patents


Patent An Idea

Patent office does not grant patents for "mere ideas or suggestions." The rules also require that the patent be explicit enough such that anyone "ordinarily skilled in the art" can apply what they learn in the patent to make the invention and make it work successfully. One can patent an idea only if the idea is used to invent or discover any new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new and useful improvement to an already patented invention. Practically anything made by humans, subject to the conditions and requirements of the law, is patentable. To patent an idea one must have an invention, not upon merely the idea or suggestion of a new invention.
A patent is a grant issued by the Patent and Trademark Office giving inventors the right to exclude others from making, using, or selling their invention in the United States. In exchange for this grant, the inventors must disclose their invention to the public in the form of a patent application. A patent does not grant inventors the right to make, use, sell, or import their inventions - only to exclude others from doing so.

To patent an idea there must first be an invention. And to enable to patent an idea through the invention, invention must be considered new. One can patent an idea through new invention unless any of the following applied before it was invented:

* it was known or used by others in the U.S.
* it was patented in the U.S. or foreign country
* it was described in a printed publication in the U.S. or foreign country
One can patent an idea through new invention unless any of the following apply more than one year prior to the date of a patent application:
* it was patented in the U.S. or foreign country
* it was described in a printed publication in the U.S. or foreign country
* it was in public use or on sale in the U.S.

In order to patent an idea through the invention, the invention must also be considered useful, which means it must perform a function and do what it is intended to do. Furthermore, in order to patent an idea the invention must give new and non-obvious results compared to known approaches. For example, substituting one material for another in an invention or changing its size is ordinarily not grounds for patentability. Determining if you can patent an idea is a complex process. And it is best conducted under careful watch of a legal counsel.

 

 

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Patents


Invention Patents

... uses, or sells the invention without permission. 5. Patent expired. After the patent expires, the owner of invention patents has no further rights, although infringement suits can still be brought for any infringement that occurred during the patent's in-force period, as long as the suit is filed within ... 

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Patent Search

... to determine if the proposed invention indeed meets the statutory conditions of patentability. The Patent Search was used to be limited to the Patent Search Office database records of prior patents and publications. But the Internet and the recognition of business method patents paved the way for changes ... 

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Patent Translation

... translation is complicated especially when it comes to translating patent claims. This is so because some claims are written in a language that makes sense during the first reading, but gets difficult to understand as you read along. Another difficulty in patent translation is sometimes only the claims ... 

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Patent Number Search

... sites recommended by the S&E library are the Delphion Intellectual Property Network and the United States Patent and Trademark office (USPTO). The Delphion site contains a database of complete patents from 1974 until the present in an image format, plus some patents issued during 1971-1973. The U.S.P.T.O ... 

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Patent Searches

... references similar to the proposed invention. The patent opinion explains what is shown by each reference and distinguishes those references from the proposed invention. And finally, the patent opinion discloses the likelihood that a patent will be granted on the proposed invention. Inventors may conduct ... 

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