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Patent it Yourself: Your Step-by-step Guide to Filing at the U.S. Patent Office (TWENTY FIRST). Cover Image Book Book

Patent it Yourself: Your Step-by-step Guide to Filing at the U.S. Patent Office (TWENTY FIRST).

Pressman, David. (Author).

Summary:

If you're sitting on a genius invention, don't wait to protect it! Nolo's best-selling guide to the patent application process is an all-in-one roadmap to putting your idea into motion and making sure your intellectual property remains your own. Let Nolo's patent experts walk you through the entire process one clear, detailed step at a time.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781413329971
  • ISBN: 1413329977
  • Physical Description: 576 pages ; 28 cm
  • Publisher: [Place of publication not identified] : NOLO, 20221025.

Available copies

  • 5 of 5 copies available at Missouri Evergreen. (Show)
  • 1 of 1 copy available at Cass County.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 5 total copies.
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Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Cass County Library-Northern Resource Center 346.7304 PRE 2022 (Text) 0002206015105 Adult Non-Fiction Available -

Syndetic Solutions - Table of Contents for ISBN Number 9781413329971
Patent It Yourself : Your Step-By-Step Guide to Filing at the U. S. Patent Office
Patent It Yourself : Your Step-By-Step Guide to Filing at the U. S. Patent Office
by Pressman, David; Blau, David E.
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Table of Contents

Patent It Yourself : Your Step-By-Step Guide to Filing at the U. S. Patent Office

SectionSection DescriptionPage Number
Your Legal Companionp. 1
A    You Don't Have to Use a Patent Attorneyp. 2
B    A Layperson Can Do a Quality jobp. 2
C    Using an Attorneyp. 2
D    Should You Do It Yourself?p. 2
E    How to Use Patent It Yourselfp. 4
1Introduction to Patents and Other Intellectual Propertyp. 5
A    Intellectual Property-The Big Picturep. 7
B    How Intellectual Property Law Provides Offensive Rights" (and Not Protection) to inventorsp. 9
C    Alternative and Supplementary Offensive Rightsp. 9
D    Patentsp. 10
E    Trademarksp. 19
F    Copyrightsp. 23
G    Trade Secretsp. 28
H    Unfair Competitionp. 32
I    Acquisition of Offensive Rights in Intellectual Property-Summary Chartp. 33
J    Summary of Legal Remedies for Misappropriation of Various Types of Intellectual Propertyp. 33
K    Invention Exploitation Flowchartp. 35
L    Summaryp. 35
2The Science and Magic of Inventingp. 37
A    What We Mean by "Invention"p. 38
B    Inventing by Problem Recognition and Solutionp. 39
C    Inventing by Magic (Accident and Flash of Genius)p. 42
D    Making Ramifications and improvements of Your Inventionp. 43
E    Solving Creativity Problemsp. 44
F    Contact Other Inventorsp. 47
G    Beware of the Novice Inventor's "PGL Syndrome"p. 47
H    Don't Bury Your Inventionp. 48
I    Summaryp. 48
3Documentation and the PPAp. 49
A    Introductionp. 51
B    Documentation Is Vital to the Invention Processp. 51
C    Documentation Has Legal Implicationsp. 52
D    Trade Secret Considerationsp. 52
E    Record Conception and the Building and Testing of Your Inventionp. 53
F    How to Record Your Inventionp. 54
G    Another Way to Record Conception or Building and Testing-The Invention Disclosurep. 60
H    Don't Sit on Your Invention After Documenting itp. 62
I    Don't Use a "Post Office Patent" to Document Your Inventionp. 62
J    The Provisional Patent Application-A Substitute for Building and Testing, With Some Disadvantagesp. 62
K    Summaryp. 83
4Will Your Invention Sell?p. 85
A    Why Evaluate Your Invention for Salability?p. 86
B    Start Small But Ramp Upp. 86
C    You Can't Be 100% Sure of Any Invention's Commercial Prospectsp. 87
D    Take Time to Do a Commercial Feasibility Evaluationp. 87
E    Check Your Marketability Conclusions Using the Techniques of Consultation and Researchp. 94
F    Now's the Time to Build and Test It (If Possible)p. 96
G    The Next Stepp. 98
H    Summaryp. 98
5Is It Patentable?p. 99
A    Patentability Compared to Commercial Viabilityp. 101
B    Legal Requirements for a Utility Patentp. 101
C    Requirement #1: Subject Matter Eligibilityp. 103
D    Requirement #2: Utilityp. 107
E    Requirement #3: Noveltyp. 110
F    Requirement #4: Nonobviousnessp. 115
G    The Patentability Flowchartp. 127
H    Don't Make Assumptions About the Lawp. 128
I    Summaryp. 128
6Search and You May Findp. 129
A    Why Make a Patentability Search?p. 131
B    When Not to Searchp. 133
C    The Two Ways to Make a Patentability Searchp. 134
D    The Quality of a Patent Search Can Varyp. 134
E    How to Hire a Patent Professionalp. 135
F    How to Prepare Your Searcherp. 137
G    Analyzing the Search Reportp. 137
H    The Scope of Patent Coveragep. 149
I    Do-It-Yourself (DIY) Computer Searchingp. 151
J    Classification Searchingp. 156
K    How To Computer Searchp. 167
L    Problems Searching Software and Business Inventionsp. 170
M    Summaryp. 170
7What Should I Do Next?p. 173
A    Fig. 7A-Invention Decision Chartp. 174
B    Drop It If You Don't See Commercial Potential (Chart Route 10-12-14-X)p. 174
C    File an Application and Sell or License It If You See Patentability (Chart Route 14-16-18-20-22-C)p. 176
D    Manufacture and Distribute Your Invention Yourself, Keeping It as a Trade Secret (Chart Route 20-32-D)p. 177
E    File Patent Application and Manufacture and Distribute Your Invention Yourself (Trade-Secret Protectable Invention) (Chart Route 20-32-34-E)p. 178
F    File Patent Application and Manufacture and Distribute Invention Yourself (Non-Trade-Secret Protectable Invention) (Chart Route 20-32-34-E)p. 179
G    Try to Sell Invention to Manufacturer Before Obtaining a "Regular" Patent Application (Chart Route 10-12-14-16-18-B)p. 179
H    If You Have Commercial Potential Without Patentability, License or Sell Your Invention to a Manufacturer Without Filing (Chart Route 16-24-26-28-30-B)p. 179
I    Make and Sell Your Invention Yourself Without a Utility Patent Application (Chart Route 16-24-26-28-30-A)p. 182
J    Summaryp. 182
8How to Draft the Specification and Initial Drawingsp. 183
A    Lay Inventors Can Do It!p. 185
B    What's Contained in a Patent Applicationp. 185
C    What Happens When Your Application Is Received by the PTOp. 187
D    Do Preliminary Work Before Preparing Your Patent Applicationp. 188
E    Flowchartp. 190
F    Your Written Description Must Comply With the Full Disclosure Rulesp. 190
G    Software, Computer-Related Inventions, and Business Methodsp. 194
H    First Prepare Sketches and Name Partsp. 196
I    Drafting the Specificationp. 200
J    Review Your Specification and Abstract Carefullyp. 214
K    Checklist for Your Patent Application Draftp. 215
L    Specification of Sample Patent Applicationp. 215
M    Summaryp. 215
9Now for the Legalese-The Claimsp. 233
A    What Are Claims?p. 235
B    The Law Regarding Claimsp. 236
C    Some Sample Claimsp. 239
D    Common Misconceptions Regarding Claimsp. 244
E    One Claim Should Be as Broad as Possiblep. 245
F    The Effect of Prior Art on Your Claimp. 246
G    Technical Requirements of Claimsp. 248
H    Drafting Your Main (Independent) Claimp. 254
I    Other Techniques in Claim Writingp. 258
J    Drafting Dependent Claimsp. 261
K    Drafting Additional Sets of Claimsp. 267
L    Checklist for Drafting Claimsp. 269
M    Summaryp. 269
10Finaling and Filing Your Applicationp. 275
A    The Drawingsp. 277
B    Finaling Your Specification for Paper Filingp. 289
C    Finaling Your Specification for EFS-Web Filingp. 308
D    File the Information Disclosure Statement Within Three Monthsp. 313
E    Assignmentsp. 318
F    Petitions to Make Special-Getting Your Application Examined Fasterp. 320
G    Filing a Design Patent Applicationp. 326
H    Summaryp. 329
11How to Market Your Inventionp. 331
A    Perseverance and Patience Are Essentialp. 333
B    Overview of Alternative Ways to Profit From Your Inventionp. 333
C    Be Ready to Demonstrate a Working Model of Your Invention to Potential Customersp. 337
D    Finding Prospective Manufacturers/Distributorsp. 338
E    "NIH" Syndromep. 339
F    The Waiver and Precautions in Signing Itp. 339
G    The Best Way to Present Your Invention to a Manufacturerp. 341
H    Presenting Your invention by Correspondencep. 343
I    Making an Agreement to Sell Your Inventionp. 343
J    Manufacturing and/or Distributing the invention Yourselfp. 343
K    Summaryp. 346
12Going Abroadp. 347
A    Don't File Abroad Unless Your Invention Has Very Good Prospects in Another Countryp. 348
B    Foreign Filing: The Basicsp. 349
C    The Paris Convention and the One-Year Foreign-Filing Rulep. 350
D    The World Trade Organization and TRIPSp. 350
E    European Patent Office/Europäisches Patentamt/Office Européen des Brevets (EPO)p. 350
F    The Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT)p. 354
G    Non-Convention Countriesp. 356
H    The Hague Agreementp. 356
I    The Early Foreign-Filing License or Mandatory Six-Month Delayp. 357
J    The Patent Laws of Other Countries Are Differentp. 357
K    Ways to File Abroadp. 358
L    Rescind Any Nonpublication Requestp. 363
M    Foreign-Filing Resourcesp. 364
N    Summaryp. 365
13Getting the PTO to Deliverp. 367
A    What Happens After Your Patent Application Is Filedp. 370
B    General Considerations During Patent Prosecutionp. 374
C    A Sample Office Actionp. 385
D    What to Do When You Receive an Office Action (OA)p. 391
E    Format for Amending the Specification and Claimsp. 413
F    Drafting the Remarksp. 415
G    Drawing Amendmentsp. 423
H    Typing and Filing the Amendmentp. 424
I    If Your Application Is Allowablep. 425
J    If Your First Amendment Doesn't Result in Allowancep. 427
K    Derivation Proceedingsp. 432
L    Defensive Publicationp. 433
M    If Your Application Claims More Than One Inventionp. 433
N    The Public May Cite Additional Prior Art Against Your Published Patent Applicationp. 434
O    NASA Declarationsp. 434
P    Design Patent Application Prosecutionp. 435
Q    What to Do If You Miss or Want to Extend a PTO Deadlinep. 435
R    Summaryp. 436
14Your Application Can Have Childrenp. 439
A    Available Supplemental Casesp. 440
B    Continuation Applicationp. 442
C    Request for Continued Examination (RCE)p. 444
D    Divisional Applicationsp. 446
E    Continuation-In-Part and Independent Applicationsp. 448
F    Reissue Applicationsp. 450
G    Defensive Publicationsp. 451
H    Substitute Applicationsp. 451
I    Double Patenting and Terminal Disclaimersp. 451
J    Summaryp. 452
15After Your Patent Issues: Use, Maintenance, and Infringementp. 453
A    Issue Notificationp. 455
B    Press Release and Marketingp. 455
C    Check Your Patent for Errorsp. 455
D    Patent Number Markingp. 456
E    Advertising Your Patent for Salep. 457
F    What Rights Does Your Patent Give You?p. 458
G    Be Wary of Offers to Provide Information About Your Patentp. 459
H    Maintenance Feesp. 462
I    Legal Options If You Discover an Infringement of Your Patentp. 463
J    What to Do About Patent Infringementp. 464
K    Product Clearance (Can I Legally Copy or Make That?)p. 470
L    How to Cite Prior Art and Other Information in Patent Applications and Patentsp. 473
M    The Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (CAFC)p. 475
N    Jury Trialsp. 475
O    Arbitrationp. 476
P    How Patent Rights Can Be Forfeitedp. 476
Q    Tax Deductions and Incomep. 476
R    Patent Litigation Financingp. 477
S    Summaryp. 477
16Ownership, Assignment, And Licensing Of Inventionsp. 479
A    Inventor, Applicant, Ownerp. 480
B    The Property Nature of Patentsp. 481
C    Who Can Apply for a Patent?p. 481
D    Joint Owners' Agreementp. 483
E    Special Issues Faced by the Employed Inventorp. 483
F    Assignment of Invention and Patent Rightsp. 486
G    Record Your Assignment With the PTOp. 488
H    Licensing of Inventions-An Overviewp. 488
I    Universal License Agreementp. 491
J    How Much Should You Get for Your Invention?p. 495
K    Summaryp. 496
Appendixes
1    Abbreviations Used in Patent It Yourselfp. 497
2    Resources: Government Publications, Patent Websites, and Books of Use and Interestp. 499
A        Government Publicationsp. 500
B        Patent Websitesp. 500
Glossariesp. 503
A        Glossary of Useful Technical Termsp. 504
B        Glossary of Legal Termsp. 510
4    Fee Schedulep. 517
G    Mail, Telephone, Fax, and Email Communications With the PTOp. 519
A        Patent and Trademark Office Mail Addressesp. 520
B        Patent and Trademark Office Telephones and Faxesp. 521
6    Quick-Reference Timing Chartp. 523
7    How to Use the Downloadable Forms on the Nolo Websitep. 525
A        Editing RTFsp. 526
B        List of Formsp. 526
Indexp. 529

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