Presidential hopeful
Barack
Obama has unveiled his technology strategy and is calling for an overhaul of
the US patent system and the appointment of a national chief technology officer.
The policy states that Obama wants to upgrade the national internet network
to next-generation broadband and put in laws to encourage open access for all.
He has also made clear his commitment to network neutrality, but it is his
policies on patents that will raise eyebrows in Silicon Valley.
"By improving predictability and clarity in our patent system, we will help
foster an environment that encourages innovation," the
policy
document (PDF) states.
"Giving the
Patent
and Trademark Office [PTO] the resources to improve patent quality, and
opening up the patent process to citizen review, will reduce the uncertainty and
wasteful litigation that is currently a significant drag on innovation.
"With better informational resources, the PTO could offer patent applicants
who know they have significant inventions the option of a rigorous and public
peer review that would produce a 'gold-plated' patent much less vulnerable to
court challenge."
The other controversial plan is to appoint a national chief technology
officer as a cabinet-level role.
The CTO would oversee the opening up of government communications to voters
and will have a specific responsibility to ensure that government communications
are opened up as much as possible.
Other plans include a re-examination of the wireless spectrum to see whether
it can be used more effectively, a $10bn programme to digitise medical records
and a reassessment of the speed limits for broadband, currently 200Kbps.
Obama unveiled the policy document before an official visit to the
Google
campus, becoming the seventh presidential candidate to do so.
After greeting employees on the site and in 40 remote locations he settled
down for a fireside chat with Google chief executive Eric Schmidt.
Andrew McLaughlin, director of public policy and government affairs at
Google, quoted
some
of the conversation in his blog.
"After a particularly open-ended first question ('What is it that you're
going to do that's exceptional?'), Obama looked out and asked 'Is this the kind
of interview that you guys went through?'" McLaughlin wrote.
"(The answer is 'yes', except we went through eight of them, and they focused
more on how to sort 32-bit integers and less on how to counter the threat of
global terrorism).'"
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