USPTO Roadshow: The Patent Examination Process

The Patent Trademark Resource Center and the Franklin Pierce Center for Intellectual property hosted Mindy Bickel, Associate Commissioner for Innovation Development at the USPTO. She spoke as part of her national tour on The Patent Examination Process. Since becoming a PTRC we have each year had the proud opportunity to host several visits by the USPTO.
September 19, 2016
law.unh.edu

Пікірлер: 15

  • @nevaholloway1093
    @nevaholloway10933 жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much. I didn't understand how important how important claims were or that we can talk to the examiner. Also I didn't know once a patent is issued that we must continue to pay fees. Thank you for your time and the explanation.

  • @nicolettereece8818
    @nicolettereece88184 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this

  • @joephantom8288
    @joephantom82882 жыл бұрын

    So why do you make it so complicated the patent process?

  • @gregorysalter6226
    @gregorysalter62263 жыл бұрын

    Independent inventor. That's what I'm tryin rn

  • @joephantom8288
    @joephantom82882 жыл бұрын

    Yeah I would challenge the time limit where the patent office eats up for years of your protection time period from the time you get the patent granted is the time that your clock should start. And I will challenge that in court!

  • @puremindssyria1366
    @puremindssyria13667 жыл бұрын

    is that just for american citizens?

  • @paperbeen

    @paperbeen

    5 жыл бұрын

    no you can file patent application with USPTO regardless of your citizenship. Same with any other Patent Office in any country

  • @onekerri1

    @onekerri1

    3 жыл бұрын

    That would be a capital A.

  • @joephantom8288
    @joephantom82882 жыл бұрын

    So why don't you just have you examined do a patent search once they do not find any prior art whatever rules stipulated. It appears to me that the patent office is making patents complicated and hard to get for the purpose of making money through fee's

  • @onekerri1
    @onekerri14 жыл бұрын

    Given the rampant corruption within the USPTO that I know now, this woman's animosity toward inventors and entrepreneurs, glows louder than neon signs.

  • @gregorysalter6226

    @gregorysalter6226

    3 жыл бұрын

    Whats corruption u talking about?

  • @Sadboy80629
    @Sadboy806292 жыл бұрын

    Let's face it, having patents in your name is the biggest clout pass to be cocky as hell. You can pick up a dictionary and find any patent and revise it to add a worse alternate and boom, it's novel because it's worse than the original imo. You go to court right for a traffic ticket and you agrue that you were just testing out a patent related to physics and that your just doing your job, it goes to jury trial and jury gets to see your patent ,jury goes like wow very smart man he could be Albert Einstein gotta let this guy not guilty .

  • @paperbeen
    @paperbeen5 жыл бұрын

    The problem with USPTO and generally current US patent system that enforcement is in hand of inventor himself and mostly unaffordable. Theoretical.

  • @Mumsdayward
    @Mumsdayward2 жыл бұрын

    What's horrible is the "poor man's patent". Try to go that route and you find out someone at the post office opens your mail and copies the contents. Then your hotel room gets broken into and the receipt stolen and local police refuse to even file a report. Call the uspoig and get the runaround until escalation. Which they just refer you right back to the same office that defrauded you. Then you see in the news that the patent office's system gets shut down for a "vulnerability"... yeah, the process is definitely not something worthwhile to anyone seeking a patent