I'm a young American entrepreneur who has spent the last five years (full-time) researching and building the technology for our Lisp startup.
Set aside the details for now, because they don't really matter to my question. Just assume for the sake of argument that our startup has something quite a bit more interesting up its sleeve than some new photo-sharing app---and that we proceed to draw the anti-competitive ire of the established players. (If you're not comfortable with that assumption, instead fantasize about one of your own startup ideas. It's much easier to imagine that those are great.)
Cutting to the chase: the more I learn about the U.S. legal environment for software businesses, the less I want to actually start my business here. Among other things, the depressing history of DMCA jurisprudence; the new Nortel Cartel; and the profound dysfunction of the USPTO (and increasingly, the Library of Congress) have got me in a funk.
To sum up: as our project becomes more exciting, my gut feeling becomes stronger that I should take it outside the United States. As an American I am profoundly saddened by this.
So, can anyone on HN explain convincingly why I should bet on America?
This is a great question.
The short answer is to license the IP between several corporate entities.
Here's a structure that offers a huge amount of protection and risk reduction:
-You own 100% of Company A
-Company A owns all IP
-Company B licenses the IP from Company A
-Company B is an operational company (with a merchant account, employees, office, etc).
Any potential litigation will target Company B because it's exposed. However, you structure the licensing agreement between Company A and Company B such that:
-Company A is indemnified of all of Company B's transgressions
-Company A has very little value because most income is paid to Company B as the licensing fee. You want Company B to essentially be worthless, which means it's not a big target for lawsuits.
Company B would probably be a US-based company. However, Company A could be based in another country, which would further reduce the likelihood of a lawsuit touching the IP.
So you get to operate in the US, but still protect your IP from litigation. The best of both worlds.