I just meant in terms of research. Once someone has a patent on one puzzle piece, it's off limits to anyone else and that stifles innovation. A lot of these things aren't exactly technological breakthroughs as much as they are an anticompetitive move.
I would argue that it's worse. If one looks hard, see that a lot of the research is within things that are found in nature. The problem is, can't patent nature, so it has to be changed in order for it to be patented. That change, in my mind, is what gets people (the list that the commercial has to go 4 times speed to get through in the limited commercial time slot).
I don't agree in totally abandoning it, because if we do that, some of the protections that people take advantage of in here, would be casualties to that as well. I will say that the ability to use say patent 1, whose protection is about to expire, in the research of patent 2 thus extending patent 1 protection since it's in use for another patent is probably your biggest issue, but I'm speculating. The irony is, a lot of the stuff is found in nature.
Oh yeah. For something that hits closer to home, look at what has been happening to the type industry in recent years. Monotype has been buying up other type foundries for the past 20 years, but their rate of buy-outs has increased noticeably in the past few years. Monotype also bought up the most popular online fonts stores (they now own MyFonts, Fonts.com and FontShop). Independent typographers are struggling to be able to sell their fonts without having to deal with Monotype as some sort of gate keeper. Some type designers are selling out and quitting the business. By the way, Monotype is owned by a private equity company. I think that partly explains their interest at cornering as much of the type market as possible.
Thankfully, I have a nice font collection that's robust enough to cover my needs, but even if I get something now, I make sure that they aren't connected to any of the big guys and so far they are not. The use cases are also very, very niche, so I think that helps them fly under the radar as well. I tend to use a program that also handles fonts directly, not thru the system loaded fonts, so support for older deprecated formats is still there even though the system may not support them.
But you are right and it's going to get worse now, as consolidations are going like gangbusters and it will be no bueno for us.