would you suggest any additional changes?
    Professor Osenga. Thank you. I believe that the one-
sentence bill is perfect.
    [Laughter.]
    Chair Coons. I should record this moment. Yes. Something 
that I have is perfect.
    Professor Osenga. So, for these reasons. First of all, the 
rebuttable presumption brings us back to the 200 years of 
history with the injunction of relief being an equitable 
remedy. There are certain times when it doesn't and shouldn't 
apply, so a mandatory injunction would be not in line with 
equity, not in line with historical practices.
    Going forward with the eBay tests as it is, as Mr. Babcock 
says, puts a lot of burden on the patentee to show that they 
deserve injunctive relief, which is an extra layer that 
shouldn't have to be once they've already been able to prove 
that their patent has been infringed upon.
    Mr. Landau's proposal, also adds a lot of burden to the 
patentee. They're going to have to show that they're the good 
guy, that they're doing the right things. And so that doesn't 
alleviate some of the concerns that Mr. Babcock raises.
    But also, I want to point out that even in the eBay 
decision, in the majority opinion, they cite to the paper bag 
case to say, basically starting in 1908, right? That injunctive 
relief doesn't require a working or operating company in order 
to receive it. And so, for all of those reasons, I think that 
the bill as proposed hits exactly all the right notes.
    Chair Coons. Professor Contreras and Professor Osenga, I'll 
let you kick this around. Some commentators have argued that 
the result was actually not mandated by the eBay decision, that 
it was an outgrowth of Justice Kennedy's concurrence, that his 
concurrence which is not the holding of the case, which really 
focused on business method patents and on patent trolls, drove 
this outcome, the application of eBay. Do you think that's 
correct or incorrect? Professor Contreras?
    Professor Contreras. I would say that's not correct. 
Courts, when they are reviewing a request for injunctive 
relief, they look at the majority opinion, they cite the 
majority opinion, and that that is the law. I think district 
courts understand very well what a concurring opinion is from 
the Supreme Court, and they understand that that is not 
Presidential and not binding.
    My research assistants and I reviewed every single case in 
which an injunction was not granted and an ongoing infringement 
was allowed, and they were not citing a concurring opinion 
except you know, possibly just by way of greater explanation. 
Certainly, the holding of the majority is what was being cited.
    Chair Coons. Professor Osenga, would you disagree or agree 
with that characterization of the impact of Kennedy's 
concurrence literally no impact?
    Professor Osenga. I disagree with Professor Contreras. 
Whether the courts are citing it or not, if you look to who 
isn't receiving injunctive relief, it falls into the categories 
that the Kennedy concurrence lays out. It's the operating, the 
licensing firms, its business methods, and then it also 
sometimes gets into the multiple patents covered in a single 
component. That's essentially when we get into standard 
essential patents. And so, those are the times when we don't 
see injunctions granted. So, whether they're citing it or not, 
I think it may as a big impact.
    Senator Coons. Thank you all for your testimony. Senator 
Tillis.
    Senator Tillis. Mr. Landau's suggestion to a non-attorney 
who doesn't necessarily take a position that the one-sentence 
bill is perfect. I've just tried to figure out, Ms. Osenga, you 
said something to the effect it adds an extra burden to 
identify the good guys, but that was my point about patent 
assertion versus patent trolling.
    Why isn't there some way to, and Mr. Babcock, if you want 
to opine, I'm just assuming the attorneys are going to gimme an 
answer that my attorneys will have to explain. But why isn't 
there something there to that concept at the end of the day, 
that's really what we're trying to do is just make the good 
guys not have a burden that could cause an invention never to 
occur.
    So, what am I missing in terms of trying to find a way that 
does that, that doesn't increase the burden? It kind of gets to 
the point that Mr. Landau made. And Mr. Landau, or Mr. 
Contreras, or Mr. Babcock, or professor Osenga, any of you can 
answer, but why aren't we trying to get to that? I mean, this 
isn't just so cut and dried, Mr. Chair, that we have to pick a 
winner and loser here. Or is there any thought process to 
bridge in the middle ground?
    Mr. Landau. Well, since no one else seems to want to jump 
in. I will say that it would create a different burden, but I 
don't think it creates an additional burden to show a working 
report.
    Senator Tillis. Well, the reason I was asking is, Mr. 
Babcock talked about if we created more of a sense that people 
were going to be able to assert their intellectual property 
rights, then we would have more people investing earlier. And 
would that create an environment where the people who are 
incented to invest earlier would then be able to invest in 
defending the intellectual property if it got that point in the 
life cycle? Does that make any sense to y'all? Because I'm kind 
of a project guy, I'm trying to understand what I'm talking?
    I thought what I heard you say, Mr. Babcock, is that one of 
the reasons why angel investors and private equity are hesitant 
now is because they don't necessarily--they're not willing to 
invest in the science and technology to see if it's a deal 
worth investing in, because they're not really sure if the 
intellectual property rights would be preserved if they did. 
But isn't it fair to say that those folks would also, if they 
saw a promising invention or a promising idea, that they would 
likely have the resources to prove that they're good actors or 
working with a good actor? I'm just trying to figure out what 
I'm missing here.
    Mr. Babcock. I think a lot of it comes back to that burden 
at every step of the way. So, if you think about the process 
here, so you go through the invention, so you invent something 
meaningful, then maybe you had a little seed funding for that, 
or maybe you did that out of your own pocket, or from friends 
and family, then you want to file patents, and then you pay 
tens of thousands of dollars to law firms and you go through 
USPTO Office to prosecute those patents, to earn the patent.
    Usually, I think historically, once you earn patents, then 
you can fundraise significantly more money on top of those 
because it meant something. Today, I don't think it means that 
much. I think that once you have those patents or that first 
patent, or that second or third, it's a little bit of 
credibility building, but it doesn't really change the 
financial picture much, to get that next stage of real funding 
to now bring it to market and to do something with it. So, as 
an inventor or as an entrepreneur, you're required to find 
other ways of competing.
    Senator Tillis. Okay. So, Professor Osenga does that, mean 
that--like again, I thank you all in advance for coming here 
with your opinions, but does that mean that that Mr. Landau's 
decision is sort of a poisoned pill? It doesn't really do 
anything, or his suggestion? I'm just trying to understand it. 
And I'll give you a chance too, Mr. Landau, take notes.
    [Laughter.]
    Professor Osenga. Thank you. I do think that Mr. Landau's 
proposal leaves us in the same eBay space. It's just changing 
the words of the test.
    Senator Tillis. Same result, different approach, result.
    Professor Osenga. Correct.
    Senator Tillis. Mr. Contreras, and then I'll let Mr. Landau 
finish up my time.
    Professor Contreras. Yes. Thank you, Senator. I mean, I 
have to say in my view that the eBay framework itself, is this 
the middle ground? It is, it offers the balance that we need.
    Senator Tillis. So, you're in the ``ain't broke category''.
    Professor Contreras. Excuse me.
    Senator Tillis. So, you're in the ``ain't broke not broke 
category''.
    Professor Contreras. In this case, I believe I am, yes 
because and its industry dependent. One thing we haven't really 
talked about is this is industry dependent. In some industries, 
pharmaceuticals, for example, you get injunctions all the time, 
almost every time.
    It's in industries where patent claims are harder to parse, 
they're more vague, and where they can be asserted against very 
broad swaths like Cedar Lane and its campaigns against hundreds 
of companies in the tech space, just because they do something 
involving a computer that they're going to get one of these 
claims. That's where the failure to be able to show irreparable 
harm, inability to get compensated by money damages, where 
those factors really make a difference, and I think they work.
    Senator Tillis. And Mr. Landau?
    Mr. Landau. So, I hear a lot about the sort of excessive 
burden, but before I was doing this, I was a litigator. I was a 
patent litigator. And a big portion of any case is proving your 
damages. And I don't think there are any inventors out there 
who would just abandon their damages case. You're always going 
to want damages for past infringement, even if you do want an 
injunction for future infringement. So, you are always going to 
have this component of your case where you prove what harm you 
suffered, and that's normal. We don't award remedies that have 
no evidence behind them, nor should we.
    So, I don't think it is an excessive burden. I think it 
changes the burden a little bit. And I deeply respect Professor 
Contreras, but I think I disagree with him that this doesn't 
change anything from eBay. Presumptions matter, I can say 
innocent until proven guilty. I can say guilty until proven 
innocent. Those are very different things. So, putting a 
presumption of irreparable harm is meaningful, it means that 
you have that presumption. The other party has to push back and 
prove that you didn't experience an irreparable harm. So, I 
think it is a meaningful difference.
    Senator Tillis. Thank you all. Thank you all for being 
here. We'll continue the dialog. Mr. Chair, you don't intend to 
get a markup and get this bill passed before the end of your 
tenure, right?
    Chair Coons. Yes. Tomorrow.
    Senator Tillis. Okay. So, you know, outside of the Hail 
Mary here, this is a dialog to be continued and hopefully we 
can continue it early next year. Thank you.
    Chair Coons. Senator Hirono.
    Senator Hirono. Thank you. I'd like to make sure that I 
have clarification on this. So, this is for Professor Osenga. 
Didn't eBay shift the burden of going forward to the patent 
holder in terms of getting an injunction?
    Professor Osenga. Yes. Thank you.
    Senator Hirono. So, one of the things that Mr. Babcock 
mentioned, and this is in line with Senator Tillis's line of 
questioning. It has to do with the importance of the 
availability of venture capital for startups, and of course, 
that would include small inventors in particular.
    Mr. Babcock, you mentioned, you said that venture 
capitalists are not going to be inclined to invest in 
inventions that cannot be protected as a property right. So, 
are there VC people that you talk with who can tell us that 
this is in fact a limiting factor for their wanting to provide 
venture capital money?
    Mr. Babcock. Yes. And in my experience, probably 9 out of 
10 venture capitalists you reach out to for fundraising 
purposes, once they understand that it's a hard tech, patent-
based business, they just say, that's not in our expertise. We 
don't invest in those businesses.
    Senator Hirono. And do you think that if this bill were to 
pass to create more protection for certainty that they may have 
a different view of investing in these kinds of startups, 
including small inventors?
    Mr. Babcock. I think it's a starting point. I don't think 
it does enough, but I think it starts swinging the pendulum 
back toward fairness in the middle ground.
    Senator Hirono. I think the availability of VC capital, 
it's very, very important. So, that's an added factor that 
where I do think that we need to support a bill like this. 
Thank you.
    Chair Coons. Given that a close friend of mine is about to 
give his farewell speech on the floor of the Senate, I'm going 
to defer to Senator Tillis to close this hearing out. And I 
look forward to hearing about Senator Blackburn's questioning. 
Thank you.
    Senator Blackburn. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. And I want to 
thank you-all for being here and doing this hearing. One of the 
things that has concerned me and intellectual property and its 
protections or something we hear a lot about in Tennessee, 
whether it is our auto engineers or it's our singers, our 
songwriters, our authors, our publishers, they're concerned 
about AI. They're concerned about losing IP protections. So, I 
appreciate this.
    And many times, China comes up and one of the things we've 
paid attention to, if you go back and you look at 2021, China 
really moved ahead when it came to patent filings. And in 2021, 
they did 1.59 million patent filings, and that was more than 
double what we had in the U.S. And that acceleration rate is 
something that was of tremendous concern to me, because we know 
China is repeatedly trying to take our R&D and take our IP.
    And Mr. Babcock, you talked about this in your testimony, 
and I'll quote you. You said ``to donate our R&D and American 
IP to aggressive foreign competitors'' was a statement you 
made. Why don't you elaborate on that one for me?
    Mr. Babcock. Yes. we were trying to work in good faith with 
a Korean OEM, for putting wireless power into their cell 
phones. Once they realized the ingenuity of the invention, they 
worked with their suppliers in China and Taiwan to figure out a 
way to reverse engineer it and build it. And it ended up 
proliferating into over a billion cell phones since then. And 
as I mentioned earlier, it just let the cat out of the bag, and 
you can't put it back in. We have gotten financial damages.
    Senator Blackburn. So, then talk about how the RESTORE Act 
would help with that type of situation.
    Mr. Babcock. Yes. So, the RESTORE Act can actually stop it 
from proliferating because it will actually enjoin those 
companies from being able to ship products if it has the 
infringing technology in it versus the paradigm we're in today. 
They might just have to pay some amount of money at a future 
date, and they might not have to if we don't come up with the 
money to go around and sue the entire cell phone industry, 
which is a very expensive proposition, risky, and distracting 
when we want to spend our time inventing new technologies, not 
litigating the past.
    Senator Blackburn. Yes, I can appreciate that. Well, we 
have watched very closely as how China has significantly 
increased their R&D efforts, and they lead the world in 57 
critical and emerging technologies.
    Now, in the early 2000's, we were the leader in those 
critical and emergency technologies. And right now, we lead in 
just seven of those. And this is of tremendous concern to me, 
it's why Senator Welch and I did the leadership in Critical and 
Emerging Technologies Act, which would require the PTO to put 
in place a pilot program that would expedite the examination of 
10,000 patents and microelectronics, artificial intelligence, 
quantum information. And Mr. Landau, let me ask you, why would, 
in your opinion, why would the patent system be a great place 
to do this, to do this expediting and pushing this innovation?
    Mr. Landau. So, I think that the patent system is of 
course, the appropriate place to place that sort of process. 
The patent system exists to promote the progress of science and 
the useful arts. That's why we have a patent system. It's 
actually one of the unique things about the U.S. patent system. 
Ours is the only, or one of the only that puts that progress as 
the reason rather than some other rationale.
    So, I think it makes sense that if we think these are 
important technologies, and they are, my members are heavily 
involved in many of them, we do want to have that sort of 
accelerated process through the patent office. We do want to 
have an accelerated examination process. I think that makes 
perfect sense.
    Senator Blackburn. Well, we think that this will help push 
us back into that leadership position on this so that it is 
something that is encouraging our innovators. We don't want 
them leaving the country. We want to keep this innovation here. 
We don't want to have that IP stolen from them. We don't want 
predatory infringement. And Professor, I know you talked about 
that a little bit earlier, and protecting these innovators and 
their constitutional right to benefit from their innovations is 
something that should be a priority of this Committee. Thank 
you, Mr. Chairman, I yield back.
    Senator Tillis. Well, thank you-all for being here. Senator 
Blackburn, before you leave, I'd like to seek unanimous consent 
to have Chairman Coons' closing remarks submitted to the 
record.
    Senator Blackburn. Without Objection.
    [The information appears as a submission for the record.]
    Senator Tillis. I do on behalf of Senator Coons want to 
thank you-all for being here. I do agree with him. I think 
injunctive relief is no longer near the certainty it used to 
be. I'm just in a category of trying to figure out how we can 
produce certainty and not have unintended consequences, which I 
think is part of the concern with the opposition.
    About the only thing I will read in his speech is he wants 
to especially thank me and my staff for being great partners at 
the hearing. I don't want to miss that one. But no, thank you 
all for being here. The thing I like about this Committee, and 
frankly, one of the only reasons why I continue to be on 
Judiciary is we try to present ourselves in a professional, 
respectful manner. Really just trying to get to a fair outcome.
    I don't think either one of you want to prevent fewer Mr. 
Babcock's, and all of you want innovation. It's about trying to 
figure out how we can tune the dial to get the best of both. 
And if we engage in a constructive way, we'll come out with an 
outcome that maybe not everyone likes, but if I'm convinced 
it's going to move the ball down the field, then I'm going to 
support it. And I appreciate Senator Cotton and Senator Coons 
for pressing on this issue. So, thank you-all for your 
testimony.
    And I should say that the record will be held open, any 
kind of questions will be due a week from today. But given the 
holidays, we're going to extend the deadline to 5 p.m. Friday, 
January 3, so that if anyone has questions, wants to submit 
other information to the record, you can by January 3. Thank 
you-all. Have a great holiday. Meeting adjourned.
    [Whereupon, at 3:32 p.m., the hearing was adjourned.]
[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]
    
                                 [all]