patents


Patent Application

The United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO or Office) is the government agency responsible for examining patent applications and issuing patents. A patent is a type of property right. It gives the patent holder the right, for a limited time, to exclude others from making, using, offering to sell, selling, or importing into the United States the subject matter that is within the scope of protection granted by the patent. The USPTO determines whether a patent should be granted in a particular case. However, it is up to the patent holder to enforce his or her own rights if the USPTO does grant a patent.

There are ways to file a utility patent application. A patent application is a complex legal document. It shouldn't be taken lightly. Patent application is best prepared by one trained to prepare such documents. There are various types of patents - utility, design, and plant. There are also two types of utility and plant patent applications - provisional and non-provisional. Each year the USPTO receives approximately 350,000 patent applications. Most of these are under non-provisional utility patents.
Patent Application Requirements

A non-provisional utility patent application must be in the English language or be accompanied by a translation in the English language. All papers must be typewritten or produced by a mechanical printer. The text must be in permanent black ink or its equivalent; on a single side of the paper; in portrait orientation.
A non-provisional utility patent application must include a specification, including a claim or claims; drawings, when necessary; an oath or declaration; and the prescribed filing, search, and examination fees. A complete non-provisional utility patent application should contain the elements listed below, arranged in the order shown.

* Utility Patent Application Transmittal Form or Transmittal Letter
* Fee Transmittal Form and Appropriate Fees
* Application Data Sheet (see 37 CFR § 1.76)
* Specification (with at least one claim)
* Drawings (when necessary)
* Executed Oath or Declaration
* Nucleotide and/or Amino Acid Sequence Listing (when necessary)

According to the law, only the inventor may file patent application. There are certain exceptions to this rule. If a person who is not the inventor should make patent application, the patent, if obtained, would be invalid. The person applying in such a case who falsely states that he/she is the inventor would also be subject to criminal penalties. If the inventor is dead, the patent application may be made by legal representatives, that is, the administrator or executor of the estate. If the inventor is insane, the patent application may be made by a guardian. If an inventor refuses to make a patent application or cannot be found, a joint inventor or a person having a proprietary interest in the invention may apply on behalf of the non-signing inventor.

 

 

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Patents


European Patent

... each of the designated states, so protection is not uniform. A European patent application may not contain more than one independent claim in the same category (eg product and/or process) unless one of the exceptions listed. You must keep the amount of claims reasonable in consideration of the nature ... 

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Patent Info

... before filing for a patent application. A patent info you need to know is that patent application has two primary sections: the specification and the claims. The specification is essentially a detailed patent info description of the invention, including drawings if necessary, showing what the invention ... 

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U.S. Patents

... required as well. Today, a model is almost never required. To be patentable, an invention essentially must be: (1) useful, (2) novel, and (3) nonobvious. The novelty requirement is often consider the entry test for patentability. Application for US patents must be filed within one year of the date the ... 

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Free Patent Search

... need not solicit the help of a patent counsel to conduct a free patent search. They can do the work themselves and search for free patent search sites. For an inventor to be able to start his or her own Free patent search, he or she needs to access the U.S. Patent Office Database at http://www.uspto.gov/patft/index.html ... 

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Free Patent Searches

... a strong patentability opinion from a patent attorney. Free patent searches may help show that the idea can be patented and licensed. Free patent searches are important to prevent the inventor from shelling out thousands of dollars in a patent application. In some instances, certain elements of the proposed ... 

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