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US Patents.

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Presentation on theme: "US Patents."— Presentation transcript:

1 US Patents

2 Four Major Types of Intellectual Properties (US Law) Guard against the unauthorized use of….
Patents – Public Legally Recognized Inventions Trademarks – Public Symbols & Markings Copyrights – Names, Expressions & Publications Trade Secrets – Private Protection for Processes & Methods

3 Why do we care about IP? IP licensed to other companies may be a tremendous source of profit In many cases, companies must pay competitors to license their intellectual property In other cases, IP held by competitors temporarily excludes a company from manufacturing and selling components, costing the business substantial income. Licensing costs may be multi $MM/year for larger companies

4 What is a Patent? A legal acknowledgement of original invention from the US government granting the patent holder the right to exclude others from making, using, selling, and offering for sale the invention. It does not necessarily give the patentee the right to practice the invention.

5 Purpose of Patents A contract between a government and the inventor to promote innovation in society. To protect the individual’s control of an invention for a certain length of time for the potential economic benefit of the inventor.

6 Patent Limitations They are national in scope. Must file in each individual country to receive protection in that country. The protection is limited in time. (generally 20 years from filing date) The protection generally begins on the issue date of the patent (~2+ years from filing date) They can be expensive and time consuming to get and maintain (>$15K initially plus maintenance fees)

7 What can be patented? Processes - Methods to produce a result including mechanical, chemical, electrical, software, business methods, and other non-natural processes Machines & Other Articles of Manufacture - anything man made from raw materials or processed components. Assemblies of parts Compositions of matter – chemicals, drugs, living organisms, materials

8 Types of Patents Utility – Subdivided into Electrical, Mechanical and Chemical Categories Most Common Group of Patent Types Granted for 20 years Design – Ornamental or implementation aspects of a design Granted for 14 years Plants & Compositions of matter – chemicals, drugs, living organisms

9 What are the requirements for a patent?
New – a single prior art reference (e.g., patent, publication, product) cannot disclose the idea. Can’t patent something that is already in the public domain. Utility – idea must have some benefit Non-obvious, Novelty – an obvious combination of prior art references cannot disclose the idea. Must have some basis for combining references. Usually not intuitive or obvious to “one skilled in the art”

10 STATUTORY SUBJECT MATTER ?
Issued U.S. PATENT NO. 6,XXX,XXX Consideration Pyramid NON-OBVIOUS ? NEW ? USEFUL? STATUTORY SUBJECT MATTER ? PATENTABILITY

11 New: What is a prior art reference?
Disclosure in a previously filed patent application A publication A public use of an invention A sale or an offer to sell the invention Already known by others in this country thru trade or academic association or other affiliation

12 Patent Examiners may vary in this area
Non-obvious To be patentable, an invention must be non-obvious Issue: Would the subject matter of the invention, as a whole, have been obvious at the time the invention was made to a person having ordinary skill in the art ? The determination of obviousness rests on factual inquiries: scope and content of prior art differences between prior art and the claimed invention level of ordinary skill in the art to which the invention pertains Patent Examiners may vary in this area

13 Patent Examiner: Patent Attorney who evaluates your patent application
Examiner assumes the application is initially worthy of a patent and proceeds to try to prove otherwise. If negative proof cannot be found with reasonable effort, a patent is usually granted. The presumption is that an invention is entitled to a patent. It is the patent examiner’s legal burden to prove that it is not.

14 Typical Corp Disclosure Form

15 Additional Questions to Consider
1)       DESCRIBE ANY RECENT WORK ON DEVELOPING AND DEMONSTRATING THE IDEA? Has feasibility been proven? How? Is there a prototype? 2)       ARE THERE ANY PLANS TO USE THE INVENTION IN A PRODUCT? Give Product/Program name and dates if known. Has this invention been identified as a formal project deliverable? 3)       WHAT ARE THE PLANS OR DESIRES TO PUBLISH? It is absolutely critical to identify the earliest possible public disclosure of the invention for legal reasons. This may include publication, installation of prototype, trade shows, etc. Companies may lose the right to patent an invention by premature public disclosure. 4)       DESCRIBE ANY KNOWN RELEVANT COMPETITOR ACTIVITY. Are any competitors working on solutions to the same problem? Have any competitors addressed the same problem? 5)       WAS THIS INVENTION DEVELOPED IN THE COURSE OF A PROJECT WHICH WAS FUNDED IN PART BY AN ENTITY OTHER THAN YOUR COMPANY? Has any work been done, for example, with Government funding, university collaboration, even if such funding was provided indirectly? 6)   WHAT IS THE EARLIEST TANGIBLE DOCUMENTATION OF THIS INVENTION? Is it a lab notebook, engineering report, etc., or this disclosure document? If not this document, please provide a reference and a date. 7)       HOW MUCH DIFFICULTY WOULD A COMPETITOR EXPERIENCE IN TRYING TO DESIGN AROUND THIS INVENTION? Are there many ways of relatively equal difficulty to solve the problem, or is the invention a unique solution in terms of benefit and simplicity?

16 Anatomy of a Patent (US)
Primary Inventor Title: A short descriptive name of the invention. Inventors: Assignee: Legal Entity Owning Patent Filing Date/Info: References, Prior Art: Examiner(s)/Attorney(s) Patent – Title Page Abstract: A general description of the nature of the invention Std US Patent Sections

17 Drawings: Drawings are required if necessary for the understanding of the subject matter sought to be patented. Patent Drawing Examples Most drawings have reference numbers that relate to the detailed invention description and preferred embodiment

18 Anatomy of a Patent (US)
Background of the Invention (optional): Describes the technical field of the invention, the state of the art of the technology involved, and the shortcomings of existing prior art. Summary of Invention: A brief description of the nature, substance and object of the invention. Description of the Drawings: Drawings accompanying the technical disclosure shall be briefly described, and the detailed written description of the invention shall refer to the different drawing views by specifying drawing figures and reference numerals. Preferred Embodiment: A detailed written description of the invention describing the best mode of operation and enabling someone to make and use your invention. Claims: A NUMBERED precise and detailed description of the subject matter which the applicant regards as his invention. 14

19 Claims may be independent or dependent on previous claims
Example of a Patent Claim 1. A utensil for the feeding of children consisting of a handle which terminates in the face of a clown, with provisions for an attachable disposable food utensil which fits into the mouth of said clown and is fastened to said handle, together with means to illuminate the eyes and the nose of the face of the clown by means of electric bulbs mounted to the face powered by a battery mounted inside the handle, said eyes and nose being formed of transparent material. Claims may be independent or dependent on previous claims

20 Using the Internet for Patent Searches

21 Consistency of What is Patentable
Consistency of What is Patentable? - Issued Patents Can be Unusual, Ridiculous - USPTO May Not Necessarily Always Consider Invention Monetary Value Ability to Collect Royalties Qualifications of Inventor Safety of Invention Obviousness


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