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A patent is a government grant to exclude, anyone other
than the owner of the patent, from making,
The government grant is affixed to the document that describes and claims
the invention. Thisusing or selling an invention as described and claimed in the patent. In short then, a patent is a government granted monopoly for a fixed number of years to encourage inventors to disclose their inventions to the public. After the grant has expired, the invention as described and claimed in the patent is dedicated to the public, at which time anyone can make, use or sell the invention as described in the expired patent. A patent may not be renewed. document includes an abstract that summarizes the invention, one or more drawings that illustrate the invention, a brief description of the prior art or state of technology pointing out its failure to solve a particular problem, a summary of the invention describing the problem the invention solves, a detailed description of the invention that is cross referenced to the drawings, and most importantly, one or more claims that distinctly and clearly define the invention. The document in its unpublished form is called a patent application. The document in its published and printed form is called a patent. Here is what the United States patent grant looks like: THE COMMISSIONER OF PATENTS AND TRADEMARKS Has received an application for a patent
for a new and useful invention. The title
and Therefore, this United States Patent Grants to the person or persons having title to this patent, the right to exclude othersfrom making,using or selling the invention throughout the United States of America for the term of twenty years from the effective filing date of the application, subject to the payment of maintenance fees as provided by law. Since a patent application, and the rules and regulations that govern the filing and prosecution of the application before the United States Patent and Trademark Office are complex and detailed there will be no attempt to explain these processes. References are provided however, to the various codes and regulations that control the filing and prosecution of patent applications in the United States. The codes and regulations and other controlling references include: the United States Code (Title 35),the Rules of Practice in Patent Cases (37CFR), the Manual of Patent Examining Procedures (MPEP), the US Patent Classification System, the Manual of Classification, the Classification Definitions and the Classification Index. For examples of patent applications in published and printed form,
review any issued patent. Such Claim drafting is an acquired skill that takes practice. An excellent
reference is "The Mechanics of Because of the complexities associated with the preparation and prosecution
of a patent If you would like to know how to obtain a patent follow this link. If you would like to learn how to conduct a patent search follow this link. |
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