Category: Congress

  • PTO 101 worst management Practices. Workers bilked the government of millions by playing hooky, watchdog finds – The Washington Post

    Patent office workers bilked the government of millions by playing hooky, watchdog finds – The Washington Post:

    The USPTO wins, hands down. They have implemented 101 of the all time worst management practices, all at one time.

    It may be worthy of a method patent application since no one has ever considered implementing all know mis-management practices at once in one organization.

    In reading the Washington Post article by Lisa Rein, you move from groan and wonderment, to GROAN and bewilderment, to actual PAIN and anger.

    All processes are broken as designed. It is reasonably hard to manage with a Union. There is no good rationale for unionization within government, really. Combine that with a cozy relationship where there is no accountability and no direct responsibility.

    To accommodate the new technology and new ways possible of working (telework, computer record searches, cloud computing, etc.) they regressed to pre-computer processes, measures and methods.

    People who work at home, don’t have to log in to work. People who come to work have to time-clock in, but never clock out. People who don’t work much during the week, log in huge amounts of overtime and receive big bonuses.

    When you read a report like this, you assume that you are likely reading the worst of the worst. This seems to be so prevasive, however, that it is embedded in the culture and the protocols, i.e., standard operating procedure (SOP, or in this case SOL). It appears that this is only a sample, so the problem is likely approximately a multiple of the problem. That is, the report is not a measure of the problem, but can be used to generate a huge estimate of how BIG the problem really is.

    WHATTTT!

    This is painful to read at so many levels. This is a case study of government failure, management structure decay, and leadership incompetence. It is all the best of bad leadership practices integrated into one office.

    We at SBP love innovation and want to see the USPTO do the best job possible for the world of innovation. We at SBP love telework, and believe telecommuting is one of the easiest, fastest, and bestest ways to start improving our carbon footprint (while savings massive amounts of time and money doing so).

    The only bright spot in the whole report is that poor performers are monitored (read managed) and consequently only 4% of the identifiable problems of fraud come from the poor performers. Good news, poor performers don’t do a very good job, but they also don’t do a spectacular job of cheating taxpayer, either.

    Managers are obviously a huge part of the problem in so many ways and at so many levels. This whole environment is not salvageable; congress needs to kill off everything USPTO related, and rebuild the organization with proper structure and incentives.

    Oh this is ugly…
    Painfully, UGLY!

    ‘via Blog this’

  • America's patent problem – POLITICO.com Print View

    America’s patent problem – POLITICO.com Print View:

    Interesting Politico article by Leahy & Lee related to legislation to tame some of the really bad actors in the patent pool.

    The didn’t mention patent trolls by name, but the idea of building a bridge over the pond certainly implies that it will make it harder for trolls to reach up and pick off stray pieces of the economy.

    The article talks about the problem of patent holders skipping over the (?infringing?) manufacturer and going straight to end users and consumers.

    The two Senators are promoting legislation that would help curb this intrusion into the mainstream economy.

    Looks pretty good on the face of it?

    What do you all think?

    ‘via Blog this’

  • U.S. National Debt Clock Now and Then (2016)

    If you haven’t visited the US national debt clock recently, you should do so. www.usdebtclock.org

    As of January 1, 2013, the US Federal deficit has now exceeded the size of the annual US economy as measured by GDP: $16.4T vs. $16.3T, respectively.

    But the hidden feature of our deficit that your friendly congressman will not discuss is the HUGE unfunded mandates that are looming large while congress putters around. The unfunded mandates are fully 7 times our current annual GDP. We’re talking Social Security of course, that that is only have as big a problem as the unfunded Drug plan. And both of those collectively are only half of the Medicare unfunded deficit! Ouch! The total unfunded is $122T (or more of course).

    An example is thinking of Social Security as a pension plan. The IRS requires a (publicly traded) company to put in enough money to reasonably cover the pensions that they currently promise. But our federal government has “borrowed” every single dollar ever put into the Social Security. And even if they hadn’t, there’s not enough money there to pay for the retires that we all have promised to pay. And of course, the problem gets bigger and worse every day.

    The compounding effect of not dealing with these issues, makes the problem exponentially worse over time.

    So, while the federal government is fiddling in D.C., the real problems — and solutions — of country are being postponed.

    When fiddling and can-kicking becomes an Olympic event, you can only imagine how hard it will be to beat the US Congress. Might have to split them into two teams so there will at least be a contest for the final match.

    Oh. Wanna have a look at the future, based on various forecasts, check out 2016/2017:
    U.S. National Debt Clock 2016:

    Social Irresponsibility: National Debt
    ‘via Blog this’