In 2009, Intellectual Ventures launched a prototyping and research laboratory, Intellectual Ventures Lab, hiring scientists to imagine inventions which could exist but do not yet exist, and then filing descriptions of these inventions with the US Patent Office. Notable participants include
Robert Langer of MIT,
Leroy Hood of the
Institute for Systems Biology, Ed Harlow of Harvard Medical School,
Bran Ferren and
Danny Hillis of Applied Minds, and Sir
John Pendry of Imperial College. The
Sunday Times reported that the company applies for about 450 patents per year, in areas from vaccine research to optical computing and, as of May 2010, 91 of the applications had been approved. Internally developed inventions include a
safer nuclear reactor design (which won the MIT Technology Review Top 10 Emerging Technologies in 2009) that can use uranium waste as fuel or thorium which is plentiful and poses no proliferation risk, a mosquito-targeting laser, and a series of computer models of infectious disease. Their efforts to promote a method to reverse or reduce the effects of global climate change by artificially recreating the conditions from the aftermath of a volcanic eruption gained media coverage following the release of the book
SuperFreakonomics, whose chapter about
global warming proposes that the global climate can be regulated by
geo-engineering of a
stratoshield based upon patented technology from the company. The chapter has been criticized by some economists and climate science experts who say it contains numerous misleading statements and discredited arguments, including this presentation of
geoengineering as a replacement for CO2 emissions reduction. Among the critics are
Paul Krugman,
Brad DeLong,
The Guardian, and
The Economist. Elizabeth Kolbert, a science writer for
The New Yorker who has written extensively on global warming, contends that "just about everything they [Levitt and Dubner] have to say on the topic is, factually speaking, wrong." In response, Levitt and Dubner have stated on their
Freakonomics blog that global warming is
man-made and an important issue. They warn against claims of an inevitable doomsday; instead they look to raise awareness of less traditional or popular methods to tackle the potential problem of global warming.
Lowell Wood, an "inventor in residence" at Intellectual Ventures, became the most-patented inventor in US history in 2015, breaking the record held by Thomas Edison for over 80 years. == Global Good ==