On August 21, 2007, the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) announced significant changes to the rules of practice in patent cases. The changes include the following:
limiting the number of continuation (or continuation-in-part) applications that applicants may file per invention without justification to only two;
tightening the definitions of continuation and divisional applications and restricting the kinds of claims that can be pursued in divisional applications;
limiting requests for continued examination (RCEs) to one without justification;
limiting the number of claims per application to 5 independent claims or more than 25 total claims (the 5/25 rule), unless an examination support document (ESD)
...would require the patent attorney to review each of the documents thoroughly before submitting it to the Patent Office. More importantly, every statement or explanation provided to the Patent Office could constitute potential ammunition that a competitor could use defeat ...
redefining the relationship between individual applications in a patent application portfolio so that if one or more applications have at least one patentably indistinct claim, their claims are combined for purposes of the 5/25 rule; and increasing the duty of disclosure.
Changing Continuation Practice
The general right to claim priority to a nonprovisional application through an unlimited chain of copendencies by 35 U.S.C. 120 appears to be abolished. The new rules limit the number of continuation (or continuation-in-part) applications that applicants may file per application without justification to only two. Additional continuation or continuation-in-part (CIP) applications require justification. The justification for additional continuation or CIP filings is made by
...license through a court s ruling in litigation involving the technology in question. Is there a writing? As with all contracts, a writing is not absolutely required for a valid, enforceable bargain. In the knowledge-driven economy today, of course, most ...
Beyond the above mentioned two continuations, applications pending prior to August 21, 2007 in which two continuation or continuation-in-part applications have already been filed are allowed to have one additional continuation application filed without justification. This additional continuation application may be filed before or after November 1, 2007.
Changing Divisional Practice
Divisional applications may only be filed to non-elected groups of claims created when an Examiner finally restricts claims of an application. A properly filed divisional may also have two additional continuation applications filed without a justification; however, CIP applications claiming priority to a divisional application are not permitted. Further, the new rules
...and approved by the USPTO can use the symbol. Since the application process can take many months to complete, use the TM or SM symbol in the meantime to establish your intention to use the mark as a trademark. Make ...
The new rules also state that any continuing application that contains claims previously examined in any prior-filed application is not a proper divisional application. This has implications in applications in which the USPTO makes an election of species requirement. In such applications, generic claims must be prosecuted in the initial application or its two continuation or continuation-in-part applications, including exhaustion of any available appeals, before even filing a divisional
...or offer for sale, such actions could potentially defeat your priority for the purposes of filing in some foreign countries. Thus, it is prudent to get your U.S. patent application on file before introducing your product. This article, and/or the ...
Limiting the Number of RCEs
Under the previous rules, an unlimited number of RCEs were allowed to be filed. Under the new rules, only one RCE may be filed per application and its continuation applications without justification. A proper justification requires a showing that any amendments, arguments or evidence could not have been filed earlier. Each divisional application and its accompanying continuation applications, if any, are also entitled to one RCE without justification.
Limiting a Number of Claims per Invention
...getting trigger happy for business method patents, the USPTO did provide guidelines that should be met. The patent should either transform an article or physical object to a different state or thing, or, the claim method should produce a useful, ...
The new rules require a filing of an examination support document whenever an application contains or is amended to contain more than 5 independent claims or more than 25 total claims. The count of claims includes all of the claims in any other copending application with common ownership having at least one patentably indistinct claim.
An examination support document requires the following:
a listing of the reference or references deemed most closely related to the subject matter of each of the claims;
an identification of all of the limitations of each of the claims (whether in independent or dependent form) that are disclosed by the reference;
a detailed
...filing an application for Patent, Copyright or Trademark? You can conduct a free search on the USPTO website using the Trademark Electronic Search System (TESS) at: [http://tess2.uspto.gov/bin/gate.exe?f=login&p_lang=English&p_d=trmk. ]TESS You can also conduct a trademark search at the Trademark Public Search ...
a showing of where each limitation of each of the claims (whether in independent or dependent form) finds support under the first paragraph of 35 U.S.C. 112 in the written description of the specification.
Complying with these requirements will likely be very expensive for applicants. It is also quite likely that statements made in an ESD will be extensively scrutinized by patent infringement defendants in any patent issuing with an ESD in its file history. Therefore, an ESD will not be recommended in most, if not all applications. The new rules thus effectively limit the number of claims
...domain. If it is, you should register it immediately. If not, you can either change your business name again or focus on a domain name incorporating your service or product instead of the business name. Avoiding Problems You business could ...
count a claim depending on a claim of a different statutory type as independent;
count all of the claims in copending applications containing patentably indistinct claims (including applications having a continuity relationship), but not in issued patents containing patentably indistinct claims, in determining whether each such application contains more than five independent claims or more than twenty-five total claims;
not count claims withdrawn from consideration as drawn to a nonelected invention or inventions, unless they are later reinstated or rejoined; and
count multiple dependent
...good for business. Given the prospect of litigation or the fallout from firing a customer, ISPs and other service providers would rather terminate a contract then face litigation. An unscrupulous brand owner could take advantage of this by sending cease ...
Importantly, the presence of even one patentably indistinct claim in two applications sharing the same ownership will cause the two applications to be treated as one application under the 5/25 rule. Thus, the two applications will be limited to 5 independent claims and/or 25 total claims. Further, applications with the same ownership, at least one common inventor, the same effective filing date and overlapping disclosure (in a sense defined precisely in the rules) will be subject to a rebuttable presumption that their claims are patentably indistinct. The presumption must be overcome to prevent the multiple applications being treated as one under the 5/25 rule.
Requiring Disclosure of Certain Copending
...should initiate rectification proceedings if an identical or deceptively similar trademark is registered. Use Of Trademarks In Foreign Countries Trademark rights are granted on a country-by-country basis. An Indian registration provides protection only in India and its territories. If the ...
The rules require the USPTO to be informed of applications with effective filing dates within two months of each other that have the same ownership, and one inventor in common. The rules provide that one or more other nonprovisional applications meeting the above conditions must be disclosed to the USPTO within:
(1) Four months from the actual filing date of a nonprovisional application filed under 35 U.S.C. 111(a);
(2) Four months from the date on which the national stage commenced under 35 U.S.C. 371(b) or (f) in a nonprovisional application entering the national stage from an international application under 35 U.S.C. 371; or
(3) Two months from the mailing date of the initial filing receipt in the other
...date or offer date. Take the case of the DNA patent where the company obtained a patent for DNA for detecting gonorrheae. The company that developed the DNA sent out a sample of it to its agreement partner and received ...
These deadlines cannot be extended. It is unclear what sanctions exist for failure to identify these other applications, other than it provides a basis for which the USPTO may make final a second office action that includes a new double patenting rejection.
Effective Date and Compliance Date
The effective date for these new rules is November 1, 2007. Most of the rules, however, have implications for currently pending applications and any new applications that may be filed before November 1, 2007.
The USPTO has also set a compliance date of February 1, 2008 for its newly required disclosures of related applications for all pending applications. Furthermore, for applications
...logo and name in order to make sure that it is unique. There is a step-by-step process for this which the USPTO will use to examine your business trademark. There of course is also certain rules that they will apply ...
Action Needed Prior to November 1, 2007
The rules changes create one instance in which an additional action must be taken prior to November 1, 2007. For pending applications in which an RCE has been filed previously, only one RCE may be filed for each application after November 1, 2007 without a justification. This one RCE, without justification, may only be used once in each application family. Thus, for an application
...you finally receive correspondence accepting your application, you will need to wait another month for it to be published and then become approved. If the trademark office wants clarification on your application, you will have thirty to sixty days to ...
Consequences for Patent Application Filing Strategies
The new rules change the number of claims that can be filed in a given patent application. Now, only 5 independent claims and/or 25 total claims may be filed unless an examination support document is filed along with the application. This rule cannot be circumvented by filing multiple patent applications claiming the
...invention you want to patent has already been patented. After it has been established that your invention has never received a patent for an invention of this sort, it is now time to either consult a patent lawyer if you ...
While only five independent and twenty-five total claims will be examined in an application, there is one way to file more than 5/25 claims initially in an application without filing an examination support document. In order to file with more than the 5/25 limit, the application must be filed with a suggested restriction requirement, suggesting to the examiner how the claims may be divided so that only groups of claims that comply with the 5/25 limit are examined in any one application. The applicant also selects the
...run against an international database and approved or rejected. The cost for filing the international application is $100 per class you wish the mark to apply to, although there are exceptions where $150 is the cost. If approved, the registration ...
Consequences in Patent Prosecution
The changes to the patent rules will make it prudent to present all necessary evidence, declarations and argument in response to the first substantive office action. Under the previous rules, which provided unlimited RCE submissions, applicants could attempt to overcome claim rejections initially by using only argument, or claim amendment, and then relying on multiple RCEs if necessary if more
...USPTO registration examination, with a score of 70% or better. To participate in this examination, a law degree is not a must, but a bachelor's degree in science is essential. A lawyer who has passed the USPTO examination and is ...
Appeal practice will likely become much more common under the new rules. Appeal allows the ruling of the examiner to be reviewed by the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences (BPAI) at the USPTO. Previously, most practitioners avoided the appeal process because it could take several years for the BPAI to decide an appeal. The appeal
...system itself. It is the third step where the Macrossan Appeal falls down. The contribution concerns solely excluded subject matter. It is for both a business method and a computer program. Nothing more. It was therefore not necessary for the ...
The USPTO has received numerous complaints about the extensive delays in the appeal process. In response, they have reduced the appeal docket so that cases may proceed through appeal more quickly. Patent term adjustment is also available so that at least some of the time lost in appeal will be regained as additional patent term. Moreover, the USPTO has added a pre-appeal process in
...is the job of the patent attorney to guide the client on how to bring about modifications in order to get a patent. Patent searches done by attorneys can be basic or comprehensive. A basic search involves searching within the ...
Rules Will Require Greater Monitoring of the Patent Portfolio
The new rules require that if two patent applications with the same ownership have patentably indistinct claims, the applications will be treated as one application under the 5/25 rule. Thus, both applications must have 5 independent and/or 25 total claims in this situation. Indeed, if the applications have the same effective filing date, overlapping disclosure, one identical inventor, and the same ownership, there is a rebuttable presumption that the claims of the two applications are indistinct. In order to prevent this from happening, and possibly
...result, the phrase can be trademarked. Perhaps the most unique trademark is one for sound. Certain sounds are associated with products or services and thus can be trademarked. A classic example is the bonging noise used on the Law and ...
Pending applications should be reviewed in order to ensure that the claims of the applications are patentably distinct and to determine whether there are applications with the same ownership, a common inventor, and priority dates within two months of each other. These applications should be brought to the attention of the USPTO in both applications. The USPTO must be informed of the existence of such applications after November 1, 2007, but no later than February 1, 2008.
Dr.Joseph Mani, Senior Partner of http://www.pmgip.com
...system itself. It is the third step where the Macrossan Appeal falls down. The contribution concerns solely excluded subject matter. It is for both a business method and a computer program. Nothing more. It was therefore not necessary for the ...














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