So you are an inventor Where do you go from here
Download
Report
Transcript So you are an inventor Where do you go from here
Building a Competitive Edge:
Protecting Inventions by Utility Models
and/or Patents
Casey K. Chan
National University of Singapore
IP Academy of Singapore
Topics Covered
Economic Commercial Perspective
Patentability and Specification
Introduction to Claim Structure
Proprietary position and FTO
Practical Tips
Increasingly, wealth of a
nation is measured by
ownership of intellectual
properties rather than by
ownership of hard assets.
Paul Romer
Graduate School of Business at Stanford University
Fellow at the Hoover Institute
Classical Economy
Tangible Capital
New Growth
Economy
Intangible Capital
Types of Intellectual Properties
Trade Secrets - No regulation
Patents – Regulated
Trademarks – Regulated
Copyright - Regulated
Freedom to Operate – FTO
Proprietary Position
New Product Development
User Spec
IP Assessment
IP Protection
Economic Perspective
Patents -- legal ownership of intellectual
properties
Incentive for Inventors
Quid pro quo - grant in exchange for
disclosures
Right to exclude others to use and/or
manufacture the invention
Types of Patent
Utility Patents - machine, process,
composition of matter
Design Patents - ornamental design
Plant - distinct and new variety of
asexually reproduced plant
Should I file a Patent?
Where and When
When should you file a patent?
Because it is a brilliant idea -- No
Because of commercial potential -- Yes
Competitive advantage (unfair
advantage)
Barrier to entry in market place
Criteria
Patentability
Commercial Potential
Enthusiasm of Inventor
Commercial Potential
Co 1
Accuracy
Sensitivity
Efficiency
Speed
Automatable
Reproducibility
Cost
NuProduct
Co 2
Commercial Potential
Business Model
NuProduct
Market Applications
Very Broad
Initial Targeted Applications
>$750 Million
Product Development Cycle
Short: 6 – 12 Months
Commercialization Pathway
Multiple Channels Direct + “NuProduct Inside”
Manufacturing Complexity
Low – Repackaging
Projected Gross Margins
>65%
Projected Time to Profitability
Q4, ‘04
Where should you file your
patent?
Patent law is jurisdictional
File in country where the market is
largest
File in countries it is cost effective
Customer per $ patent cost
File in countries where you are
prepared to enforce infringement
Worldwide Market for
Medical Device
Asia
Pacific
20%
Americas
5%
USA
50%
Europe
25%
Source: Tucker Anthony
European Market
for Medical Device
Scandinavia
4%
Others
8%
Switzerland
3%
France
24%
The Big Four constitute
75% of Europe’s market: Spain &
Portugal
France
15%
Germany
Italy
Gt Britain
Gt Britain
9%
Italy
13%
Germany
24%
Source: Tucker Anthony
One strategy
Clearing House
(12 Months)
National Phase
(18 Months)
Europe
Local + US
Application
PCT
Application
Japan
China
EU
Chap II
Delay to 30 mths
JP
CN
Utility Patent - 5 statutory classes
1. Processes (Methods)
2. Machines (Devices and Apparatus)
3. Manufactures -- “articles of
manufacture”
e.g. transistors, floppy disks, etc
4. Composition of matter
5. New uses of above
Utility Patent – Three Types
In practice this is all you need to remember
1. Method
2. Apparatus
3. Composition of matter
Requirements for Patentability
1.
New and Novel
2.
Useful
3.
Non-obvious
1. New and Novel (No “Prior Art”)
Commercially available
Public Disclosure
Publication in journals, magazines,
abstracts
Posting on the Internet
Oral or Poster Presentation at symposium
or seminar
Material made available to public at
university library
Demonstration at trade shows, to visitors
Confidential Disclosure Agreement
2. Utility
Must have a useful function
If device does not work no use to
inventor anyway
Prevent pre-emptive filing of
Composition of Matter e.g. new
chemicals, new drugs, new gene with
no known function
2. Utility – New Guidelines
Credible
Specific
Substantial
3. Obviousness
Obvious to those “ordinary skill in the
arts”
What makes an invention non-obvious
1. Unexpected results
2. Previous publication stated that it
cannot be done
3. Have to go through a series of
experimentation to arrive at
invention
What Cannot be Patented?
Arrangements of printed matter
Methods of doing business ?
Obvious devices
Perpetual motion machines
Nuclear weapons or weapons of mass
destruction
Laws of nature or scientific principles
(must have “embodiment”)
Actual Cost of Filing
US$ 10,000 to 15,000
Preparation Time
Patent Search
Drawings
Attorney’s Fee
Filing Fees
Maintenance Fee
Legal Defense
Legal jargons
“prior art”
“ordinary skill in the art”
“embodiment”
“new teachings”
Specification of a Patent
Broad claims
“less is more”
New teachings
Background
& Prior Art
Claims
Definition
“more is better”
Anatomy of a peer review paper
Title
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Anatomy of a Patent
Title
Field Of The Invention
Specifications
Background Of The Invention
Objects Of The Invention
Summary Of The Invention
Brief Description Of The Drawings
Detailed Description Of The Preferred
Embodiments
Modifications Of The Preferred Embodiments
Claims
This is the right you own!
1807 – Prior Art - Unicycle
A
B
1827 - My Invention - Bicycle
D
A
B
C
Z
Elements
B
A
C
D
Your Invention:
Definition
B
A
C
D
Z
Independent Claim
Your Claim:
B
D
D
A
A
B
C
C
Competitor’s
Product:
B
A
A
C
E
Infringement ? = NO
B
E
C
Your Invention:
Definition
B
A
C
D
Z
Independent Claim
Your Claim:
B
D
A
C
Competitor’s
Product:
B
A
C
E
Infringement ? = YES !
Dependent
Claim
B
A
C
D
Five Types of Claims
Your Invention
Independent Claim (3)
Apparatus
Method
Composition of Matter
Dependent Claim (2)
Additional element
Restriction of an element
Z
Definition
B
A
C
D
A
1807 – Prior Art - Unicycle
B
1827 - My Invention - Bicycle
D
A
B
C
Z
Elements
B
A
C
D
Your Invention:
Z
Definition
B
A
C
D
D
Independent Claim
Your Claim:
A
B
A
D
B
C
C
Competitor’s
Product:
A
Infringement ? =
B
A
C
E
NO
B
E
C
Your Invention:
Z
Definition
B
A
C
D
Independent Claim
Your Claim:
A
B
A
C
Competitor’s
Product:
A
Dependent Claim
C
B
C
B
E
Infringement ? = YES !
D
Five Types of Claims
Independent Claim (3)
Apparatus
Method
Composition of Matter
Dependent Claim (2)
Additional element
Restriction of an element
Z
Your Invention
Definition
D
B
A
C
One Hand Rule of Claims
2
1
One Hand Rule of Claims
2
1
One Hand Rule of Claims
1
Freedom to Operate
is determined by:
What are competitors’ patent claims
Unclaimed prior art
Patent B
Patent specification
Published work
Claim B
Patent A
Claim A
My FTO
Publication
C
Proprietary Position
is determined by:
What are my patent
claims
My Trade Secrets
Trade secrets
My Patent B
Claim B
Competitor’s
FTO
My Patent A
Claim A
Claim C
My Patent C
Initial patent review
Front Page
Patent Number and Title
Applicant (s), Assignee
Issued Date/ File Date
Class and Field of Search
Attorney, Examiner
References (Referring Patents)
Abstract
Representative Drawing
Back Page
Claims (First claim most important)
Utility model
Not the same as “utility patent”
Parallel second tier patent systems
Foster indigenous invention and
innovative activities
Petty patents, innovation patents,
utility model
Types of Patent and Duration
US
China
Utility (20y)
Design (14y)
Plant (20y)
Inventions
(20y)
Indus designs (10y)
Utility models (10y)
Thank you