Posts Tagged ‘patent language’

By: Mark R. Malek

In a press release issued by the USPTO yesterday, Director David Kappos announced President Obama’s 2012 budget request for the USPTO.  The 2012 budget includes a $2.71 Billion request for the USPTO.

Let’s analyze that “request” for a moment.  In the same press release, we learned that the USPTO anticipates collecting $2.71 Billion in fees in 2012.  What a coincidence!  This is probably good news and bad news.  The good news is that if the USPTO hits its mark of $2.71 Billion in collected fees, it will be able to keep it all, i.e., no fee diversion.  I’ll present what I believe to be the bad news in the form of a question – what happens if the USPTO exceeds the anticipated $2.71 Billion mark in collected fees?  Does the USPTO get to keep it?  I suspect not!

Here is what I anticipate to be the worse news.  What happens if the USPTO does not meet the goal of $2.71 Billion in collected fees?  Does the Federal Printing Press simply make up the difference?  Trying to figure out what goes on in the mind of the budget planners is apparently out of my league.  I welcome any comments by our readers to try to shed some light on the subject.

If you spend any time reading patent applications, two things will probably become apparent to you:  1) you probably need to find a hobby or five to take up more of your time; and 2) sometimes it may seem like patent applications are written in some kind of strange, overly complicated, almost alien language.  Usually, there’s a perfectly good explanation for why one would use a more complicated phrase, in a patent application, to say what could be said in a word or two anywhere else.  It generally has something to do with legal precedent that would impact the protection granted by the patent.  In our first of what will be another series of subject-specific posts about why we use the words we use in drafting a patent application, Tactical IP takes a look at one of the oft-inserted patent language twists – “an embodiment of the present invention,” used in place of “the present invention.”


by Jason Fischer

When writing a patent application, there is a delicate balance that must be maintained, between describing an invention well enough to meet the statutory requirements and keeping your language general enough that the inventor’s competition can’t make a quick, easy design-around implementation that doesn’t infringe the patent.  Patent protection is only worth as much as what you can prevent others from doing without paying you licensing fees or a royalty.

Luckily (or unluckily, depending on which way you look at it) decades of infringement litigation and appeals of patent office decisions give a roadmap for patent practitioners to follow when drafting a patent application.  Unfortunately, the roadmap changes so often that the language you’re using today to draft a patent application may be no good by the time that application is used as the basis for an infringement suit – or even by the time it’s being examined by the PTO.

One patent drafting faux pas, which has developed in the last eight years or so, is stating that something is “the invention,” or stating that “the invention” includes something else.  As the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit has demonstrated, such language can be used to narrow the protection that your patent would otherwise provide.

Read more...

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 05, 2012

Bad Behavior has blocked 1588 access attempts in the last 7 days.