Greenberg & Lieberman
Intellectual Property and Litigation

 Home Page  Contact Us  Terms Glossary  Patent FAQs
  

Patent Examples Such As " Patents And Inventors " Can Be Legally Complex. That's Why Our Patent Lawyers Are Ready To Help With:

• Patent Fee
• Patent Infringment
• Patent Pending

Need Patent Help? Contact Our Lawyers!

  
 
 
See what other customers have to say about us.

   Patent Topics

   Patent Help Pages

 
Step 3: Protect your idea in anticipation of receiving one or more patents

Once you know for sure that you are on sound footing in pursuing a patent, there are several things you can do to protect your interests as soon as possible.

Provisional Patent
You can file for a Provisional patent application quickly if it does not have claims. Claims are the legally operable part of a patent application, though other parts of the application (in particular the detailed description) may be used for purposes of claiming a priority date. The Provisional patent application has a lesser filing fee than the Utility patent application and will expire if it is not upgraded to a utility patent application within one (1) year of filing. The Provisional patent application does give the inventor(s) a priority date and patent pending status this alone is a goal for many inventors.

Document Disclosure
You can file a Document Disclosure to prove that you came up with an idea on a particular date. This disclosure, though it does not give the inventor a priority date as does the Provisional patent application, will allow the inventor a modicum of peace of mind as the PTO will hold on to the disclosure for two (2) years. The importance of this disclosure is the fact that in the US, the right to an invention lodges in the first person(s) to invent and not necessarily the first person(s) to file a patent application. The disclosure is only good so long as a patent application is diligently filed in the PTO, and the inventor makes no public disclosure of the invention.

Go to Step 4
File your patent application(s), track application
progress and keep you informed.

Bookmark:           
Permalink:  http://S-0.ORG/tjBtZ5Z


Did You Know?

Your invention may already be patented.

Public users may perform preliminary searches of patent information in a variety of formats including on-line, microfilm, and print at the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) Public Search Facility located in Alexandria, VA. State of the art computer workstations provide automated searching of patents issued from 1790 to the current week of issue. Full document text may be searched on U.S. patents issued since 1971 and OCR text from 1920 to 1970. U.S. patent images from 1790 to the present may be retrieved for viewing or printing. Some foreign patent documents are available.

Contact our Patent Professionals to ensure you complete the patent filing process correctly or for violation of your patent rights.

Patent Owner

Texas Patent Tutorials

Vehicle Data Patent

Pending Patents

Kentucky: Secretary of State - Patent Series Overview

:: DOER Renewable Energy Programs ::

 Helpful Patent Terms

Bio-sequence Listings

Definition:
A document that must be included only if a nucleotide or amino acid sequence is part of the invention.

Patent

Definition:
A property right granted by the Government of the United States of America to an inventor “to exclude others from making, using, offering for sale, or selling the invention throughout the United States.

See More Terms >

 

• Patent Help Terms
• Patent Steps
• Patent Progress
• Patent Forms
• Patent Links
• Patent News
• Terms Glossary
• Site Map

• Pardalis® Continues International Spread Of Patent Protection


• Bottomline Technologies Acquires Legal e-Billing Patent


• Via Licensing Announces Patent Licensing Terms For Interactive Television Services

 

Patent Topics Our Firm Can Help With

Patent Amendments

Agent Services

Surgical Patent

Apparel Patent

Printer Patent

Inventors Oath

License Patent

Shoe Patent

Patent Development

Novelty Patents


Do you need legal Patent help? Contact our Patent Lawyers today!