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How To Patent An Invention New Filing Guide! The USPTO has issued a new Nonprovisional (Utility) Patent Application Filing Guide that incorporates and strongly encourages electronic filing. (The USPTO now charges substantially more for applications submitted on paper.) |
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Before Filing How to Patent an Invention- Short Summary * Idea to conception: Develop your idea or innovation to a complete description of a machine, part, process, or other acceptable subject matter (a patent cannot be obtained on an idea or suggestion). While developing, testing, and preparing to patent, Avoid Public Disclosure: There is a one year US limit (a ‘grace’ period) on public disclosure, offer for sale or publication after which you are completely barred from getting a US patent. See How to Keep a Trade Secret for more information on public disclosure. * Patent Search- * Reduction to Practice:- MPEP 2164: The Enablement Requirement: The enablement requirement refers to the requirement of 35 U.S.C. 112, first paragraph that the specification describe how to make and how to use the invention. The invention that one skilled in the art must be enabled to make and use is that defined by the claim(s) of the particular application or patent. * File a Non- |
After Filing * Patent Pending/Publication of Patent Application: An inventor may place the words
‘Patent Pending’ on an invention after a patent application has been filed. These
words (with actual notification) only take on legal effect, known as provisional
rights, after the patent application has published which is generally 18 months after
the Non- **OPTIONAL–FILE AN INTERNATIONAL PATENT APPLICATION CLAIMING THE BENEFIT OF THE NONPROVISIONAL PATENT APPLICATION–WITHIN 12 MONTHS OF FIRST FILING (SEE PCT BELOW) * Office Actions: If the examiner finds an application does not have patentable subject
matter, the application will be rejected or if the examiner finds that the claimed
invention lacks novelty or differs only in an obvious manner from what is found in
the prior art, the claims may also be rejected. Some or all of the claims in an application
are usually rejected on the first Office action by the examiner; relatively few applications
are allowed as filed. An average first Office action currently is about 25 months
from the filing date of a non- * Responses to Office Action- * Final Disposition: Allowance and Issue of Patent or Final Rejection and Abandonment or Appeal. If an examiner finds that a patent application meets the requirements, the patentee will receive a notice and has a limited time to pay the issuance fees. See USPTO Fee Schedule for more information on issue fees. If the examiner finds that the patent application does not meet the requirements, the patentee will receive a Final Rejection and can then either Abandon or Appeal the application or continue with a new application. |
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After Issue * Patent Marking; A patentee was previously required to mark the articles with the word “Patent” and the number of the patent. Sec. 16 of the America Invents Act spells out the new law on Patent Marking:
* Patent Maintenance/Enforcement: USPTO Fees are due at 3- U.S. Patents protect patents in the U.S. only. Foreign patents must be obtained to protect in foreign countries. Protection from counterfeit imports into the U.S. may be obtained through the International Trade Commission. Note: Every patent prosecution is different and the steps shown here are illustrative,
not all- For more information on PCT Filing and a brief summary of the Steps to a PCT Patent Application, see http://nonprovisional.com/pctpatentapplication.html. |
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