What is a Patent?
A
patent is a set of exclusive rights granted by a government to an
inventor or applicant for a limited amount of time (normally 20 years
from the filing date). It is a legal document defining ownership of a
particular area of new technology.
Patents are Granted in over
150 countries and are predicated on the theory that inventors are more
likely to invent and disclose that knowledge to the public in exchange
for a limited period of exclusivity. The right granted by a patent
excludes all others from making, using, or selling an invention or
products made by an invented process.
What is Patentable?
To
gain a valid Patent the invention must be new (novel), involve an
inventive step or be non-obvious, and be capable of industrial
application. Some countries have specific exclusions preventing things
from being patented such as the making of nuclear bombs.
What does new mean?
An invention is considered new if it does not form part of the state of the art.
What
is the State of the Art? The state of the art comprises everything that
is known or used in public in any way, anywhere in the world, before
the date of filing of the patent application. What is inventive Step? An
invention is considered as involving an inventive step if it is not
obvious to a skilled person having regard to the state of the art.
Industrial
applicability: The invention must be capable of being made or used in
some kind of industry, including agriculture. Generally, it does not
include one-offs.
Excluded Subject Matters: Many countries have
specific exclusions to certain inventions such as the patenting of
plants and animals or the patenting of scientific theories. As long as
the above criteria are met the United States has very few exclusions to
patentability.
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