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Commentaries
March 12th, 2016
Pre-Search Interview Program Kate S. Gaudry Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton LLP Compact prosecution—that is, reaching a final disposition as quickly as possible—while preserving quality of examination is a high priority for the USPTO and for applicants. Efficient prosecution requires that: • The examiner understand the invention. Accurate understanding allows the ...
Commentaries
March 12th, 2016
Comment Regarding USPTO Proposal 3: Clarity of Record Matthew T. Kitces Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton LLP An efficient and effective examination process is critical to enhancing patent quality in the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO or PTO). Clarity of the record is necessary to ensure everyone involved, including ...
Commentaries
March 12th, 2016
Perfect Examination The U.S. Patent Office has never aspired to provide perfect examination. Under the old law, the swearing-back of a publication issued within the pre-filing one-year grace period left unresolved whether the party originating that reference had publicly used the invention, or even published it, prior to the beginning ...
Commentaries
March 12th, 2016
On behalf of the United Inventors Association of America (“UIA”), the Glushko-Samuelson Intellectual Property Law Clinic of the American University Washington College of Law submitted a comment to the United States Patent and Trademark Office (“USPTO”) with respect to the proposed automated pre-examination search system (“APEx”) under Proposal 2 of ...
Uncategorized
March 12th, 2016
Charles Duan, Daniel Nazer, Ange Royall-Kahin, Vera Ranieri, and Julie P. Samuels In its February 5, 2015 Request for Comments, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office proposed to improve the quality of patents based on three “pillars”: excellence in work products, excellence in measuring quality, and excellence in customer service. ...
Commentaries
March 12th, 2016
By Dennis Crouch Quality patent examination demands that patent examiners first identify the closest and most applicable prior art. To that end, the USPTO has spent many millions of dollars to ensure that examiners have fingertip-access to extensive databases of prior art literature. For patent documents, the USPTO maintains a ...
Commentaries
March 12th, 2016
Jorge L. Contreras May 6, 2015 Prior to 2002, U.S. patent examiners were permitted to reject claims for obviousness based on “common knowledge and common sense of a person of ordinary skill in the art without any specific hint or suggestion in a particular reference.” But this practice was effectively ...
Commentaries
March 6th, 2016
By Bernard Chao In its recent “Request for Comments on Enhancing Patent Quality,” the Patent Office specifically asked for proposals targeted at clarifying the public record. This paper responds to that request by following up on a recommendation that I made in the Patently-O Blog last year. Specifically, I suggested ...
Commentaries
March 6th, 2016
A submission to the Berkeley Technical Law Journal In response to the USPTO’s Request for Comments on Enhancing Patent Quality Donald L. Champagne, Ph.D., P.E. The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine 4 May 2015 I have chosen the BTLJ’s format, which asks for a response to the following six ...
BTLJ Blog
March 1st, 2016
Apple is opposing an order by a federal magistrate judge to help the FBI unlock an iPhone belonging to one of the shooters of the San Bernardino attacks. A judge ordered the tech giant to break into the iPhone belonging to one of the San Bernardino shooters, Syed Rizwan Farook. ...