Читать книгу Intellectual Property Law for Engineers, Scientists, and Entrepreneurs - Howard B. Rockman - Страница 15

Оглавление

Top Ten List of Intellectual Property Protection

There are several important points regarding the potential loss of intellectual property rights by the actions of an inventor or creator, and other matters, that warrant special and advanced mention. Adherence to these points will help you avoid the unintended loss of rights to your novel technology. Each of these matters is discussed in detail in this text, but I want to prevent the potential loss of intellectual property rights until you get to the appropriate page.

1 Do not publicly disclose your patentable invention to anyone outside your development team until either a provisional or non‐provisional patent application covering your invention has been filed with the USPTO, or your respective home patent office. In the United States, in broad terms, an inventor has 1 year following the public disclosure of an invention to file a patent application. However, public knowledge of your invention anywhere will destroy all patent rights in most countries outside the United States. These countries adhere to the “absolute novelty” rule that requires a patent application to be filed covering an invention in the inventor’s home country before any public disclosure of the invention. Thus, by filing your patent application in your home country before any public disclosure of the invention, you have saved all of your international patent rights. If you must disclose your invention to another before a patent application can be filed, have the recipient of the disclosure sign a confidential non‐disclosure agreement before receiving the information. This makes the disclosure “non‐public,” and saves your patent rights.

2 Even though you obtain a patent on your invention, products or processes incorporating your invention may still infringe the patent rights of someone else. Therefore, my advice is to have a freedom‐to‐use search conducted before you bring your new, and patentable, product to market.

3 Be sure you advise your patent attorney of all prior art relating to your invention that you are aware of before the patent application covering your invention is filed, and during the pendency of your application. It is a strict requirement that all material prior art publications and activities of which you are aware be submitted to the U.S. patent examiner.

4 Since the United States has adopted the “first‐to‐file” system, if you are working in a highly competitive industry, your patent application, provisional or non‐provisional, should be prepared and filed at the earliest practical time.

5 When beginning a new employment, carefully read and fully understand the agreements you sign, particularly the language regarding ownership of inventions made prior to your employment, and those inventions made during your employment. Also make sure you understand any language that may affect your ability to work for a competitor if and when your new employment terminates.

6 If you are adopting a name, trademark, logo, etc., for use in your business, have a search conducted to ensure that someone else in the same or a similar line of business is not already using a confusingly similar name or symbol.

7 When asking a vendor or supplier to provide input to a development project, have the vendor first sign an agreement that any contribution they make toward the development of protectable intellectual property will belong to you or your company, and not to the vendor.

8 If you intend to maintain certain information as trade secrets, fully inform yourself of the steps you legally have to take to prove later that you have in place a strict policy and safeguards for maintaining the secrecy of all confidential information.

9 The copyright law prevents copying. You may set forth a previously written‐about concept or development in your own words, but do not copy the same expression of that concept as used by someone else.

10 Consider initially that any new development you produce may be patentable, or may be covered by one or more of the other intellectual property vehicles. Just as science and technology changes, intellectual property laws also change to protect new forms of innovation.

Intellectual Property Law for Engineers, Scientists, and Entrepreneurs

Подняться наверх