Patent Attorney Budget

Don’t let a tight budget stop you from patenting your invention

 

It’s tough in this economy to justify spending money on anything but the essentials. If you’re out of work, there is no telling when you will find your next job or how long your savings will last. If you’re working, there is no guarantee that you will still have your job 6 months from now. But what if you have an invention? Should you just wait until the economic outlook is all clear before moving forward to protect your invention with a patent?

Filing a patent application can be expensive. Patent attorneys can charge $8,000 or more just to file a patent application. Even less expensive patent attorneys typically charge $4,000 or more just to file a patent application.

But what if you don’t file a patent application for your invention? By the time the economy turns around and you decide to apply for a patent for your invention, it may be too late.

First, there are bar dates in the United States which prevent you from applying for a patent application if you have publicly disclosed or publicly used, sold or offered for sale, or published your invention more than one year before filing a patent application. Most foreign countries have even stricter standards, barring you from applying for a patent at all if you have publicly disclosed your invention prior to filing a patent application.

Your impulse reaction might be to just keep your invention secret. But what if someone else comes up with your idea? The United States is still a first-to-invent scenario under the U.S. Patent Laws. That means even if someone else files a patent application before you for the same invention, you may still be declared the inventor if you can document an earlier date of invention. But this only goes so far.

[UPDATE – The United States is now a First-To-File – whoever files their patent application first!]

If someone else comes up with your idea and publicly discloses your invention, for example by selling the product on the Internet, more than one year before you file your patent application, then the bar dates will prevent you from receiving patent protection for your invention. In other words, your patent application will be rejected.

The longer you wait to file a patent application for your invention, the higher risk you run that you will not be able to get a patent issued for your invention. It’s best to talk to a patent attorney as soon as possible.

Trenner Law Firm offers low, flat-fee pricing for most patent services. Visit Trenner Law Firm today to learn more and find a patent attorney to help you!

Inventors & Patent Laws

Inventors & Patent Laws

Inventorship is a legal determination based on the patent laws (discussed below) and a technical analysis of the claims in a patent application.

The threshold question in determining inventorship is who conceived of the invention. Unless a person contributes to the conception of the invention, he or she is not an inventor. The inventor is not required to reduce the invention to practice.

Conception is the formation in the inventor’s mind of a definite and permanent idea of the complete and operating invention as it is to be applied in practice. Conception requires a contemporaneous recognition and appreciation of the invention.

Conception is established when the invention is made sufficiently clear to enable one skilled in the art to reduce it to practice without the extensive experimentation to make the invention operative.

Merely hoping that something will work does not establish conception, since there is not a definite understanding or a reasonable expectation that the invention will work.

An inventor may consider and adopt ideas, suggestions and materials derived from many sources. Examples include a suggestion from an employee, a hired consultant or a friend even if the adopted material proves to be the key that unlocks the problem so long as the inventor “maintains intellectual domination of the work of making the invention down to the successful testing, selecting or rejecting.

But simply suggesting an idea of a result to be accomplished, rather than the means of accomplishing it, does not make someone a co-inventor.

A coinventor need not make a contribution to every claim of a patent. A contribution to one claim is enough. Inventors may apply for a patent jointly even though (1) they did not physically work together or at the same time, (2) each did not make the same type or amount of contribution, or (3) each did not make a contribution to the subject matter of every claim of the patent. 35 U.S.C. 116.

It is important to work with a qualified patent attorney in order to make a proper determination of inventorship. Failing to name all of the inventors on a patent application can have serious legal consequences.

Patent Attorney Colorado

Looking for a patent attorney? Colorado patent attorney Mark Trenner has over 10 years of experience in Colorado & across the country.

 

Technical Patent Experience

Mark Trenner has worked on hundreds of patent applications during his career, including writing patent applications and prosecuting patent applications to issuance. Mark has experience in a wide variety of technology areas.

Click on any of these links to learn more about a particular area.

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Electronics, Networks, and Telecommunications

Mark Trenner has a BS Electrical Engineering and has worked extensively in this technology area.

Computer and Mobile Device Hardware and Software Patents

Mark Trenner has a BS Electrical Engineering and has worked extensively in this technology area.

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Patents for Mechanical Devices

Mark Trenner has a MS Civil Engineering and has worked extensively in this technology area.

Energy & Environmental Patents

Mark Trenner has a BS Environmental Engineering and his graduate work emphasized environmental engineering. Mark Trenner was also senior in-house patent counsel for the US Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory for 4 years.

Chemistry and Chemical Processes Patents

Mark Trenner has a BS Environmental Engineering and both his undergraduate and graduate work emphasized chemistry, including coursework in organic and physical chemistry. Mark Trenner was also senior in-house patent counsel for the US Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory for 4 years.

Bio-technology and Medical Patents

Mark Trenner has a BS Environmental Engineering and both his undergraduate and graduate work included biology and biological systems. Mark Trenner was also senior in-house patent counsel for the US Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory for 4 years, and has done work for St. Jude Medical.