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      • Using a patent to collect money from other companies predates the invention of the computer. American inventor George Selden is frequently cited as an early example of a patent troll. From 1903 to 1911, Selden, who never built a car, used his patent on the automobile to collect royalties from other automobile companies.
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  2. May 6, 2015 · But more than 100 years ago, a patent attorney was a proto-patent troll, exploiting the system to profit off of the burgeoning auto industry. George B. Selden, born in Clarkson, New York, in...

  3. George Selden—the First Recognized Patent Troll. George Selden (1846–1922), a patent attorney, expressly set out to be a patent troll. In 1879, Selden filed a patent appli-cation for a “road engine.”

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  4. The Selden patent. George B Selden driving an automobile in 1905. He filed for a patent on May 8, 1879 (in a historical cross of people, the witness Selden chose was a local bank-teller, George Eastman, later to become famous for the Kodak camera [4] ). The Selden Road-Engine.

  5. American inventor George Selden is frequently cited as an early example of a patent troll. From 1903 to 1911, Selden, who never built a car, used his patent on the automobile to collect royalties from other automobile companies.

  6. American inventor George Selden is frequently cited as an early example of a patent troll. From 1903 to 1911, Selden, who never built a car, used his patent on the automobile to collect royalties from other automobile companies.

  7. Mar 13, 2019 · George Selden invented an automobile that employed a modified Brayton engine, in which air is compressed in an external compressor and injected into a constant pressure combustion chamber – this was not the internal combustion engine in use by 1903. He applied for a patent in 1879 and in 1895 was granted US patent 549,160.

  8. Perhaps the very first patent troll was a lawyer and inventor named George Selden. In the 1800s, he had the bright idea to patent a “road engine powered by a liquid hydrocarbon engine of the compression type” with a “body adapted to the conveyance of persons or goods.”

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