Patents can become more valuable in time such as drugs that receive approval from the FDA.
I have no problem with that, but it seems that this system that you've described as it is wouldn't change the status quo for really valuable IP that you'd want to be available, only for the less useful ones.
Maybe the article itself has measures to compel or reward inventors and investors for selling patents on the auction, but it seems like they'd just be able to hold out for the price that they could get today(or not sell the patent entirely), the only difference being that if the government buys the patent it would release the patent to public domain.
I have no problem with that, but it seems that this system that you've described as it is wouldn't change the status quo for really valuable IP that you'd want to be available, only for the less useful ones.
Maybe the article itself has measures to compel or reward inventors and investors for selling patents on the auction, but it seems like they'd just be able to hold out for the price that they could get today(or not sell the patent entirely), the only difference being that if the government buys the patent it would release the patent to public domain.
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