US Inventor president Randy Landreneau reveals tech giants’ tactics
and tricks for “legally” stealing intellectual property from competitors
With their $2.7 trillion growth in 2020 and with the degree of power they now wield over our lives, many say these tech giants have become more like governments than companies.
But how did Big Tech become so powerful?
Randy Landreneau, president of US Inventor, is here to reveal some of the little-known tricks and tactics that Big Tech uses to crush competitors and steal cutting edge technologies, swelling corporate earnings, and market share for the giants year after year.
“Large corporations normally face competition from disruptive startups – but because of Big Tech’s hidden influence and control of our patent office, disruptive startups with new patented technologies cannot get a foothold in the marketplace,” says Landreneau.
“Without competition, Big Tech is guaranteed virtually unlimited expansion.”
During the interview, Landreneau will expose some of Big Tech’s little-known tactics for quashing competition, including:
· How Big Tech influences legislation making it virtually impossible for small companies with disruptive technologies to attract investors
· Requesting patent validity hearings in front of Big Tech biased administrative “judges” in the “PTAB”, the patent office’s “Star Chamber”, a trial room where Big Tech brings smaller competitors to have their patented technologies reviewed, invalidated, and stolen.
· Maintaining a revolving door policy between the patent office and Big Tech creates conflicts of interest: Big Tech’s ability to staff the patent office with administrative “judges” who have worked in Big Tech, or who will eventually work in Big Tech, creates unfair advantages for Big Tech in patent disputes.
· Defending a patented technology in court against attempts by Big Tech to nullify or confiscate it can cost the smaller patent holder millions. Big Tech can keep filing challenges to the patent, piling on court costs, until it the patent holder has no choice but to surrender the patent and walk away.

