As a quirk of the US patent system, patenting an idea doesn’t actually require implementing it or proving that the implementation works. As a result, if you want to try this, you should patent ideas that seem good or bad to you in a scattershot manner, but should not do the actual underlying capabilities research. Then, you get to sue if someone else independently comes up with the patented idea and actually finds success with it, but you don’t contribute to actual capabilities advances any more than an ideas guy posting to /r/singularity.
(Source: I have actually patented a thing, but do not really endorse this decision and haven’t sued anyone about it. I am not a patent lawyer)
As a quirk of the US patent system, patenting an idea doesn’t actually require implementing it or proving that the implementation works. As a result, if you want to try this, you should patent ideas that seem good or bad to you in a scattershot manner, but should not do the actual underlying capabilities research. Then, you get to sue if someone else independently comes up with the patented idea and actually finds success with it, but you don’t contribute to actual capabilities advances any more than an ideas guy posting to /r/singularity.
(Source: I have actually patented a thing, but do not really endorse this decision and haven’t sued anyone about it. I am not a patent lawyer)