Greenberg & Lieberman
Intellectual Property and Litigation

 Home Page  Contact Us  Terms Glossary  Patent FAQs
  

Patent Examples Such As " Patents And Inventors " Can Be Legally Complex. That's Why Our Patent Lawyers Are Ready To Help With:

• Novelty Patents
• Design
• Patent Amendments

Need Patent Help? Contact Our Lawyers!

  
 
 
See what other customers have to say about us.

   Patent Topics

   Patent Help Pages

 

FAQs Patent Questions

Question:If two applications are filled for the same patentable invention the Office will determine who is entitled to the patent

Answer:
Occasionally two or more applications are filed by different inventors claiming substantially the same patentable invention. The patent can only be granted to one of them, and a proceeding known as an “interference” is instituted by the Office to determine who is the first inventor and entitled to the patent.

Question:Use of inventions more than one year prior to filling a patent will prohibit the granting of a patent

Answer:
Inventors are also reminded that any public use or sale in the United States or publication of the invention anywhere in the world more than one year prior to the filing of a patent application on that invention will prohibit the granting of an U. S. patent on it.

Question:A patent claim listing is required for preliminary amendments present on the filing date.

Answer:
Yes, a claim listing of every claim ever presented in the application is required, even for preliminary amendments present on the filing date of the application. The status identifier, (new), instead of (original), should be used for claims added by a preliminary amendment, even when the preliminary amendment is present on the filing date of the application and the first executed oath or declaration refers to the preliminary amendment.

Bookmark:           
Permalink:  http://S-0.ORG/72ZtZ5v


Did You Know?

There is a time limit on patent protection.

For applications filed on or after June 8, 1995, utility and plant patents are granted for a term which begins with the date of the grant and usually ends 20 years from the date you first applied for the patent subject to the payment of appropriate maintenance fees. Design patents last 14 years from the date you are granted the patent. Note: Patents in force on June 8 and patents issued thereafter on applications filed prior to June 8, 1995 automatically have a term that is the greater of the twenty year term discussed above or seventeen years from the patent grant.

Contact our Patent Professionals to ensure you complete the patent filing process correctly or for violation of your patent rights.

Euro Patents

Stronger Patent Protection For Exports

United States Patent And Trademark Office

Patent Service

USDA Licensing and Patents

Patent Code

 Helpful Patent Terms

Chapter I

Definition:
The first, mandatory phase under the Patent Cooperation Treaty that includes performance of an international-type search, issuance of an International Search Report.

Infringe

Definition:
To make, use or sell the patented item or process within the country covered by the patent, without permission or license from the patentee.

See More Terms >

 

• Patent Help Terms
• Site Map

• HP Settles Patent Litigation With Gateway


• WebSideStory Files Patent Infringement Lawsuit Against NetRatings


• Living Naturally Awarded Electronic Ordering Patent

 

Patent Topics Our Firm Can Help With

CPUs Patent

Communications Patent

Invalidate Patent

Expired Patent

Patent Analytics

Inventors Oath

Patent Pending

Artificial Intelligence Patent

Design

Single Claim Patent


Do you need legal Patent help? Contact our Patent Lawyers today!