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Your USPTO

Your USPTO: Inventors Must Get Specific

A detailed specification, containing a description and other information illustrating the invention, is essential in the quest for a patent. When inventors submit a patent application, they must describe their invention in what is known as a specification. This contains a description and other information illustrating the invention.

Your USPTO

Your USPTO: Rejected Again. Now What?

In the November 2022 Inventors Digest, the USPTO told readers about inventors’ options if a patent examiner rejects a patent application. If a patent applicant receives a second or final rejection of his or her application, the applicant again has options.

Your USPTO

Your USPTO: What is a Patent Claim?

After your invention, your words in a patent application define the boundaries of your exclusive rights. You have just invented something. You believe it is new, useful, solves a problem, and most important: It is yours. You invested time, money, and energy into this invention.

Your USPTO

Your USPTO: News Flash – Udupa is New Commissioner for Patents

Vaishali Udupa, an intellectual property attorney, engineer, and top executive from Hewlett Packard Enterprise, joined the 13,000-person Department of Commerce agency as the new commissioner for patents on January 17. Before that, as an attorney in private practice, she participated in multiple IP trials and counseled clients with respect to their IP portfolios.

Your USPTO

Your USPTO: Rising to the COVID Challenge

It’s a privilege to announce the five winners of the USPTO’s Patents for Humanity: COVID-19 category competition. The awards recognize these innovators for their rapid response to the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic through game-changing technologies.

Your USPTO

Your USPTO: Discover About Discovery

To achieve fairness in any legal dispute, it is paramount for two parties to develop a fair record and be able to respond to arguments raised by the other side. In an America Invents Act (AIA) trial proceeding before the USPTO’s Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB), this is the goal of a process called discovery.

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