Patentability Search

Patentability Search

Will your invention suffice to merit a patent? Domain quest from the United States You may not be sufficient to evaluate the news of your drug, method or invention by the Patent and Trademark Office, the EPO, and other government organizations. A great deal of non-patent literature will influence your decision to seek a patent.

Therefore, a broad quest for patentability is a crucial step in defending the inventions. A patentability quest can help you find not only the granted and published applications of leading patent offices, but also any and all the prior-art invention issues reported on the Patent Cooperation Treaty ( PCT) of the United States, Europe, Asia, and in any of the 148 participating countries in the WIPO. An example will be to investigate the variety of relevant outlets such as the International Society of Optics and Photonics, journals of the Optical Society of America, the IEEE (one of the most important outlets of non-patent literature) and the other physical journals. The inventor of the modern optical system for the medical device.

On the stage of the idea: An initial search should be made which reveals the fundamental concepts of your invention. The new feature of the invention and its implementation are defined in this "allowable embodiment." The description, which may include drawings or schemes, should be described in such a way that it is reasonably reproducible by any skilled person in the area. A quest will cover all patent and non-patent publications, but there is no limit to publishing it. You are searching for information that will make it unlikely that the invention is patentable in its current form.

On the stage before filing: The ideation divulgation is the basis of the patent submission. An analysis of the results helps the patent attorney and the engineers to change the invention to increase the chances of a patent granted. A second, more comprehensive search uses a more detailed explanation to help you find quotes of any issues relevant to the state of the art that might be troublesome.

Your patent application can pass two tests in a patentability search: novelty and visibility. Most companies pass the news test, but many are tested "obviously"-whether another entity can combine existing prior art to create your invention. Will an electrical engineer, for example, have a camera installed in a cellular phone? The patent is usually rejected if the answer is yes.