fundamentals of patent law and implications on optoelectronic devices andy pettit greg rosenthal

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Fundamentals of Patent Law and Implications on Optoelectronic Devices Andy Pettit Greg Rosenthal

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Fundamentals of Patent Law and Implications on Optoelectronic DevicesAndy PettitGreg Rosenthal

Introduction to Patent Law

Tips and Tricks

Example: Gould Laser Patents

Questions?

Among Apple’s 1,298 mobile patents, some individual technologies stand out as key

indicators of what the future of smartphone designs may hold.

Core Technology Areas of Apple Patents

Technology Area Number of Inventions (Patents)

iPhone, Smartphone General 416

Camera 279

User Interface 232

Image Display/Screen 149

Battery/Power Control 88

Antenna 75

Calendar 31

Contact Management 15

Voice Control 5

Fundamentals of Patent Law• The American patent system is authorized by Article 1,

Section 8(8) of the Constitution.“ … Congress shall have power … To promote the progress of science and

the useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries;”

• But how does Congress do that? See 35 U.S.C. § 154.“Every patent shall … grant to the patentee … the right to exclude others from making, using, offering for sale, or selling the invention throughout the United States or importing the invention into the United States …”

• A patent grants the inventor rights to exclude others from practicing his/her invention in exchange for public disclosure.

Patentable Subject Matter• So what is a patent? See 35 U.S.C. § 101.

“ Whoever invents or discovers any new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new and useful improvement thereof, may obtain a patent …”

• Patentable subject matter falls into four main categories: (1) process; (2) machine; (3) manufacture; or (4) composition of matter.

• Patentable subject matter must satisfy three main requirements: (1) New/Novel; (2) Useful/Utility; and (3) Non-obvious.

Patentable Subject Matter• The United States has two complementary methods to create

new law: Statutory Law and Common Law.▫ Common Law is created by courts in published opinions.

Chakrabarty: Patentable subject matter includes “… anything under the sun that is made by man.”

Mayo v. Prometheus: “… laws of nature, natural phenomena, and abstract ideas are not patentable.”

• When filing an application, the inventor must clearly indicate what technology is being “claimed.” An inventor cannot claim discoveries of natural phenomena but may be able to claim specific implementations of those phenomena.

Patentability Requirements1. Novelty

▫ Is your invention different from what is already known to the public?

2. Utility▫ Is your invention capable of use and does it provide some

identifiable benefit?

3. Non-obviousness ▫ Is the invention an adequate distance beyond or above the state

of the art?▫ Would a “person having ordinary skill in the art” know how to

solve the problem at which the invention is directed?

Tips and Tricks

1. Use a lab notebook.A. Have detailed descriptions and dates.B. Have a colleague or supervisor review and sign (occasionally).

2. Be aware of the AIA.A. The U.S. has transitioned to a first-to-file system; if another inventor files before

you all of your rights will be lost.

3. Think about patentability and disclosure.A. If you plan on presenting or publishing, use caution.B. Non-disclosure agreements (NDAs) are a good option.C. Public disclosure of your invention can prevent you from getting a patent.

4. Do a basic web search on your invention.A. Don’t invest the money required if someone else has already developed the same

idea.

Tips and Tricks

5. Consider a provisional patent.A. Provisional patents retain an earlier filing date, but do not provide protection.B. Provisionals preserve rights without a huge financial commitment.C. A provisional costs ~$130, a full utility application written by a firm will cost

~$10,000.

6. But have a patent agent or attorney draft the application. A. Knowing the technology does not (necessarily) qualify an inventor to write a

patent application; drafting claims is an art.

7. Don’t sell or offer to sell your invention.8. Don’t lie about your invention.

A. Lies about disclosure or conception dates will destroy all patent rights.

9. Consider the possibility of joint inventorship.A. Any individual who contributed at least one patentable idea is a co-inventor.

Tips and Tricks

10. Remember that patents are territorial.A. A U.S. patent will only protect inventor rights within the United States (with some

exceptions).B. Any inventor who is interested in filing in other countries must do so within 12

months.

Deconstructing a Patent

- Title- Inventor- Issuance Number- Issuance Date- Filing Date- References- Abstract- Figures- Description- Claims

Begin study of infrared laser

1957

Abandoned infrared to

concentrate on visible light

Late 1957

Filed patent application on

“optical maser”

July, 1958

Began working on “laser”

November, 1957

Published the term LASER at a

conference

1959

Patent filed

April, 1959

Patent rejected

1960

Patent granted

March, 1960

Example: Gould Laser PatentTownes/Schawlow: Bell Labs

Gordon Gould

• Gould filed suit claiming that he was the first inventor based on 1957 notebook.

• A few major problems:▫ The notebook did not sufficiently

describe the lasing process.▫ The notebook lacked any dates.

• Gould ultimately lost the battle over the original laser patent.

So who is the inventor?

• BUT Gould continued to file continuation applications linked back to his original (undisclosed application).

• Gould won a number of patent suits beginning in 1977 and continuing through 1987.

• By this time, the laser had become widely adopted.

• Gould’s patents, despite covering limited applications of laser technology, were worth tens of millions of dollars.

So who is the inventor?