2/19/2026 at 7:22:24 AM
> The EU trails the US not only in the absolute number of AI-related patents but also in AI specialisation – the share of AI patents relative to total patents.E.U. patent law takes a very different attitude towards software patents than the U.S. Even if that wasn't the case: “Specialisation” means that no innovation unrelated to AI gets mind share, investment, patent applications. And that's somehow a good thing? Not something you can just throw out there as a presupposition without explaining your reasoning.
by gyulai
2/19/2026 at 9:24:08 AM
> “Specialisation” means that no innovation unrelated to AI gets mind share, investment, patent applications. And that's somehow a good thing?I don’t think the authors claim we should have 100% specialisation. They just say that the fact that the EU has fewer AI-related patents as a proportion of the total (less specialisation) is evidence that it is behind in AI. That seems reasonable.
by dash2
2/19/2026 at 9:31:38 AM
Or it's ahead in not–AI.by direwolf20
2/19/2026 at 8:48:59 AM
EU firms don't file EU patents necessarily, but rather in the relevant countries (including USA).by eternauta3k
2/19/2026 at 10:21:29 AM
Makes me wonder how AI will influence the work of patent officers.Perhaps it will make patent trolling a bit harder because it is easier to look up existing work and to check if an idea is obvious?
by amelius
2/19/2026 at 11:03:20 AM
> Perhaps it will make patent trolling a bit harder because it is easier to look up existing work and to check if an idea is obvious?Haha, funny :)
No, it'll be like the rest of the industries that use more AI, they'll spend the same amount of effort (as little as possible) and won't validate anything, and provide worse service, not better. AIslop is everywhere, and seemingly unavoidable for companies to use more and more to cut more corners.
by embedding-shape
2/19/2026 at 11:38:54 AM
The validation point is real. We tested this with AI presentation tools specifically - gave 6 of them the same prompt and fact-checked every claim against primary sources. Best accuracy was 44%. Most were under 20%.The pattern was consistent: the tools produce confident, well-formatted output that looks thoroughly researched. But more than half the statistics were either distorted or completely fabricated. The worst part was finding the same fake stats appearing across multiple tools - not because they independently verified anything, but because they all absorbed the same bad data from training.
The productivity gains from AI are real, but so is the validation cost. People just aren't accounting for it.
by cor_NEEL_ius