Patent
patent
Patent
According to the US Patent and Trademark Office:A patent is an intellectual property right granted by the Government of the United States of America to an inventor "to exclude others from making, using, offering for sale, or selling the invention throughout the United States or importing the invention into the United States" for a limited time in exchange for public disclosure of the invention when the patent is granted.
The inventor is guaranteed the right to exclude others from making, using, offering for sale, selling or importing the invention
The printing Press refrence:What_invention_in_the_1440s_helped_spread_the_idea_of_renaissance_throughout_Europe
The printing Press refrence:What_invention_in_the_1440s_helped_spread_the_idea_of_renaissance_throughout_Europe
The printing Press refrence:What_invention_in_the_1440s_helped_spread_the_idea_of_renaissance_throughout_Europe
It gives a right granted by the government to an inventor to manufacture, use, or sell the invention for a certain amount of time.
an invention
The inventor invented an invention.
"Theft" is not a challenge for an inventor any more than it is for anyone else. Theft is taking something with the intention of permanently depriving its owner of it. Copying an invention is not theft because the inventor has not been deprived of the invention after it has been copied: the inventor still knows what the invention is. On the other hand, the risk of someone copying his or her invention is a challenge for an inventor. The person who copied the invention can get the benefit of the invention without any of the cost and effort that the inventor had to go to to make the invention. That might make the inventor worse off. The patent system exists to allow inventors to protect their inventions.
he studied government and throughout his lifehe was a mechanical engineer and inventor
Fire is not an invention.