The first practical LENR device will not be the best or the only method.
There will be a thousand "patentable" variations.  Any successful design
will have teams of competing engineers feverishly designing around the
patents, and in the process, they will quite often develop a vastly superior
machine.  (been there, done that, obviously in other fields)  

Patents are little more than an ego trip.  In my case, I'm not taking
anymore of those trips.

My advice to this incipient industry:  

Forget the stupid patents and just get out there and DO IT!

Jeff



-----Original Message-----
From: Jed Rothwell [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, June 05, 2008 11:14 AM
To: [email protected]; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Self Runner

leaking pen wrote:

>Patent schmatent.  Creative commons license.

My thoughts exactly. This thing is much too big to patent. You 
wouldn't make any money patenting it. Every industrial corporation on 
earth would simply steal from you. Give it to the world and then, 
after you become famous, ask the Congress to give you a reward. 
That's more or less how things worked out for the Wright bros. in 
1917, when Congress swept aside aviation patents to allow war 
production to proceed unhampered.

Wilbur Wright killed himself from exhaustion in 1912, at age 45. He 
ran himself ragged trying to secure his patent rights. He won, more 
or less, but it was a pyritic victory.

Nick Palmer wrote:

>Seriously, I've read the other suggestions. They mostly seem to go 
>with full disclosure. This would get the device out into the big 
>wide world but the inventor wouldn't get much reward from his work 
>UNLESS the theory and art behind it is unobvious so that, although 
>people could easily replicate the existing device and generate 500 
>watts, they would be unable to immediately scale up and build their 
>own 10kw generators without needing access to the intellectual 
>property of the inventor...

I do not think there is the slightest chance of that happening. The 
world is full of very smart people, and a few months after it becomes 
generally known that this device works, several hundred thousand of 
the smartest people around will be working on it. They will discover 
more about the gadget every week than a lone inventor could discover 
in a lifetime. This is exactly what happened with airplanes after 
1908 and transistors after 1952.

- Jed


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