Lee urges lawyers to volunteer for new USPTO initiatives

Managing IP is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Gardens, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Lee urges lawyers to volunteer for new USPTO initiatives

USPTO deputy director Michelle Lee spoke of the agency’s latest initiatives to improve the US patent system during a keynote speech at Managing IP’s US Patent Forum 2014

michelle-lee-keynote-speech-pic.jpg

Lee urged lawyers at Tuesday’s event in Washington, DC to volunteer for pro-bono positions created by three new executive actions announced by President Obama last month.

She hopes the initiatives will reduce the “red tape, delay and frivolous litigation” that hampers innovation.

The White House plans to expand ways to crowdsource prior art, offer more robust technical training to examiners and offer pro bono and pro se assistance to inventors struggling to pay for legal representation.

To help these efforts, the USPTO is asking technical experts to volunteer to deliver presentations to examiners to improve their understanding of different types of technology. The agency is also looking for volunteers from the IP bar to provide pro bono advice to individuals and small businesses.

Lee, who replaced Teresa Stanek Rea as deputy director of the USPTO in December 2013, said the office has “made great progress” on five executive actions announced by President Obama in June, along with seven legislative recommendations.

She also spoke of the impact patents had on her family and career motivations.

“My father was an engineer and so were all the other fathers I knew growing up in Silicon Valley,” said Lee. “I wanted to contribute and enable others to contribute to innovation.”

As a result, she became a programmer for HP before joining Fenwick & West. She went on to work for Google, which had “a handful of patents” at the time. Lee spent nine years with the search engine company, where she ended up as head of patents and patent strategy.

She left Google in May 2012 to become director of the USPTO’s Silicon Valley office before being appointed to lead the agency.

more from across site and SHARED ros bottom lb

More from across our site

In major recent developments, Dyson snagged another win against Hong Kong-based competitor Dreame and a new AI-powered UPC platform was launched
Mohit and Sidhant Goel decided not to pursue an interim injunction application so that their client, Communications Components Antenna, could benefit from a fast-track trial
Anita Cade, head of Ashurst’s IP and media team in Australia, discusses why law firms that can pull together capability across different practice areas and jurisdictions stand to gain
INTA’s CEO says London-based firms have registered fewer delegates compared to past meetings in San Diego and Atlanta, and questions the 'ethics' of trying to participate without registering
Lobbies and interest groups are among the interveners in a major dispute over whether courts can set patent pool rates
Benoit Geurts and Coreena Brinck will help the firm ‘accelerate its innovation agenda’, according to its managing partner
News of a trademark row over Taylor Swift’s ‘The Life of a Showgirl’ and Nokia’s expansion of its IoT licensing programme were also among the top talking points
IP attorneys share how the Cox v Sony ruling impacts their counselling strategies, and if the case could influence how courts may assess liability for AI platforms
Natasha Daughtrey shares how firms can help their women litigators take the lead on trials, and why she is seeing a convergence of tech and life sciences disputes
The LMG Life Sciences Awards is thrilled to present the shortlist for the 2024 EMEA Awards
Gift this article