I would love this. Darwin didn’t invent evolution, who came up with it first. Spacetime was being discussed before Einstein too. Currently, you have to use Google Scholar to trace back an idea or invention.
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I have been looking for a site that does this for years now. Best I come up with is this answer on stack exchange / patents “Yes, there is a list. No, it is not exhaustive. In fact, the patent system is expressly designed for this purpose. We want people to know about expired patents and to use them as they see fit. The USPTO Patent Database provides patent images for all patents since 1970, and text files for all patents since 1976. Every patent issued before 4/10/2000 (as of this writing) is expired. Some patents after that date are expired, depending on whether the patent has been abandoned. There is no list of every single expired patent, but you can produce a list of the bulk of expired patents, and then search more recent ones on a case-by-case basis as necessary.”
C’mon UK Govt, we pay you to manage this information, it would be easy to just feed it as RSS on a site for all to use. After all you do want innovation right?
Tracing an invention…pdf https://www.robinskaplan.com/-/media/pdfs/finding-and-tracing-an-invention-s-footprint.pdf
I would love this. Darwin didn’t invent evolution, who came up with it first. Spacetime was being discussed before Einstein too. Currently, you have to use Google Scholar to trace back an idea or invention.
Can’t find anything like it online, but there is this map of places things were invented.
I have been looking for a site that does this for years now. Best I come up with is this answer on stack exchange / patents “Yes, there is a list. No, it is not exhaustive. In fact, the patent system is expressly designed for this purpose. We want people to know about expired patents and to use them as they see fit. The USPTO Patent Database provides patent images for all patents since 1970, and text files for all patents since 1976. Every patent issued before 4/10/2000 (as of this writing) is expired. Some patents after that date are expired, depending on whether the patent has been abandoned. There is no list of every single expired patent, but you can produce a list of the bulk of expired patents, and then search more recent ones on a case-by-case basis as necessary.”
This exists, though it is not exhaustive, wish it was.
C’mon UK Govt, we pay you to manage this information, it would be easy to just feed it as RSS on a site for all to use. After all you do want innovation right?