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Tuesday, 05/13/2025

Intellectual Property

  1. Patents

    1. Invention to Patent 101 - Everything You Need to Know to Get Started
    2. Intellectual Property Basics of the New Innovator
    3. Public disclosure
    4. Prior art
    5. Provisional Applications
    6. The Patent
    7. The Process of Patent Application Examination at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office
    8. Faculty/Principal Investigators
    9. SBIR and STTR Stakeholders
    10. Patent Application Examination at the USPTO
    11. International Patent Applications
    12. Searching for Prior Art
  2. Trademarks

    1. Trademarks in the US
    2. The International Trademark Portfolio
  3. Copyright

  4. Commercialization

    1. Business Development
    2. Valuation
    3. Licensing
    4. Assignment
    5. Deciding between Assignment or Licensing
    6. Freedom to Operate
    7. Infringement

Intellectual Property (IP) Rights

It is necessary to protect your ideas, products, and product names in today's knowledge economy. Following sections cover the most common IP rights that are of interest to inventors and small businesses.

IP rights that that are most important to inventors and small businesses are: Patents, Trademark and Copyrights.

Patents

A patent image of external link icon is an exclusive right granted for an invention, which is a product or a process that provides, in general, a new way of doing something, or offers a new technical solution to a problem.

Eureka! you have an invention and you are thinking of protecting intellectual property associated with that invention. Following links walk you through different aspects associated with the process of applying for and securing patent protection for your invention.

Invention to Patent 101 - Everything You Need to Know to Get Started. image of external link icon

Following is a description provided by Gene Quinn about the above link: "This page and website contain detailed information to help inventors on the road from invention to patent... Below are a sampling of inventor help links to specific patent and invention related information throughout our website. As you read these articles you will invariably come across links to other articles of interest, which you can and really should read. While I believe inventors should take the time to read all of the pages throughout IPWatchdog.com, I have gone through the IPWatchdog.com archives and created several "reading assignments," which will hopefully make the task of figuring out where to start more manageable, and which will help get you started. I recommend you do them in this order (i.e., starting with Reading Assignment 1), but if you find something that you just need to know then by all means jump ahead. You can also visit our Inventor Education Archive as well".

Below is a link for IP related content addressing needs of new innovators.

Intellectual Property - Basics of the New Innovator image of external link icon

Public disclosure

What constitutes public disclosure? image of external link icon

Prior art. image of external link icon

Provisional Applications

Provisional Patent Applications: Advantages and Limitations image of external link icon

The Patent. image of external link icon

The Process of Patent Application Examination at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. image of external link icon

The Process: Segment 1: The Role of Your Tech Transfer Office image of external link icon

The Process: Segment 2: Stages and Timelines image of external link icon

The Process: Segment 3: Marketing, Negotiating, and Managing image of external link icon

The Process: Segment 4: Policies and Investigator Responsibilities image of external link icon

Intellectual Property Considerations for NCAI Applicants image of external link icon

Faculty/Principal Investigators

Ten Most Common Types of Mistakes Made by Faculty PIs with their IP image of external link icon

SBIR and STTR Stakeholders

Basic US Patent Practice for the SBIR-STTR Stakeholders

Intermediate / Advanced US Patent Practice for the SBIR-STTR Stakeholders

Patent Application Examination at the USPTO

A series of six presentations were created by Boston Biomedical Innovation Center (B-BIC) to explain the Process of Patent Application Examination at the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

Patent Application Examination at the USPTO: Segment 1: Patent Applications: Types and Terminology image of external link icon

Patent Application Examination at the USPTO: Segment 2: Receiving and Sorting Patent Applications image of external link icon

Patent Application Examination at the USPTO: Segment 3: The Role of the USPTO Examiner image of external link icon

Patent Application Examination at the USPTO: Segment 4: The Patent Application Examination Process image of external link icon

Patent Application Examination at the USPTO: Segment 5: A Patent Application Case History: Claim Amendments image of external link icon

Patent Application Examination at the USPTO: Segment 6: A Patent Application Case History: A USPTO Interview image of external link icon

International Patent Applications

Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT) applications are used as starting point if inventor is interested in pursuing patent protection in multiple countries which are members of PCT. The PCT simplifies and reduces the cost of obtaining international patent protection and facilitates public access to a wealth of technical information.

Differences between the US and European patent laws that dictate the strategies used for filing PCT applications.

Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT) and Hague Strategies for Filing Abroad

Differences between US and European Patent Laws that Could Cost You and Your Startup image of external link icon

Decision to file PCT has been made, some strategies for delaying costs and maximizing the value of your Intellectual Property Worldwide image of external link icon are provided that are useful for small business.

Searching for Prior Art

Ability to search for and identify relevant prior art is crucial for determining the scope of the claims that should be presented in a patent application. Following series of presentations provides suggestions to inventors how to search for prior art using Google search engine from public databases.

How to Break Google Filter Bubble

Understand Contents Pros and Cons of Google Patents

Searching CPC Codes in Google Patents

Techniques Best Suited to Search Different Databases Using Google

Trademarks

A trademark image of external link icon is a sign capable of distinguishing the goods or services of one enterprise from those of other enterprises. Trademarks are protected by intellectual property rights.

Trademarks in the US

At the national/regional level, trademark protection can be obtained through registration, by filing an application for registration with the national/regional trademark office and paying the required fees.

Trademarks in the U.S.

Making Your Mark: The Use and Care if Trademark image of external link icon

The International Trademark Portfolio

At the international level, you have two options: either you can file a trademark application with the trademark office of each country in which you are seeking protection, or you can use WIPO's Madrid System.

The International Trademark Portfolio.

Copyright

Copyright image of external link icon (or author's right) is a legal term used to describe the rights that creators have over their literary and artistic works. Works covered by copyright range from books, music, paintings, sculpture, and films, to computer programs, databases, advertisements, maps, and technical drawings. Exhaustive lists of works covered by copyright are usually not to be found in legislation.

Commercialization

Business Development

Business development and IP (part of Drug Discovery module) image of external link icon

Valuation

Commercialization Strategies: Segment 1: Elements of a Value Proposition image of external link icon

Transforming Patent Quality into Patent Value image of external link icon : An Ex Ante Theory of Patent Valuation: Maayan Perel*

Licensing

Licensing image of external link icon involves a legal written contract where you the owner of the patent are the licensor, who grants rights to your patent to a licensee, the person that wants to license your patent. Those rights can include: the right to use your invention, or copy and sell your invention.

Assignment

Assignment is the irrevocable and permanent sale and transfer of ownership of a patent by the assignor (that's you) to the assignee. Assignment means that you will no longer ever have any rights to your patent. Typically, it's a one-time lump sum total sale of your patent.

Deciding between Assignment or Licensing

Factors Influencing the Choice to License a Patent or to Assign image of external link icon it: Royalties should be the main consideration when deciding between licensing or assignment. If you choose to receive royalties, choose licensing. If you want the capital that the best lump sum payment will bring you choose assignment. Are you in debt from your invention project? Would the money advance other projects and erase your debts?

Or is your invention ready for commercialization, ready to make and sell, and you have determined that sales would be good and that you want royalties, then licensing is probably the better choice for you.

Commercialization Strategies: Segment 2: Factors that Influence Strategy image of external link icon

Commercialization Strategies: Segment 3: The Final Frontier: Finding Commercialization Partners image of external link icon

Freedom to Operate

Freedom to Operate. image of external link icon

Infringement

Patent infringement image of external link icon is the unauthorized use of your property!
When a person or business uses your patent, they trespass on your property - your intellectual property. They take from you the revenue your patent produces for them, and would have produced for you. Under law, you have the right to pursue a civil remedy against a perpetrator of patent infringement, but a patent infringement lawsuit is often a David-versus-Goliath struggle. The patent infringement plaintiff is often an individual or a small business, while the patent infringement defendant is a large, well-financed corporation!

Following webinars provide an overview of the patent litigation process both from a patent owner perspective and an accused infringer perspective. What constitutes patent infringement? What to do when confronted with a demand letter that threatens a patent lawsuit? What options are available to challenge and validate U.S. patents at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and in the U.S. federal court system. What roles do subject matter experts play in patent lawsuits.

Patent Litigation: Basics, Defense, and Offense - Part 1 image of external link icon

Patent Litigation: Basics, Defense, and Offense - Part 2 image of external link icon

Last Updated October 2017



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This graphic notice (image of external link iconExternal Web Site Policy) means that you are leaving the NCAI-REACH Program website.

This external link provides additional information that is consistent with the intended purpose of this site.

NIH cannot attest to the accuracy of a non-federal site.

Linking to a non-federal site does not constitute an endorsement by NIH or any of its employees of the sponsors or the information and products presented on the site.

You will be subject to the destination site's privacy policy when you follow the link.