What Is a Provisional Patent Application?

A Provisional Patent legally establishes the date from which an inventor is entitled patent protection to his or her idea (known as the ‘priority date’) and allows the inventor to describe the idea as “Patent Pending.” Filing a provisional application for patent (commonly known as a Provisional Patent) is the first step in securing patent rights…

What Happens If Not All of the Inventors Agree on the Assignment?

A joint-inventor (that is, one inventor of a group of inventors of a patent) who does not assign his patent rights remains in full possession of those rights. A person or entity that does not receive rights to the patent from every inventor is considered as a partial assignee. The partial assignee must share his/her…

What Name and Address Should I List in My Correspondence?

Please submit the contact information of the individual who is designated as the contact point for: 1.The Patent Attorney Consultation that will follow your submission, 2.The Staff Attorneys and Customer Service Representatives, and 3.All correspondence from the United States Patent and Trademark Office regarding the Provisional Patent. If you are interested in more detail related…

How Do Joint Inventors Share Patent Rights?

Each inventor has the full spectrum of patent rights to his/her claimed invention. This means that each inventor can separately assign and license the patent without the other’s permission. However, each inventor must account for and share all the profits he has earned from the license of a patent with the other inventors. When multiple…

What Is a Patentability Opinion?

A Patentability Opinion provides you a Patent Attorney’s professional determination of the likelihood your idea, invention, or invention will be granted patent. The Patent Attorney first performs a Patent Search and then applies legal standards and case law for Patentability to determine if your innovation may be patentable in view of the patent search results….

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