Settings

Theme

Is 3D printer company Bambu Lab trying to patent everything about 3D printing?

patents.google.com

29 points by botolo 3 years ago · 18 comments

Reader

botoloOP 3 years ago

Today there were several threads on different social media platforms related to the number of patents filed by Bambu Lab, covering many aspects of 3d printing already existing and the subject of open source work

  • realitysballs 3 years ago

    I think the legal term here is: Common knowledge

    • pcdoodle 3 years ago

      Perhaps this patenting creating a chilling effect?

      These patent seekers are almost like domain squatters, not adding value but wants to own an idea without actually producing a sizable market themselves.

bb88 3 years ago

This is from the prusa blog. RepRap started out originally as open source.

https://blog.prusa3d.com/the-state-of-open-source-in-3d-prin...

It's worth noting that in 2022, Prusa had 0 patents assigned to them.

https://www.fabbaloo.com/news/which-3d-print-company-has-the...

aix1 3 years ago

I looked through the list and only one of the patents is granted outside China (and, at a glance, appears to be novel): https://patents.google.com/patent/CN113246473A/en

P.S. I have no idea what patent practices are like in China.

  • BoorishBears 3 years ago

    That's the default pressure advance K factor test that's been used for years. Literally no way they can claim that's novel.

  • bb88 3 years ago

    Maybe it's novel? Who really knows though unless you want to spend time through the sprawling patent system. Or the body of work that encompasses the open source rep rap community.

Steltek 3 years ago

No surprises really. Bambu was clearly a commercial/proprietary enterprise. A lot of their employees come from DJI, which is equally locked down. The only reason they released their slicer software is because of the GPL (hey, it works!).

  • WrtCdEvrydy 3 years ago

    > A lot of their employees come from DJI, which is equally locked down.

    Why does this suddenly make sense with the proprietary hotends and other magic...

Ankaios 3 years ago

Maybe we should propose legislation for an IP black hole list. If too many of a company's patents are invalidated, the company loses the ability to create or hold patents.

  • jojobas 3 years ago

    Start another company, continue.Good luck untangling double dutch sandwiches. Nothing but monetary punishment works, unless you're willing to jail executives.

    • eigenvalue 3 years ago

      Patents have to be issued in the name of people (although they can ultimately be assigned to companies). So you could institute some kind of ban for 10 years or something if too many of the person's patent applications turn out to be total BS.

      • jojobas 3 years ago

        Running out of people is even more implausible than running out of legal entities.

    • Ankaios 3 years ago

      Yeah, I agree. I had a similar thought while writing the note. Some sort of ban is an entertaining thought, but hiding ownership is probably too easy for bans to make a meaningful difference.

  • vikramkr 3 years ago

    Looks like most of these patents are in china. I would be curious to see how these do in a us filing given how much prior set they'd have to navigate around in 3d printing

nummerfuenf 3 years ago

Those are still pending and probably won't go through. That stuff is old tech and considered state of the art. It's like you're trying to patent the wheel.

Keyboard Shortcuts

j
Next item
k
Previous item
o / Enter
Open selected item
?
Show this help
Esc
Close modal / clear selection