Why should I hire a patent attorney to draft an application?

A question I commonly get from inventors and start-up managers is “Why should I hire a patent attorney to draft an application instead of writing it myself?” For smaller companies, it is paramount that they protect their intellectual property assets because larger companies will more than likely have better distribution streams, be able to undercut [...]

By |2013-01-10T11:00:01-06:00January 10th, 2013|Uncategorized|Comments Off on Why should I hire a patent attorney to draft an application?

IN RE CHEVALIER

PATENT ATTORNEY TAKEAWAY: If claimed limitations are taught by a combination of the cited art, it is very hard to overcome the obviousness standard of “obvious to combine.” Instead of formulating an obvious to combine argument, it may be easier to amend the claims. I do not agree with the courts analysis that if each [...]

By |2013-01-09T15:24:11-06:00January 9th, 2013|Patent Attorney Takeaways|Comments Off on IN RE CHEVALIER

IN RE AVID IDENTIFICATION

PATENT ATTORNEY TAKE-A-WAYS: 1) When drafting appeals to the USPTO board, it is very important to take the time to address each and every limitation that could possibly be argued at a later point. Therefore, patent attorneys should not view appeals or pre-appeal briefs as extensions of office actions that are going to be reviewed [...]

By |2013-01-08T16:47:54-06:00January 8th, 2013|Patent Attorney Takeaways|Comments Off on IN RE AVID IDENTIFICATION

What is an information disclosure statement to the U.S. patent office?

An information disclosure statement (IDS) refers to a submission of known references that are considered material/relevant to an inventor’s patent application to the patent office. During the process of obtaining a patent, there is a duty for attorneys, inventors, assignees to disclose references such as other patents or articles that may be material or relevant [...]

By |2013-01-07T11:03:32-06:00January 7th, 2013|Patent Basics|Comments Off on What is an information disclosure statement to the U.S. patent office?

How to read and respond to an Office Action from the USPTO

Office Actions are formal documents prepared and communicated from a patent examiner at the United States Patent and Trademark Office. Office Actions are common in patent prosecution to obtain a patent, and typically during patent prosecution at least 2-3 Office Actions will be issued before a patent application is granted as a patent. These linked [...]

By |2013-08-09T12:16:03-05:00January 4th, 2013|Patent Basics, Uncategorized|Comments Off on How to read and respond to an Office Action from the USPTO

Austin Patent Law: What is the doctrine of equivalents?

In United States patent law under the patent act, a granted patent gives the patent owner the right to exclude others from making, using, selling, importing and exporting what is “distinctly claimed” in the patent. Although there is typically uncertainty regarding the proper interpretation of claimed limitations in a patent, the claims provide for public [...]

By |2013-01-03T14:17:20-06:00January 3rd, 2013|Uncategorized|Comments Off on Austin Patent Law: What is the doctrine of equivalents?

WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN ASSIGNMENT AND A LICENSE?

The main difference between the two is that in a license the person granting permission (Licensor) retains an interest in the property being licensed, whereas in an assignment the assignor transfers his rights in the property being assigned. In intellectual property, a license may grant a licensee to use a patent, trademark, software, etc. without [...]

By |2013-01-02T22:23:53-06:00January 2nd, 2013|Uncategorized|Comments Off on WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN ASSIGNMENT AND A LICENSE?
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