Recently, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office provided an additional tool for patent applicants to use in pursuit of foreign patent protection.
In 2015, the USPTO partnered with the Korean Intellectual Property Office, or...more
10/15/2020
/ Collaboration ,
FOIA ,
Foreign Patent Applications ,
Japan ,
KIPO ,
Korea ,
Patent Applicants ,
Patent Applications ,
Patent Examinations ,
Patents ,
Prior Art ,
USPTO ,
USPTO Pilot Program
Your company just invested to get an application on Track One prioritized examination. Now what? The Track One prioritized program does not guarantee an applicant to get an allowance — only a final disposition that can be a...more
Through the Enhanced Patent Quality Initiative, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office is rolling out programs to enhance overall patent quality. The latest program rolled out was the Post-Prosecution Pilot (P3) Program, which...more
12/4/2019
/ AFCP ,
Notice of Appeal ,
Patent Applications ,
Patent Prosecution ,
Patent Trial and Appeal Board ,
Patents ,
Post-Prosecution Pilot Program (P3) ,
Request for Continued Examination ,
Technology ,
USPTO ,
USPTO Pilot Program
Trade secret and patent laws both provide intellectual property protection but have conflicting requirements that can impose challenges for a company seeking to maximize its protection under each right.
Originally...more
9/5/2019
/ America Invents Act ,
Corporate Counsel ,
Disclosure Requirements ,
Inadvertent Disclosure ,
Intellectual Property Protection ,
Inventions ,
Patent Applications ,
Patent Ownership ,
Patent Prosecution ,
Patents ,
Trade Secrets ,
USPTO
Intellectual property probably isn’t high on the to-do list for most new nonprofits and business start-ups. There’s plenty enough to do with setting up an organization, paying bills, and serving customers and...more
8/7/2019
/ Foreign Patent Applications ,
Intellectual Property Protection ,
Inventions ,
IP License ,
Patent Applications ,
Patent Royalties ,
Patents ,
Prior Art ,
Startups ,
Trade Secrets ,
USPTO
Today, technology companies are conceptualizing new ideas and improving upon those ideas at a blistering pace. Previously, under the United States’ first-to-invent patent system, such companies could afford to wait until new...more