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Reggie Middleton - What if someone had a patent on DeFi?

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Manage episode 331915989 series 2695066
Content provided by Radix DLT. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Radix DLT or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.

In this episode of the DeFi Download, Piers Ridyard and Reggie Middleton debate the concept of patents and how they fit into the ethos of open source in the world of DeFi.

Reggie Middleton is Disruptor in Chief, 2013 founder of DeFi, holding active patents in bothJapan and the USA. He is also a predictor of booms and busts and an inventor of P2P capital markets and self-sovereign finance.

[00:43] Reggie talks about his background in investment and projects he has been involved with, such as UltraCoin

[10:20] Reggie’s reasons and the process for filing his first patent in 2014

[13:26] Open-source software is designed around the concept of giving away ideas as the fastest way to build human innovation and is one of the greatest pieces of human cooperation that ever has existed. Are patents antithetical to the ethos of open source?

[16:24] What exactly is intellectual property?

[20:19] Is the concept of ownership of something tangible and separable the same as the concept of ownership of an idea?

[21:07] Intellectual property as legal fiction and patent law jurisdictional discrepancies

[31:47] Reasons why people dislike patents

[38:30] The moral divide: charging rent to those who have independently developed an idea and established it into a business.

[41:45] Multiple people can own an idea or come up with an idea independently.

[45:44] The patent test: demonstrating that the idea is innovative enough to support the patent's validity.

[47:29] The monetary incentive of owning a patent versus open-source and free exchange of ideas, which results in faster innovation

[56:33] Someone using someone else's idea; could they have done it without knowing about that person's idea?

Further resources

Twitter: @ReggieMiddleton

  continue reading

106 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 331915989 series 2695066
Content provided by Radix DLT. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Radix DLT or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.

In this episode of the DeFi Download, Piers Ridyard and Reggie Middleton debate the concept of patents and how they fit into the ethos of open source in the world of DeFi.

Reggie Middleton is Disruptor in Chief, 2013 founder of DeFi, holding active patents in bothJapan and the USA. He is also a predictor of booms and busts and an inventor of P2P capital markets and self-sovereign finance.

[00:43] Reggie talks about his background in investment and projects he has been involved with, such as UltraCoin

[10:20] Reggie’s reasons and the process for filing his first patent in 2014

[13:26] Open-source software is designed around the concept of giving away ideas as the fastest way to build human innovation and is one of the greatest pieces of human cooperation that ever has existed. Are patents antithetical to the ethos of open source?

[16:24] What exactly is intellectual property?

[20:19] Is the concept of ownership of something tangible and separable the same as the concept of ownership of an idea?

[21:07] Intellectual property as legal fiction and patent law jurisdictional discrepancies

[31:47] Reasons why people dislike patents

[38:30] The moral divide: charging rent to those who have independently developed an idea and established it into a business.

[41:45] Multiple people can own an idea or come up with an idea independently.

[45:44] The patent test: demonstrating that the idea is innovative enough to support the patent's validity.

[47:29] The monetary incentive of owning a patent versus open-source and free exchange of ideas, which results in faster innovation

[56:33] Someone using someone else's idea; could they have done it without knowing about that person's idea?

Further resources

Twitter: @ReggieMiddleton

  continue reading

106 episodes

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