New insurance products
can now be protected from copying with a business method patent in the United
States. A recent example of a new insurance product that is patented is telematic
auto insurance. It was independently invented and patented by a major U.S. auto
insurance company, Progressive Auto Insurance (U.S. Patent 5,797,134 ) and a Spanish
independent inventor, Salvador Minguijon Perez (EP patent 0700009).
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The
basic idea of telematic auto insurance is that a driver's behavior is monitored
directly while he or she drives and the information is transmitted to the insurance
company. The insurance company uses the information to assess the likelihood that
a driver will have an accident and adjusts premiums accordingly. A driver who
drives great distances at high speeds, for example, might be charged a different
rate than a driver who drives short distances at low speeds. The precise effect
on charges is not known as it is not clear that a high speed long distance driver
incurs greater risk to an insurance pool than the slow around-town driver.[citation
needed] A British auto insurance company, Norwich Union, has obtained a
license to both the Progressive patent and Perez patent. They have made investments
in infrastructure and developed a commercial offering called "Pay As You
Drive" or PAYD. Many independent inventors are in favor of patenting
new insurance products since it gives them protection from big companies when
they bring their new insurance products to market. Independent inventors account
for 70% of the new U.S. patent applications in this area. Many insurance
executives are opposed to patenting insurance products because it creates a new
risk for them. The Hartford insurance company, for example, recently had to pay
$80 million to an independent inventor, Bancorp Services, in order to settle a
patent infringement and theft of trade secret lawsuit for a type of corporate
owned life insurance product invented and patented by Bancorp. There are
currently about 150 new patent applications on insurance inventions filed per
year in the United States. The rate at which patents have issued has steadily
risen from 15 in 2002 to 44 in 2006. Reference: www.wikipedia.org
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