About second part, if I understand it well, I don't agree with you. Could be right for market not in continuous development as for esig. If I was a small company without a vv project and I bought the Infinity know how to make one (paying a fee per each sold) I won't have a big success. Esmokers always look for improvement, and the market is flowing very fast.
That's why Notcigs is comin out with a v2 of their vv, Provari came out with a big improvement on vv and now they are trying to bring news to a hungry market
All IMHO obviously
Every day I work in the area of technology transfer. Every day I am involved in licensing deals on some level, and each and every day I see how well this system works!
Licensing the technology does not rule out collaboration or improvement, it enhances it. It gives the licensee of the technology an edge up on those that are starting from scratch. Think about this... if you want to build a house... would you rather start by designing a lumber mill that can create 2x4s, or would you rather buy 2x4s?
To build a house starting from scratch, you will need to invent the hammer, invent nails, create a saw mill, develop roofing materials and somehow manage to create drywall sheets or something equiv... NOBODY would take on this task! But, buying a hammer, nails, shingles etc... you have a chance to actually get the job done.
AND your time can be spent designing the house and not all the stuff the house is made of, and yes you can even make original designs that nobody has done before.
Well, when you build that house using all the readilly available tools, somewhere in there you have participated on some level in the profit structure of countless licensing deals... From the hammer to the nails, the saws and shingles to the windows and doors... there are so many license deals in play it would boggle your mind! Is there a patent on the hammer? Maybe, maybe not... odds are there is a license deal on the grip material, or the processes that forged the steel.
New innovation happens BECAUSE there are license deals and patents. There would be no point in inventing anything, if the inventor can't make a living at it. You pay these fees every day of your life, and it's invisible to you.
People are calling Mike greedy... I'm calling him smart. The reall greed here is coming from the folks that are afraid prices will increase because of this, and in all honesty, I see the opportunity here for real growth in the industry, and yes... this is an andustry.
Well here's news for you... The prices WILL most likely increase on the products that are already in the market... With the exeption of the Buzz and the Infinity... ALL other VV products on the market are based on a design concept that they did not invent. ALL of the companies that have brought VV devices to market did so knowing full well the BUZZ was already out there... they without question, KNEW they didn't invent it... Mike entered a market that had absolutely NO VV products in it (yeah yeah, the fist pack isn't VV) and he paved the way. The companies that jumped on the bandwagon made some improvements in cosmetic or interface issues, but at the end of the day, the BUZZ was the first VV on the market, and a strong claim can be made for him inventing the thing. Even if he didn't... the companies that followed ABSOLUTELY did not invent it, and they knew it.
They should pay license fees, and because THEY are the greedy ones that KNOW they didn't create this technology, will pass these costs on in increased prices. If you steal an invention and profit from it YOU are the greedy one, not the guy that invented it in the first place.
Because of this, however, new products probably will come in lower than the existing ones out there. There will be FAR less development costs.