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Document Type

Note

Publication Date

2025

Publication Citation

14 IP Theory 18

Abstract

Young, startup, and growth companies play an increasingly important role in driving innovation and economic growth, but they face distinct challenges when attempting to leverage valuable assets to secure funding and scale their ventures. The valuation of startup companies, especially those built around new technologies and corresponding intellectual property, presents a complex challenge. With limited financial history and uncertain futures, investors often turn to proxies like patents to ascribe potential value. In recent years, the practice of startups using patents to secure investment and higher valuations has become increasingly common. However, this growing reliance on patents raises important questions about the suitability of using patents as a proxy in the valuation process. Further, an overreliance on some inherent value of patents masks the corequisite risks and limitations of intellectual property protection schemes, creating a false sense of confidence. In particular, there is a potentially problematic trend of startups using patents primarily for valuation and signaling purposes, rather than to protect substantive invention rights. At stake is whether this practice has the potential to undermine the integrity of the patent system itself and enable the overvaluation of potentially useless intellectual property rights, bringing about negative consequences for startups, investors, and the broader innovation ecosystem. In a different way, the core problem is the common practice of using patents as a proxy for ascribing value to startups, which enables the systemic overvaluation of intellectual property rights with uncertain or questionable real-world viability. This practice ultimately affects startups, investors, and the broader innovation ecosystem by propagating distorted incentives, information gaps, speculative optimism, and misallocated resources over time.

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