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Fundamentals of Patenting and Licensing for Scientists and Engineers Part 2: Fundamentals in Patenting Book by Matthew Ma Summarized by Constance Lu
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How to Read a Patent Chapter 4
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Anatomy of a Patent 1.Cover page 2.Patent drawings 3.Patent specifications 4.Patent claims
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1. Cover Page Last name of first inventor See page 60 for full details Contains bibliographical data about the patent Inventors Owner Filing date Classifications Field of search References Patent # Patent issue date Abstract Patent title Drawing (not shown)
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2. Patent Drawings On cover page (1.) o Representative of the invention In specification (3.) o Figure number and component labels are properly referenced
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3. Patent Specification Background and summary of the invention Description of the preferred embodiment (with references to drawings) Patent # Column # Line #
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4. Patent Claims Describes legal rights of the patent owner At least 1 claim in a patent At least 1 independent claim in a patent Beneficial to have dependent claims o Interpreted in the context of parent claim o Narrower in scope but makes infringements fit your claims better Independent claim Dependent claim
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4. Patent Claims cont. Structure of claims o Preamble Sets up general technical environment o Transitional phrase “comprises of”, “consisting of”, “consisting essentially of” o Main body Lists main components of the invention in a legal form To construe a claim = to understand the scope of the owner’s exclusive rights o Scope directly impacts strength of the patent
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Reading Patents If you’re filing a patent o Focus on specs (for prior art search) o Is your invention an obvious improvement over prior arts? If you’re writing a patent o Focus on comparing product features and claims o You can only infringe claims, not specs If you’re catching an infringer o Need reverse engineering + legal professionals
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Innovation Harvesting Chapter 5
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Steps of the Inventing Stage Know the art o Get an intuition on what has been claimed Patentability test o Used in patent examinations Innovation harvesting o Strategize! Patent landscaping o Look at broad trends Making filing decisions
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Patentability Test Does the patent have tangible use? o Not abstract things or natural products Does the invention fall into statutory category? o 1. Machine; 2. Process; 3. Manufacture; 4. Composition of matters Is the invention novel over prior art? o Need at least one new element in your invention Is the invention a nonobvious improvement over prior art?
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Innovation Harvesting Make a patent strategy to plan ahead and systematically cover various opportunities Patent brainstorming (useful in industry) o Find participants with diverse backgrounds o Prepare an agenda and a list of main themes o Have an action item for each idea in the list o Keep a positive attitude :] Market analysis o Run a prior art search o Rank and elaborate ideas in the list
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Patent Landscaping Purpose o Understand your patent portfolio o Find strengths/weaknesses in technology map Collect raw data o e.g., total # of relevant patents issued Answer technology intelligence questions o e.g., What is my competitor’s R&D trend? o e.g., Are there any prolific key inventors?
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Making Filing Decisions How essential is the technology to your business and the industry? o Can your product survive and differentiate from your competitors? What patent rights will you be getting from each patent-to-file? o Check the broadness of claims and how easy it is to work around your invention Where will you be selling your product? o A patent only gives you protection in the country it is granted
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Preparations Before Filing Chapter 6
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About the Priority Date Priority date = the date of conception o Document every piece of evidence (with time stamps) during the course of your invention File a provisional patent o Has minimal requirements o Allows you to set an early priority date o 12-month grace period: perfect application, prepare drawings, and complete claims File early and before you publish or make public speeches
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Prior Art and Statutory Bar In general, anything predating your invention may bar your application from being granted, but: o If any existing and known public use of your invention happened in foreign countries, it is not a statutory bar in the U.S. o If cited prior art occurs within the statutory bar date (i.e., 12-month grace period before your application’s filing date) and you can show your invention predated it, you may “swear back” and have the USPTO disqualify the prior art
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Working with an Attorney Challenges o Attorneys’ hours are expensive o Billing is sent to the company’s general office You can’t direct your efforts to where you get the most help for the buck o Most organizations contract with law firms whose main roles are patent filing and litigation Insufficient integrity of patent specification and claims during the filing stage o Law firms often shift cases from one attorney to another with almost no handover of work
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Working with an Attorney cont. Tactics to get the most out of the system o Provide the “meat”; attorneys just package your invention so your rights are maximized o Request meetings before the first draft is finished o Provide your work in electronic format o Coach your attorney on the field and how your invention works o During patent prosecution, consult an attorney so you understand the issues raised by the examiner
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Self vs. Professional Service Filing it yourself (see chapter 7) Professional service o Patent attorneys can represent you in patent litigation court, but patent agents cannot o However, attorneys usually do not have patent litigation experience o Make sure attorney/agent has enough experience and interacts with you Hybrid o Prepare the application yourself as much as you can; then ask a professional to finalize it
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Essentials in Patenting Filing Chapter 7
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Structural Parts of a Patent Title Abstract Background of the Invention Brief Summary of the Invention Description of Drawings Detailed Specifications of the Invention Claims Prototype
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Specification and Claims Specifications cannot be changed once patent is filed Every term used in the claim should be unambiguous and apparent from the specs Disclose alternative embodiments o Extends the scope of your invention o Hides its best mode (i.e., secret), which you must disclose by law, among other modes
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Citing Other People’s Works Backward citation o Disclosed in “References Cited” on cover page o Tool: Information disclosure Statement (IDS) o Cite as many relevant works as possible to show thoroughness of research Forward citation o When the reference patent has been cited by other patents that were filed afterwards o Forward citation count (i.e., # of times cited) = good measure of patent’s importance
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What is Considered New Matter? = anything related to the technical merits of the invention Not allowed after filing, but exceptions: o Typographical errors o Obvious corrections o Rephrasing for clarification o Inheritance of functions o Theory of advantages o Incorporating text by reference o Adding materials to the specs that were previously disclosed elsewhere
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Broadening/Diversifying Claims Use different types of claims o Better protection and leverage on how your patent can be used Claim novel features in multiple ways o Consider who may be potential infringers and draft claims to cover those scenarios Broaden your claims o In general, shorter claim = broader o Misconception: more claims = broader
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