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patent

  (păt'nt) pronunciation
n.
    1. A grant made by a government that confers upon the creator of an invention the sole right to make, use, and sell that invention for a set period of time.
    2. Letters patent.
    3. An invention protected by such a grant.
    1. A grant made by a government that confers on an individual fee-simple title to public lands.
    2. The official document of such a grant.
    3. The land so granted.
  1. An exclusive right or title.
adj.
    1. Protected or conferred by a patent or letters patent: a patent right.
    2. Of, relating to, or dealing in patents: patent law.
  1. (also pāt'nt) Obvious; plain. See synonyms at apparent.
  2. (pāt'nt) Biology.
    1. Not blocked; open.
    2. Spreading open; expanded.
  3. Of, relating to, or being a nonprescription drug or other medical preparation that is often protected by a trademark.
  4. Of high quality. Used of flour.
  5. (also pāt'nt) Archaic. Open to general inspection. Used especially of documents.
tr.v., -ent·ed, -ent·ing, -ents.
  1. To obtain a patent on or for (an invention, for example).
  2. To invent, originate, or be the proprietor of (an idea, for example).
  3. To grant a patent to or for.

[Middle English, document granting a right, short for (lettre) patent, open (letter), from Old French (lettre) patente, from Latin patēns, patent-, open, present participle of patēre, to be open.]

patentability pat'ent·a·bil'i·ty n.
patentable pat'ent·a·ble adj.
 
 

Common designation for letters patent, which is a certificate of grant by a government of an exclusive right with respect to an invention for a limited period of time. A United States patent confers the right to exclude others from making, using, or selling the patented subject matter in the United States and its territories. Portions of those rights deriving naturally from it may be licensed separately, as the rights to use, to make, to have made, and to lease. Any violation of this right is an infringement.

An essential substantive condition which must be satisfied before a patent will be granted is the presence of patentable invention or discovery. To be patentable, an invention or discovery must relate to a prescribed category of contribution, such as process, machine, manufacture, composition of matter, plant, or design. In the United States there are different classes of patents for different members of these categories.


 

A government license that gives the holder exclusive rights to a process, design or new invention for a designated period of time.

Investopedia Says:
In the United States most patents are valid for 17 years.

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Government grant of exclusive rights to sell an item or to license its manufacture. U.S. Patents are effective for 17 years, at which point the exclusivity is void. Patents are usually granted to the designer/inventor of the item if the patent is applied for and approved before knowledge of the design becomes part of the public domain. See also service mark; trademark.

 

Conveyance of Title to government land.
Example: The federal government grants a patent on land they sell to a mining company.

 

Exclusive right given by the government to the company to use, manufacture, and sell a product or process for a nonrenewable 20-year period without interference or infringement by other parties. Patent is classified as an intangible asset. Costs such as registration fees and attorney costs incurred in obtaining the patent are capitalized. Research and development costs applicable to developing the product, process, or idea are immediately expensed. Legal costs of a successful defense of a patent are capitalized and amortized over the remaining life. If the patent right is lost in court it should be written off and shown as an extraordinary charge. The cost of a patent purchased from an outsider is deferred and amortized. If the sole purpose of buying the outsider patent is to eliminate the competition, the amortization period is the remaining life of the company's patent that is being protected. The patent is amortized on a straight-line basis over its 20-year life, or its economic life, if less. As a practical matter, often the useful life is less than 20 years due to changes in the marketplace and new technology. If a patent is assigned to others, royalties obtained are accrued as revenue is earned.

 
Thesaurus: patent

adjective

  1. Easily seen through due to a lack of subtlety: broad, clear, obvious, plain, unmistakable, unsubtle. See clear/unclear, see/not see.
  2. Readily seen, perceived, or understood: apparent, clear, clear-cut, crystal clear, distinct, evident, manifest, noticeable, observable, obvious, plain, pronounced, visible. See see/not see.

 
Antonyms: patent

adj

Definition: unconcealed, conspicuous
Antonyms: concealed, hidden, inconspicuous, unobtrusive


 
Word Origin: patent

Origin: 1631

Since the Middle Ages, the English had announced official grants of privileges by means of letters patent, that is, "open letters." So when the English government claimed authority over North America, it issued letters patent granting lands to colonies and individuals. But the down-to-earth colonists in America were the first to refer to the land itself as a patent. We read in the Massachusetts Bay Record for 1631, "Noe person w[ha]tsoeuer shall trauell out of this pattent, eithr. by sea or land, without leaue from the Governr, Deputy Governr, or some other Assistant." In 1632, also in New England, a certain Stephen Batchelor was "required to for-bear exercising his gifts as a pastor or teacher publicly in our patent."

In that century we also find such spinoff terms as patentee (one to whom a grant of land has been given, 1640), patent line (the boundary of a land grant, 1675), and patent as a verb (to obtain a patent of land, 1675). Nor did the practice of granting lands by patent cease following the American Revolution and the independence of the United States in the next century. A Guide for Emigrants, written in 1831, notes that the Military Bounty Tract "was set apart by Congress and patented for soldiers who served in the last war."

The usual meaning of patent today, however, has to do with Article 1, section 8 of the United States Constitution, which authorizes Congress "to promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries." In 1836, an act of Congress established the Patent Office, headed by a Commissioner of Patents, to issue this kind of patent to inventors.



 

adj

Open and unblocked, such as a patent airway.

 

Authorized by Article I, section 8, of the Constitution “to promote the progress of science and useful arts” by granting exclusive rights to authors and inventors “for limited times,” Congress made patents broadly available to “whosoever invents or discovers any new and useful process, machine, manufacture or composition of matter.” In practice, however, the Supreme Court in Graham v. John Deere Co. (1966) denied Congress the power “to remove existent knowledge from the public domain, or to restrict free access to materials already available” (p. 6), while the Court's decisions in the recent past so limited the enforcement of patent rights that Justice Robert Jackson stated in a dissent his belief that “the only patent that is valid is one this Court hasn't been able to get its hands on” (Jungersen v. Ostby, 1949). In this way, echoes of the nineteenth‐century controversy concerning the social utility of a patent system influenced the Supreme Court's thinking well into the twentieth century, particularly its belief that the useful arts prospered best when free market competition was unhindered by legal monopolies.8

Beginning in the 1970s, however, both the executive and legislative branches reevaluated the role of the nation's intellectual property system in a drive for greater international competitiveness and for an improved balance of trade. In the spirit of reform, Congress conferred exclusive jurisdiction over patent appeals upon a newly created and specialized tribunal, the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, which has revitalized the domestic patent law since its inception in 1982. Responding to this more protectionist ethos, the Supreme Court handed down several ground breaking decisions in the 1980s that appeared to have expanded patent protection. Nevertheless, unresolved judicial tensions between the Court's traditional free‐market bias and current protectionist sentiments continue to haunt every major branch of patent jurisprudence, and the extent to which the Supreme Court has made a lasting commitment to a stronger patent system remains uncertain.

Most of the rules judicially crafted during the nineteenth century derived from the Supreme Court's characterization of patents as the product of a social bargain in which inventors were rewarded for the benefit of society at large. The Court obliged patentees to distinguish their inventions from the prior art and to limit their claims accordingly. It required full disclosure of how to make and use the patented inventions. Prior public use or knowledge usually destroyed the element of novelty.

In the 1980s, the Court broadened its reading of the statute to permit the patenting of biogenetically engineered organisms (Diamond v. Chakrabarty, 1980) and of computer program‐related inventions insofar as they partook of processes or mechanical devices otherwise eligible for protection (Diamond v. Diehr, 1981). In these decisions, the Court leaned toward greater emphasis on the role of patents in stimulating technological innovation.

Although the patent statute of 1793 had already set down the substantive prerequisites of novelty and utility, the Supreme Court derived a third requirement of “invention” (i.e., inventiveness) from the language of the Constitution. It was this controversial standard of invention, first articulated in Hotchkiss v. Greenwood (1850), that had enabled the Supreme Court to invalidate patents in twenty significant cases between 1930 and 1950, a period in which the Court upheld only five patents. Typically excluded were so‐called combination patents that incorporated previously known elements in a new way. In contrast, “pioneer” inventions, such as Bell's telephone or Edison's electric lamp, received liberal treatment under the prevailing reward philosophy even in the face of doubtful evidence.

In 1952, Congress codified the nonobviousness test of invention, but it was not until the Supreme Court's landmark decision in Graham v. John Deere Co. that this codified test fully matured. According to Graham, courts evaluating nonobviousness were obliged to determine the scope and content of the prior art, the extent to which the candidate invention differed from the prior art, and the level of ordinary skill in the trade. The invention became patentable if it would not have been obvious to one reasonably skilled in the art at the time it was discovered. The Graham opinion also permitted these “subjective” indicia of nonobviousness to be corroborated by a fourth set of subtests, known as the secondary considerations, which look to such allegedly “objective” factors as commercial success, copying, long‐felt but unsolved needs, failure of others, and acquiescence of the trade. The Graham test did not appreciably lessen the difficulties of applying the standard of invention until the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, beginning in 1982, made the secondary considerations a crucial subtest in evaluating the nonobviousness of issued patents in all relevant cases. As a result, the likelihood of judicial invalidation has declined precipitously in recent years, as regards both utility patents and design patents, without provoking a negative response from the Supreme Court.

The patentee's right to make, use, or sell the patented invention is broad and domestic patent owners cannot be compelled to practice or license their patents. On the whole, the Supreme Court has tended to construe the scope of issued patents strictly, in keeping with its historical preference for free competition over private rewards and incentives. Despite this conservative record, the Supreme Court accepted and developed the doctrine of equivalents, which limits the ability of a competitor to take the substance of a patented invention while deviating from the literal language of the claims (Winans v. Denmead, 1853; Graver Tank & Mfg. Co. v. Linde Air Products Co., 1950).

The restrictive view of patents espoused by the Supreme Court throughout much of the twentieth century logically inclined it to take a dim view of state action impinging on the patent system because that system “is one in which uniform federal standards are carefully used to promote invention while at the same time preserving free competition” (Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Stiffel Co., 1964; Compco Corp. v. Day‐Brite Lighting, Inc., 1964). In 1989, the Supreme Court reaffirmed this view in Bonito Boats, Inc. v. Thunder Craft Boats, Inc., a unanimous opinion that struck down state statutes that encroached on the design patent law by prohibiting competitors from duplicating certain unpatented boat designs. This decision appeared to invest a competitor's right to reverse engineer unpatented products with constitutional underpinnings.

See also Capitalism.

Bibliography

  • Donald Chisum, Patents: A Treatise on the Law of Patentability, Validity and Infringement (1990).
  • Edmund Kitch, Graham v. John Deere Co.: New Standards for Patents, Supreme Court Review (1966): 293–316.
  • Philip Kurland, ed., The Supreme Court and Patents and Monopolies (1975).
  • J. H. Reichman, Design Protection and the New Technologies: The United States Experience in a Transnational Perspective, University of Baltimore Law Review 19 (Winter 1990): 6–153

— J. H. Riechman

 

Government grant to an inventor of the exclusive right to make, use, or sell an invention, usually for a specified term. It may be granted for a process or method that is new, useful, and not obvious, or for a new use of a known process, machine, or composition of matter or material, including asexually reproduced plants and genetically engineered organisms. It may also be granted for any new, original, and ornamental design for an article of manufacture. The first recorded patent for an industrial invention was granted in 1421 in Florence to the architect and engineer Filippo Brunelleschi. Until recently there were wide variations in the patent systems implemented by different countries. The duration of patents recognized generally ranged from 16 to 20 years. In some countries (e.g., France), some patents were given shorter terms because the inventions had an overall general usefulness. In communist countries (e.g., the Soviet Union), patents per se were not recognized; instead, certificates were issued to inventors to ensure that they received some form of compensation for their work. The agreement establishing the World Trade Organization in the 1990s specifies a minimum set of exclusive rights that all patentees must be accorded and mandates a minimum patent term of 20 years from the date an application is filed. Patents are considered personal property and may be sold, assigned, or otherwise transferred.

For more information on patent, visit Britannica.com.

 
in law, governmental grant of some privilege, property, or authority. Today patent refers to the granting to the inventor of a useful product or process the privilege to exclude others from making that invention. Patent is also the term for the conveyance of public lands to an individual. Patents developed out of the medieval institution of allowing monopolistic control over useful goods in order to encourage their sale and distribution; the authority was contained in letters patent (meaning open, i.e., public). The corrupt sale of such privileges and the consequent increase in the price of necessities led in England to the Statute of Monopolies (1623), which abolished all monopolies except those of inventors in their inventions.

The U.S. Constitution (Article 1, Section 8) authorizes Congress to enact patent legislation; the first such law was enacted Apr. 10, 1790. In 1836, Congress created the U.S. Patent Office (now the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office) and established the basic principles of American patent law. Comprehensive revision of that law occurred in 1870 and in 1952. In the United States any process or device may be patented if it is novel and useful and if plans and a working model are supplied. In all countries patents are valid for a limited term only (17 years in the United States); this limit ordinarily secures a profit to the inventor for a reasonable period yet will not permanently deprive the public of the free use of the invention.

The American law was designed to encourage the maximum inventiveness. Unlike many European countries where the rights to patents are limited so as to make innovations in industry easier, the United States does not require the patentee to permit the use of the invention on pain of losing the patent. Although there have been many independent inventors in the United States, most important patents today are the property of large corporations capable of exploiting them.

Injurious practices, such as withholding beneficial patents that might make obsolete some widely used product or process, have developed. Other practices, such as acquiring all patents in a given field and granting manufacturing licenses only to firms that promise to refrain from effective competition, have been repeatedly attacked by the federal government under the antitrust laws (see trust). Difficulties have also developed in the effective and equitable regulation of patents taken out by foreigners.

Bibliography

See F. L. Vaughan, The United States Patent System: Legal and Economic Conflicts in American Patent History (1956); B. W. Bugbee, Genesis of American Patent and Copyright Law (1967); C. MacLeod, Inventing the Industrial Revolution (1989).


 
This entry contains information applicable to United States law only.

Open; manifest; evident.

In the sale of personal property, a patent defect is one that is clearly visible or that can be discovered by an inspection made by a person exercising ordinary care and prudence.

A patent defect in a legal description is one that cannot be corrected so that a new description must be used.

 

1. open, unobstructed, or not closed.
2. apparent, evident.

  • p. ductus arteriosus (PDA) — abnormal persistence of an open lumen in the ductus arteriosus, between the aorta and the pulmonary artery, after birth. The ductus arteriosus is open during prenatal life, allowing most of the blood of the fetus to bypass the lungs, but normally this channel closes shortly before birth. When the ductus arteriosus remains open, it places special burdens on the left ventricle and causes a diminished blood flow in the aorta. May remain open for up to 5 days in foals. One of the most common congenital heart defects in dogs, but less common in cats. Causes a continuous ‘machinery’ murmur loud in systole, soft in diastole, and ‘bounding’ pulse.
  • p. ductus venosus — see ductus venosus.
  • p. foramen ovale — see foramen ovale (1).
  • p. medicine — a drug or remedy protected by a trademark, available without a prescription.
  • p. period — the period during a disease in which the causative agent can be detected by clinicopathological tests, e.g. for helminth eggs.
  • p. urachus — the urachus persists after birth and allows urine to drip out of the bladder through the umbilicus. See also urachus.
  • p. ventricular septum — includes several entities characterized by incomplete closure of ventricular wall. Characterized by palpable cardiac thrill and audible pansystolic murmur on both sides of the chest at birth, accompanied by exercise intolerance and developing dyspnea at rest.
 
Word Tutor: patent
pronunciation

IN BRIEF: n. - A document granting an inventor sole rights to an invention; adj. - Clearly revealed to the mind or the senses or judgment.

pronunciation it became patent to my mind early in the rebellion that the North and South could never live at peace with each other except as one nation — Ulysses S. Grant, Source: Letter to Elihu B. Washburne, August 30, 1863

 
Wikipedia: patent


A patent is a set of exclusive rights granted by a state to a patentee for a fixed period of time in exchange for a disclosure of an invention.

The procedure for granting patents, the requirements placed on the patentee and the extent of the exclusive rights vary widely between countries according to national laws and international agreements. Typically, however, a patent application must include one or more claims defining the invention which must be new, inventive, and useful or industrially applicable. The exclusive right granted to a patentee in most countries is the right to prevent or exclude others from making, using, selling, offering to sell or importing the invention.

Definition

The term "patent" usually refers to a right granted to anyone who invents or discovers any new and useful process, machine, article of manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new and useful improvement thereof. The additional qualification "utility patents" is used in countries such as the United States to distinguish them from other types of patents but should not be confused with utility models granted by other countries. Examples of particular species of patents for inventions include biological patents, business method patents, chemical patents and software patents.

Some other types of intellectual property rights are referred to as "patents" in some jurisdictions: industrial design rights are called "design patents" in some jurisdictions (they protect the visual design of objects that are not purely utilitarian), plant breeders' rights are sometimes called "plant patents", and utility models or Gebrauchsmuster are sometimes called "petty patents". This article relates primarily to the patent for an invention, although so-called petty patents and utility models may also be granted for inventions. Land grants were sometimes called "letters patent", which was a government notice to the public of a grant of an exclusive right to ownership and possession.

Law

Effects

A patent is not a right to practice or use the invention. Rather, a patent provides the right to exclude others from making, using, selling, offering for sale, or importing the patented invention for the term of the patent, usually 20 years from the filing date. A patent is, in effect, a limited property right that the government offers to inventors in exchange for their agreement to share the details of their inventions with the public. Like any other property right, it may be sold, licensed, mortgaged, assigned or transferred, given away, or simply abandoned.

The rights conveyed by a patent vary country-by-country. For example, in the United States, a patent covers research, except "purely philosophical" inquiry. A U.S. patent is infringed by any "making" of the invention, even a making that goes toward development of a new invention — which may itself become subject of a patent. In contrast, Australian law permits others to build on top of a patented invention, by carving out exceptions from infringement for those who conduct research (e.g. for academic purposes) on the invention.[1]

A patent being an exclusionary right does not, however, necessarily give the owner of the patent the right to exploit the patent. For example, many inventions are improvements of prior inventions which may still be covered by someone else's patent. If an inventor takes an existing patented mouse trap design, adds a new feature to make an improved mouse trap, and obtains a patent on the improvement, he or she can only legally build his or her improved mouse trap with permission from the patent holder of the original mouse trap, assuming the original patent is still in force. On the other hand, the owner of the improved mouse trap can exclude the original patent owner from using the improvement.

Some countries have "working provisions" which require that the invention be exploited in the jurisdiction it covers. Consequences of not working an invention vary from one country to another, ranging from revocation of the patent rights to the awarding of a compulsory license awarded by the courts to a party wishing to exploit a patented invention. The patentee has the opportunity to challenge the revocation or license, but is usually required to provide evidence that the reasonable requirements of the public have been met by the working of invention.

Enforcement

The plate of the Martin ejector seat of the military aircraft, stating that the design is covered by multiple patents in Britain, South Africa, Canada and "others". Dübendorf Museum of Military Aviation.
Enlarge
The plate of the Martin ejector seat of the military aircraft, stating that the design is covered by multiple patents in Britain, South Africa, Canada and "others". Dübendorf Museum of Military Aviation.

Patents can generally only be enforced through civil lawsuits (for example, for a US patent, by an action for patent infringement in a United States federal court), although some territories (such as France and Austria) have criminal penalties for wanton infringement.[2] Typically, the patent owner will seek monetary compensation for past infringement, and will seek an injunction prohibiting the defendant from engaging in future acts of infringement. In order to prove infringement, the patent owner must establish that the accused infringer practices all of the requirements of at least one of the claims of the patent (noting that in many jurisdictions the scope of the patent may not be limited to what is literally stated in the claims, for example due to the "doctrine of equivalents").

An important limitation on the ability of a patent owner to successfully assert the patent in civil litigation is the accused infringer's right to challenge the validity of that patent. Civil courts hearing patent cases can and often do declare patents invalid. The grounds on which a patent can be found invalid are set out in the relevant patent legislation and vary between countries. Often, the grounds are a sub-set of the requirements for patentability in the relevant country. Whilst an infringer is generally free to rely on any available ground of invalidity (such as a prior publication, for example), some countries have sanctions to prevent the same validity questions being relitigated. An example is the UK Certificate of contested validity.

Patents in force in 2000
Enlarge
Patents in force in 2000

The vast majority of patent rights, however, are not determined through litigation, but are resolved privately through patent licensing. Patent licensing agreements are effectively contracts in which the patent owner (the licensor) agrees not to sue the licensee for infringement of the licensor's patent rights, usually in return for a royalty or other payment. It is not uncommon for companies engaged in complex technical fields to enter into dozens of license agreements associated with the production of a single product. Moreover, it is equally common for competitors in such fields to license patents to each other under cross-licensing agreements in order to gain access to each other's patents. A cross license agreement could be highly desirable to the mouse trap developers discussed above, for example, because it would permit both parties to profit off each other's inventions.

The United Nations Statistics Division reports that USA was the top market for patents in force in 2000 closely followed by the EU and Japan.

Ownership

In most countries, both natural persons and corporate entities may apply for a patent. The entity or entities then become the owners of the patent when and if it issues. However, it is nearly always required that the inventor or inventors be named and an indication be given on the public record as to how the owner or owners acquired their rights to the invention from the inventor or inventors.

In the United States, however, only the natural person(s) (i.e. the inventor/s) may apply for a patent. If a patent issues, then each person listed as an inventor owns the patent separately from the other. For example, if two inventors are listed on a patent, then each one may grant licenses to the patent independently of the other, absent an agreement to the contrary.

It is common in the United States for inventors to assign their ownership rights to a corporate entity.[3] Inventors that work for a corporation, for example, often are required to assign their ownership rights to their corporation as a condition of their employment. Independent inventors often assign their ownership rights to a single entity so that only one entity has the right to grant a license.

The ability to assign ownership rights increases the liquidity of a patent as property. Inventors can obtain patents and then sell them to third parties. The third parties then own the patents as if they had originally made the inventions themselves.

Governing laws

The grant and enforcement of patents are governed by national laws, and also by international treaties, where those treaties have been given effect in national laws. Patents are, therefore, territorial in nature.

Commonly, a nation forms a patent office with responsibility for operating that nation's patent system, within the relevant patent laws. The patent office generally has responsibility for the grant of patents, with infringement being the remit of national courts.

There is a trend towards global harmonization of patent laws, with the World Trade Organization (WTO) being particularly active in this area. The TRIPs Agreement has been largely successful in providing a forum for nations to agree on an aligned set of patent laws. Conformity with the TRIPs agreement is a requirement of admission to the WTO and so compliance is seen by many nations as important. This has also led to many developing nations, which may historically have developed different laws to aid their development, enforcing patents laws in line with global practice.

A key international convention relating to patents is the Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property, initially signed in 1883. The Paris Convention sets out a range of basic rules relating to patents, and although the convention does not have direct legal effect in all national jurisdictions, the principles of the convention are incorporated into all notable current patent systems. The most significant aspect of the convention is the provision of the right to claim priority: filing an application in any one member state of the Paris Convention preserves the right for one year to file in any other member state, and receive the benefit of the original filing date. Because the right to a patent is intensely date-driven, this right is fundamental to modern patent usage.

The authority for patent statutes in different countries varies. In the United States, the Constitution empowers Congress to make laws to "promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts..." The laws Congress passed are codified in title 35 of the United States Code and created the United States Patent and Trademark Office.[4] In the UK, substantive patent law is contained in the Patents Act 1977 as amended.[5]

In addition, there are international treaty procedures, such as the procedures under the European Patent Convention (EPC) [administered by the European Patent Organisation (EPOrg)], and the Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT) (administered by WIPO and covering 137 countries), that centralise some portion of the filing and examination procedure. Similar arrangements exist among the member states of ARIPO, OAPI, the analogous treaties among African countries.

Application and prosecution

For more details on this topic, see Patent application and Patent prosecution.

A patent is obtained by filing a written application at the relevant patent office. The application contains a description of how to make and use the invention and, under some legislations, if not self evident, the usefulness of the invention. The patent application may or must also comprise "claims". Claims define the invention and embodiments for which the applicant wants patent rights.

To obtain a patent, an applicant must provide a written description of the invention in sufficient detail for a person skilled in the art (i.e., the relevant area of technology) to make and use the invention. This written description is provided in what is known as the patent specification, which is often accompanied by illustrating drawings. Some countries, such as the United States, further require that the specification disclose the "best mode" of the invention (i.e., the most effective way, to the best of the inventor's knowledge, to make or practice the invention).[6] In addition, at the end of the specification, the applicant must provide one or more claims that define what the applicant regards as their invention. A claim, unlike the body of the specification, is a description designed to provide the public with notice of precisely what the patent owner has a right to exclude others from making, using, or selling. Claims are often analogized to a deed or other instrument that, in the context of real property, sets the metes and bounds of an owner's right to exclude. The claims define what a patent covers. A single patent may contain numerous claims, each of which is regarded as a distinct invention.

For a patent to be granted, that is to take legal effect, the patent application must meet the legal requirements related to patentability.

Once a patent application has been filed, most patent offices examine the application for compliance with the requirements of the relevant patent law. If the application does not comply, the objections are usually communicated to the applicant or their patent agent or attorney, who can respond to the objections to attempt to overcome them and obtain the grant of the patent.

In most countries, there is no requirement that the inventor build a prototype or otherwise reduce his or her invention to actual practice in order to obtain a patent. The description of the invention, however, must be sufficiently complete so that another person with ordinary skill in the art of the invention can make and use the invention without undue experimentation.

Once granted the patent is subject in most countries to renewal fees, generally due each year,[7] to keep the patent in force.

In Egbert v. Lippmann,104 U. S. 333 (1881) (the "corset case"), the United States Supreme Court affirmed a decision that an inventor who had "slept on his rights for eleven years" without applying for a patent could not obtain one at that time. This decision has been codified as 35. U.S.C. §102, which bars an inventor from obtaining a patent if the invention has been in public use for more than one year prior to filing.

Economics

For more details on this topic, see Economics and patents.

Rationale

There are four primary incentives embodied in the patent system: to invent in the first place; to disclose the invention once made; to invest the sums necessary to experiment, produce and market the invention; and to design around and improve upon earlier patents.[8]

  1. Patents provide incentives for economically efficient research and development (R&D). Many large modern corporations have annual R&D budgets of hundreds of millions or even billions of dollars. Without patents, R&D spending would be significantly less or eliminated altogether, limiting the possibility of technological advances or breakthroughs. Corporations would be much more conservative about the R&D investments they made, as third parties would be free to exploit any developments. This second justification is closely related to the basic ideas underlying traditional property rights.
  2. In accordance with the original definition of the term "patent," patents facilitate and encourage disclosure of innovations into the public domain for the common good. If inventors did not have the legal protection of patents, in many cases, they would prefer or tend to keep their inventions secret. Awarding patents generally makes the details of new technology publicly available, for exploitation by anyone after the patent expires, or for further improvement by other inventors. Furthermore, when a patent's term has expired, the public record ensures that the patentee's idea is not lost to humanity.
  3. In many industries (especially those with high fixed costs and either low marginal costs or low reverse engineering costs — computer processors, software, and pharmaceuticals for example), once an invention exists, the cost of commercialization (testing, tooling up a factory, developing a market, etc.) is far more than the initial conception cost. (For example, the internal "rule of thumb" at several computer companies in the 1980s was that post-R&D costs were 7-to-1). Unless there is some way to prevent copies from competing at the marginal cost of production, companies will not make that productization investment.
  4. Patent rights create an incentive for companies to develop workarounds to patented inventions, thereby creating improved or alternative technologies that might not otherwise be developed.

One interesting side effect of modern patent usage is that the small-time inventor can use the exclusive right status to become a licensor. This allows the inventor to accumulate capital quickly from licensing the invention and may allow rapid innovation to occur because he or she may choose to not manage a manufacturing buildup for the invention. Thus the inventor's time and energy can be spent on pure innovation, allowing others to concentrate on manufacturability.

Criticism

While each of the four incentives is achieved by the patent system in some contexts, the patent system has countervailing costs, and those costs fall more heavily in some contexts than others. There are many critics and criticisms of patents and this has resulted in the formation of a large number of groups who oppose patents in general, or specific types of patents, and who lobby for their abolishment.

Patents have always been criticized for being granted on already known inventions. In 1938, for example, R. Buckminster Fuller, inventor of the geodesic dome wrote:[9]

“At present (1938), the (US patent) files, are so extraordinarily complex and the items so multitudinous that a veritable army of governmental servants is required to attend them and sort them into some order of distinguishable categories to which reference may be made when corresponding with patent applicants for the purposes of examiner citation of “prior art” disclosure. This complexity makes it inevitable that the human-equation involved in government servants relative to carelessness or mechanical limitations should occasion the granting of multitudes of “probably” invalid patent claims.”

Patents have also been criticized for conferring a "negative right" upon a patent owner, permitting them to exclude competitors from using or exploiting the invention, even if the competitor subsequently develops the same invention independently. This may be subsequent to the date of invention, or to the priority date, depending upon the relevant patent law (see First to file and first to invent). [citation needed]

Patents may hinder innovation as well. A holding company, pejoratively known as a "patent troll", owns a portfolio of patents, and sues others for infringement of these patents while doing little to develop the technology itself. [citation needed]

Another theoretical problem with patent rights was proposed by law professors Michael Heller and Rebecca Sue Eisenberg in a 1998 Science article.[10] Building from Heller's theory of the tragedy of the anticommons, the professors postulated that intellectual property rights may become so fragmented that, effectively, no one can take advantage of them as to do so would require an agreement between the owners of all of the fragments.

Since at least the early 1980s, patent offices have accepted that computer programs can lie within the realm of patentable subject matter, although the regulations for when a computer program is a patentable invention differ markedly between countries. It is argued[attribution needed] that the resulting software patents inhibit innovation in contrast to the underlying purpose of patents.[citation needed]

In response to perceived problems with the grant of patents, and the evolving nature of technology and industry, there is debate about, and reform of, patent systems around the world. The TRIPs agreement, developed by the WTO has led to the alignment of many patent systems with regard to certain controversial issues, such as what can be protected by patents and the issue of compulsory licences in cases of national need.

Etymology

The term "patent" originates from the Latin word patere which means "to lay open" (i.e., make available for public inspection) and the term letters patent, which originally denoted royal decrees granting exclusive rights to certain individuals or businesses.

History

For more details on this topic, see History of patent law.
U.S. Patents granted, 1800–2004.[11]
Enlarge
U.S. Patents granted, 1800–2004.[11]

There is evidence suggesting that something like patents was used among some ancient Greek cities. The creator of a new recipe was granted an exclusive right to make the food for one year, and a similar practice existed in some Roman cities.[citation needed] Patents in the modern sense originated in Italy in 1474.[12] At that time the Republic of Venice issued a decree by which new and inventive devices, once they had been put into practice, had to be communicated to the Republic in order to obtain the right to prevent others from using them.[13]

England followed with the Statute of Monopolies in 1623 under King James I, which declared that patents could only be granted for "projects of new invention." During the reign of Queen Anne (1702–1714), the lawyers of the English Court developed the requirement that a written description of the invention must be submitted.[14] These developments, which were in place during the Colonial period, formed the basis for modern English and United States patent law.

In the United States, during the colonial period and Articles of Confederation years (1778–1789), several states adopted patent systems of their own. The first Congress adopted a Patent Act, in 1790, and the first patent was issued under this Act on July 31, 1790 (and the subject matter of that patent was for the making of potash).

See also

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:

Further reading

References

  1. ^ What is a Patent?. Patents. IP Australia (2006). Retrieved on 2007-08-12.
  2. ^ DLA Piper Rudnick Gray Cary (2005) Patent Litigation across Europe, handout available as per this link.
  3. ^ Assignee (Company) Name. Help Page. U.S. Copyright and Trademark Office (USPTO). Retrieved on 2007-07-25.
  4. ^ U.S. Code collection, Title 35 — Patents
  5. ^ United Kingdom law requiring no explicit authority due to the Supremacy of Parliament.
  6. ^ What are the steps in getting a patent?. Questions and Answers on Patents. Wolf, Greenfield & Sacks, P.C.. Retrieved on 2007-06-05.
  7. ^ the US being a notable exception; see the Maintenance fee (patent) article for more details
  8. ^ Howard T. Markey (chief judge of the United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals and later of the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit), Special Problems in Patent Cases, 66 F.R.D. 529, 1975.
  9. ^ Nine Chains to the Moon, Chapter 36, “Throwing in the Patent Sponge”, p 277
  10. ^ Heller, M.A., & Eisenberg, R.S. (1998). Can Patents Deter Innovation? The Anticommons in Biomedical Research. Science, 280(1 May 1998), 280, 698-701.
  11. ^ U.S. Patent Activity 1790 to the Present
  12. ^ (German) Helmut Schippel: Die Anfänge des Erfinderschutzes in Venedig, in: Uta Lindgren (Hrsg.): Europäische Technik im Mittelalter. 800 bis 1400. Tradition und Innovation, 4. Aufl., Berlin 2001, S.539-550 ISBN 3-7861-1748-9
  13. ^ Wolfgang-Pfaller.de: Patentgesetz von Venedig (German / Italian).
  14. ^ History of Copyright. UK Intellectual Property Office (2006). Retrieved on 2007-08-12.

External links


 
Translations: Translations for: Patent

Dansk (Danish)
n. - patent, brev
adj. - åben, tydelig
v. tr. - tage patent på

idioms:

  • patent leather    lakeret læder
  • patent medicine    patentmedicin
  • Patent Office    patentdirektoratet

Nederlands (Dutch)
octrooi, gepatenteerd artikel, exclusieve rechten, vergunning, lakleer, landoverdracht, duidelijk, gepatenteerd, ingenieus, vrije doorgang verlenend, een patent verlenen/verkrijgen

Français (French)
n. - brevet, invention brevetée
adj. - évident, manifeste, (Jur) breveté
v. tr. - (Jur) faire breveter

idioms:

  • patent leather    cuir verni
  • patent medicine    médicament de marque déposée délivré sans ordonnance
  • Patent Office    (US) Institut National de la Propriété Industrielle

Deutsch (German)
n. - Patent
adj. - patentiert, offenkundig
v. - patentieren lassen

idioms:

  • patent leather    Lackleder
  • patent medicine    patentiertes, nicht rezeptpflichtiges Medikament
  • Patent Office    Patentamt

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - δίπλωμα ευρεσιτεχνίας, ευρεσιτεχνία (κν. πατέντα), προνόμιο
adj. - προφανής, πρόδηλος, απλός, προνομιακός, καλυπτόμενος από δίπλωμα ευρεσιτεχνίας, πατενταρισμένος, πρωτότυπος, νεωτεριστικός
v. - κατοχυρώνω με δίπλωμα ευρεσιτεχνίας, πατεντάρω

idioms:

  • patent leather    λουστρίνι
  • patent medicine    (ιατρ.) ιδιοσκεύασμα, σπεσιαλιτέ, φαρμακευτικό που πουλιέται χωρίς συνταγή γιατρού
  • Patent Office    υπηρεσία χορηγήσεως διπλωμάτων ευρεσιτεχνίας

Italiano (Italian)
patente, lampante, palpabile, brevettare

idioms:

  • patent leather    pelle verniciata
  • patent medicine    specialità farmaceutica
  • Patent Office    ufficio brevetti

Português (Portuguese)
n. - patente (f), direito (m)
adj. - patente, evidente, expandido (Bot.)
v. - patentear, requerer/obter patente

idioms:

  • patent leather    verniz (couro)
  • patent medicine    remédio registrado
  • Patent Office    Registro de Patentes

Русский (Russian)
патент, открытый, очевидный, запатентованный, патентовать

idioms:

  • patent leather    лакированная кожа
  • patent medicine    лекарство, продающееся без рецепта
  • Patent Office    патентное бюро

Español (Spanish)
n. - patente, privilegio exclusivo, diploma, título, cosa patentada, zapatos de charol
adj. - patente, evidente, claro, manifiesto
v. tr. - patentar, conceder privilegio o título

idioms:

  • patent leather    charol
  • patent medicine    específico, especialidad medicinal
  • Patent Office    oficina de patentes, registro de la propiedad industrial, registro de patentes y marcas

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - patent(brev), privilegiebrev
adj. - öppen, tillgänglig, uppenbar
v. - patentera

中文(简体) (Chinese (Simplified))
专利权, 专利品, 执照, 专利的, 新奇的, 显著的, 取得...的专利权, 请准专利

idioms:

  • patent leather    黑漆皮, 类似之合成皮
  • patent medicine    专利药品, 成药
  • Patent Office    商务部专利局

中文(繁體) (Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 專利權, 專利品, 執照
adj. - 專利的, 新奇的, 顯著的
v. tr. - 取得...的專利權, 請准專利

idioms:

  • patent leather    黑漆皮, 類似之合成皮
  • patent medicine    專利藥品, 成藥
  • Patent Office    商務部專利局

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 특허, 특허품, 공유지 양도 증서, 특권
adj. - 특허의, 명백한, 개방되어 있는
v. tr. - ~에게 특허권을 주다, 전매 특허로 하다

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 特許, パテント, 特許品
v. - 特許を取る, 特許を受ける
adj. - 特許の, 明らかな, 明白な, 独創的な, 独特の

idioms:

  • letters patent    特許状, 専売特許証
  • patent leather    エナメル革
  • patent medicine    特許医薬品, 売薬
  • Patent Office    特許庁

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) براءة الاختراع, الاختراع المسجل, إمتياز استثمار (صفه) مسجل, مصون ببراءة إمتياز, واضح, جلي, ممتد (فعل) منح براءة أو شهادة اختراع‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮פטנט‬
adj. - ‮מוגן ע"י פטנט, גלוי, נהיר, ברור, מקורי, מתוחכם‬
v. tr. - ‮קיבל פטנט על-‬


 
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