Hello Daniel,
In regards to your comment:
"I first started looking at semiconductor patents back in 1980 while at Wang Labs, and was shocked to find out that someone had actually filed a patent for the CMOS inverter circuit, one PMOS transistor and one NMOS transistor. At that exact moment I knew that our patent system was deeply flawed beyond repair when such an obvious concept could be patented."
Do you have any further information on that patent application, such as whether or not the patent application was issued as you describe, and was the patent ever enforced or licensed ?
And what is your basis for characterizing the patent application as “CMOS inverter circuit, one PMOS transistor and one NMOS transistor” ? Was that in the title, the summary, the detailed specification, one of the claims? Do you know that the claims are the only enforceable part of the patent and that the title of the patent can be misleading? In the claims, do you know the huge difference between “comprising” and “consisting essentially of” ?
So, you condemned the entire patent system based on one patent application out of 100's of thousands that were filed in that one year alone ?