Intellectual Property Overview
Sanjiv Chokshi, Esq.
Assistant General Counsel For
Patents and Intellectual Property
Office of General Counsel
Fenster Hall- Office 342
(973) 642-4285
Chokshi@njit.edu
Intellectual Property
Intellectual
Property
refers to
creations
of the mind
Inventions
Brand
Names
Secret
Formulas
Content
on
Websites
Movies
Types of Intellectual Property
• Inventions
Patents
• Identify source of a product or service
Trademarks
• Expressions of ideas
Copyrights
• Secret information with commercial
value
Trade Secrets
What is a Patent?
• Limited property right to exclude others from making, using,
or selling an invention.
• Does not give the right to practice your invention.
What is a Patent?
Key to Patent Rights = BALANCE
Full Disclosure
to the Public
Limited
Monopoly
Right
Types of Patents
• Utility Patents
– Protect the way an invention works
– 20 year term from filing date
– Provisional and Non-provisional applications
• Design Patents
– Protect ornamental appearance
– 15 year term from issue date
• Plant Patents
– Protect new varieties of asexually produced
plants
Apple U.S. Patent No. 8,551,283
Apple Design Patent No. D593,087
Why Protect Your Inventions
• Showcase your technology
♦ Asset when looking for funding
♦ Critical factor in obtaining funds for investors
• Block your competition
• Protect an area of research while you identify a
product
• Licensing revenue
• Source of recognition for the inventor
• Stimulates innovation and economic growth by
protecting investment
Provisional Patent Application
• Provides filing date
– A “placeholder”
• No patent rights—not examined
• Abandoned automatically after one year
• Has simpler filing requirements
– Claims are not required
• Lower filing fees
• Patent pending once application is filed
Typical Patent Filing Strategy
Provisional Application
Non-provisional Application International Application
(Not later than 1 year after (Not later than 1 year after
the provisional application the provisional application
filing date) filing date)
National Stage Applications
Issued Patent(s)
Patent Prosecution
File Non-provisional Application
Restriction Requirement if more than one
invention claimed
Office Action (about 17 months from date of
filing)
Response to Office Action
Examiner Interviews
Notice of Allowance
Pay Issue Fee
Parts of a Patent Application
♦ Specification
– Must provide sufficient information to allow one skilled in
the art to make and use the invention
♦ Claims
– Define the invention being protected
♦ Drawings
– Required if necessary to understand the invention
What Can Be Patented?
U.S. Supreme Court in Diamond v. Chakrabarty, 447 U.S. 303 (1980)
“. . . anything under the sun that
is made by man.”
What Can Be Patented?
♦ Anything new and useful
♦ Methods, Machines, Compositions of Matter,
Manufacture
♦ Mathematical algorithms, laws of nature, and ideas?
– No
Requirements for Patentability
Description/
Non-Obvious Enablement
Novelty
Utility
Requirements for Patentability
• Utility: invention must be useful
• Novelty: not already known
• Non-Obvious: must not be obvious to a person having
ordinary skill in the art
• Invention must be described and enabled in the application
Prior Art
♦ Information or knowledge publically available before the
filing date of the application
♦ Printed Publications
– U.S. patents and published applications
– foreign published patent documents
– poster presentations
– handouts at meetings
– abstracts
– material posted on the internet
– articles, books
– thesis or dissertation
Prior Art
♦ “Otherwise Available to the Public”
– Oral Presentation
– Lecture or speech
– Demonstration at a trade show
♦ The public disclosure must be enabling
Exceptions / Grace Period
♦ United States
– One year grace period
♦ Most foreign countries/regions (for example: Europe)
– Absolute novelty
Common Pitfalls
♦ U.S. is now a First to File country
♦ In the former First to Invent system, A receives the patent because A invented
first; however, in a First to File system B receives the patent because B filed
the invention first.
♦ A receives the patent if A can show that B obtained the invention from A.
A Invents
B Invents
(Independently)
B
Files
A
Files
A Invents
B derives
invention from
A’s invention
B Files
A Files
Common Pitfalls
♦ If the inventor allows other people to know about
the invention before a patent application is filed, the
inventor may lose his/her patent rights.
♦ Do not disclose the invention without an executed
confidentiality or non-disclosure agreement.
♦ General rule: No public disclosure until a patent
application is filed.
Laboratory Notebooks
♦ Serve to document critical dates
♦ Establish rights in derivation proceedings
♦ Establish exceptions to prior art rules
♦ Story of invention in litigation
Inventorship
• Determining who is an inventor is a legal determination
• The inventor must contribute to the conception of the
invention
• Inventors are not the same as co-authors of a paper,
students in a lab, or supervisors
• Wrong inventorship can invalidate a patent
Prior Art Searching
♦ Patent Office Search
- www.uspto.gov
♦ Internet Searches
- https://patents.google.com
♦ Library: text books, reference books, trade journals
Prior Art Searching
♦ Patent Office Search
- www.uspto.gov
♦ Computer Searches
- https://patents.google.com
♦ Library: text books, reference books, trade journals
Revised  Intellectual Property Presentation Official Version.pdf
Process of Technology Commercialization
Research
Invention
Disclosure
Assessment
Patent Application
Identifying Potential
Licensees
Licensing
Commercialization
Process of Technology Commercialization
Invention Disclosure
Assessment.
Proceed?
Provisional Patent
Application
Assessment.
Proceed?
Non-provisional Patent
Application
Request additional
information or waive to
inventors
Waive to inventors
Assessment
• Patentability search
IP Strength
• Market size and growth potential
Market Potential
• Whether additional resources could
improve prospect of commercialization
Competition
Commercialization
• Any interest from target companies
Market Need
Disclosure Form
♦ Report your inventions via the NJIT Inventor Portal
https://njit-ip.ttoportal.com/Login.aspx
No patent rights after submitting the invention disclosure form
Trade Secrets
• Secret information with commercial value
• Reasonable degree of protection
– Physical security, limited access to material, need to know
• Recipes or formulas, business plans, customer lists,
manufacturing processes
– The formula for CocaCola (secret for more than 125 years)
– The recipe for KFC
Trade Secrets Versus Patents
• Available for as long as the information remains
confidential
– Patent protection generally lasts about 20 years
• Could be reverse engineered or independently
discovered
– A reason to pursue patent protection
• Cannot be disclosed to the public
– Information is disclosed in a patent application
Trademarks
• Any word, name, symbol, design, sound, color, touch, smell,
device
• Identify and distinguish a product or a service
• Trademarks are adjectives; not nouns or verbs
– Ray-Ban sunglasses
• Trade name: company or business
– Apple
• Trademark: identifies goods
– iPhone
Selecting a Trademark
Not distinctive,
no protection
Most distinctive,
full protection
Generic (common
names)
Soap
Phone
Descriptive
(describes
product)
Creamy
Suggestive
(suggests
products)
Playstation
Arbitrary (existing
word but no
relationship to
product)
Apple computers
Fanciful (made up)
Exxon
Trademark Rights
• Federal Registration: ®
• Common law rights: TM or SM
• Could be indefinite as long as trademark does not become
generic
• Advantages of Federal Registration
– Evidence of validity and ownership
– Nationwide
– Right to sue in federal court
– Incontestable after 5 years of continuous use
– Damages for infringement
Copyright
• Protects original works of authorship
– Literary
– Musical
– Artistic
• Originality: independently created
• Only minimal creativity required
• Exists upon fixation of work in any tangible medium
– No registration required
Copyright Rights
• What can you do with a copyright?
– Reproduce
– Derivative works
– Distribute copies
– Perform publicly
– Display publicly
• Only protects expression, not idea of underlying work
Copyright Term
• Generally life of author plus 70 years
• Work made for hire: 95 years from publication or 120 years
from creation, whichever expires first
Copyright Registration
• Required to bring suit for infringement
• Statutory damages and attorney fees
• Actual or constructive notice
Overlapping IP Protection
♦ More than one form of IP protection may apply
♦ Patent
– Design patent on the bottle shape
– Utility patent on method of fortifying drinks with
vitamins
♦ Trademark on bottle shape and Coke
♦ Copyright on advertising and promotion
♦ Trade Secret on the formula
Issues
• Contact us for any advice
– IP@NJIT.edu
• For what types of IP protection does work quality?
• Who owns the IP?
– Each IP can have a different owner
– Review NJIT Patent Policy
– Review your employment agreement
• Develop an overall strategy for IP from the start
before the product is introduced
Revised  Intellectual Property Presentation Official Version.pdf

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Revised Intellectual Property Presentation Official Version.pdf

  • 1. Intellectual Property Overview Sanjiv Chokshi, Esq. Assistant General Counsel For Patents and Intellectual Property Office of General Counsel Fenster Hall- Office 342 (973) 642-4285 Chokshi@njit.edu
  • 2. Intellectual Property Intellectual Property refers to creations of the mind Inventions Brand Names Secret Formulas Content on Websites Movies
  • 3. Types of Intellectual Property • Inventions Patents • Identify source of a product or service Trademarks • Expressions of ideas Copyrights • Secret information with commercial value Trade Secrets
  • 4. What is a Patent? • Limited property right to exclude others from making, using, or selling an invention. • Does not give the right to practice your invention.
  • 5. What is a Patent? Key to Patent Rights = BALANCE Full Disclosure to the Public Limited Monopoly Right
  • 6. Types of Patents • Utility Patents – Protect the way an invention works – 20 year term from filing date – Provisional and Non-provisional applications • Design Patents – Protect ornamental appearance – 15 year term from issue date • Plant Patents – Protect new varieties of asexually produced plants Apple U.S. Patent No. 8,551,283 Apple Design Patent No. D593,087
  • 7. Why Protect Your Inventions • Showcase your technology ♦ Asset when looking for funding ♦ Critical factor in obtaining funds for investors • Block your competition • Protect an area of research while you identify a product • Licensing revenue • Source of recognition for the inventor • Stimulates innovation and economic growth by protecting investment
  • 8. Provisional Patent Application • Provides filing date – A “placeholder” • No patent rights—not examined • Abandoned automatically after one year • Has simpler filing requirements – Claims are not required • Lower filing fees • Patent pending once application is filed
  • 9. Typical Patent Filing Strategy Provisional Application Non-provisional Application International Application (Not later than 1 year after (Not later than 1 year after the provisional application the provisional application filing date) filing date) National Stage Applications Issued Patent(s)
  • 10. Patent Prosecution File Non-provisional Application Restriction Requirement if more than one invention claimed Office Action (about 17 months from date of filing) Response to Office Action Examiner Interviews Notice of Allowance Pay Issue Fee
  • 11. Parts of a Patent Application ♦ Specification – Must provide sufficient information to allow one skilled in the art to make and use the invention ♦ Claims – Define the invention being protected ♦ Drawings – Required if necessary to understand the invention
  • 12. What Can Be Patented? U.S. Supreme Court in Diamond v. Chakrabarty, 447 U.S. 303 (1980) “. . . anything under the sun that is made by man.”
  • 13. What Can Be Patented? ♦ Anything new and useful ♦ Methods, Machines, Compositions of Matter, Manufacture ♦ Mathematical algorithms, laws of nature, and ideas? – No
  • 15. Requirements for Patentability • Utility: invention must be useful • Novelty: not already known • Non-Obvious: must not be obvious to a person having ordinary skill in the art • Invention must be described and enabled in the application
  • 16. Prior Art ♦ Information or knowledge publically available before the filing date of the application ♦ Printed Publications – U.S. patents and published applications – foreign published patent documents – poster presentations – handouts at meetings – abstracts – material posted on the internet – articles, books – thesis or dissertation
  • 17. Prior Art ♦ “Otherwise Available to the Public” – Oral Presentation – Lecture or speech – Demonstration at a trade show ♦ The public disclosure must be enabling
  • 18. Exceptions / Grace Period ♦ United States – One year grace period ♦ Most foreign countries/regions (for example: Europe) – Absolute novelty
  • 19. Common Pitfalls ♦ U.S. is now a First to File country ♦ In the former First to Invent system, A receives the patent because A invented first; however, in a First to File system B receives the patent because B filed the invention first. ♦ A receives the patent if A can show that B obtained the invention from A. A Invents B Invents (Independently) B Files A Files A Invents B derives invention from A’s invention B Files A Files
  • 20. Common Pitfalls ♦ If the inventor allows other people to know about the invention before a patent application is filed, the inventor may lose his/her patent rights. ♦ Do not disclose the invention without an executed confidentiality or non-disclosure agreement. ♦ General rule: No public disclosure until a patent application is filed.
  • 21. Laboratory Notebooks ♦ Serve to document critical dates ♦ Establish rights in derivation proceedings ♦ Establish exceptions to prior art rules ♦ Story of invention in litigation
  • 22. Inventorship • Determining who is an inventor is a legal determination • The inventor must contribute to the conception of the invention • Inventors are not the same as co-authors of a paper, students in a lab, or supervisors • Wrong inventorship can invalidate a patent
  • 23. Prior Art Searching ♦ Patent Office Search - www.uspto.gov ♦ Internet Searches - https://patents.google.com ♦ Library: text books, reference books, trade journals
  • 24. Prior Art Searching ♦ Patent Office Search - www.uspto.gov ♦ Computer Searches - https://patents.google.com ♦ Library: text books, reference books, trade journals
  • 26. Process of Technology Commercialization Research Invention Disclosure Assessment Patent Application Identifying Potential Licensees Licensing Commercialization
  • 27. Process of Technology Commercialization Invention Disclosure Assessment. Proceed? Provisional Patent Application Assessment. Proceed? Non-provisional Patent Application Request additional information or waive to inventors Waive to inventors
  • 28. Assessment • Patentability search IP Strength • Market size and growth potential Market Potential • Whether additional resources could improve prospect of commercialization Competition Commercialization • Any interest from target companies Market Need
  • 29. Disclosure Form ♦ Report your inventions via the NJIT Inventor Portal https://njit-ip.ttoportal.com/Login.aspx No patent rights after submitting the invention disclosure form
  • 30. Trade Secrets • Secret information with commercial value • Reasonable degree of protection – Physical security, limited access to material, need to know • Recipes or formulas, business plans, customer lists, manufacturing processes – The formula for CocaCola (secret for more than 125 years) – The recipe for KFC
  • 31. Trade Secrets Versus Patents • Available for as long as the information remains confidential – Patent protection generally lasts about 20 years • Could be reverse engineered or independently discovered – A reason to pursue patent protection • Cannot be disclosed to the public – Information is disclosed in a patent application
  • 32. Trademarks • Any word, name, symbol, design, sound, color, touch, smell, device • Identify and distinguish a product or a service • Trademarks are adjectives; not nouns or verbs – Ray-Ban sunglasses • Trade name: company or business – Apple • Trademark: identifies goods – iPhone
  • 33. Selecting a Trademark Not distinctive, no protection Most distinctive, full protection Generic (common names) Soap Phone Descriptive (describes product) Creamy Suggestive (suggests products) Playstation Arbitrary (existing word but no relationship to product) Apple computers Fanciful (made up) Exxon
  • 34. Trademark Rights • Federal Registration: ® • Common law rights: TM or SM • Could be indefinite as long as trademark does not become generic • Advantages of Federal Registration – Evidence of validity and ownership – Nationwide – Right to sue in federal court – Incontestable after 5 years of continuous use – Damages for infringement
  • 35. Copyright • Protects original works of authorship – Literary – Musical – Artistic • Originality: independently created • Only minimal creativity required • Exists upon fixation of work in any tangible medium – No registration required
  • 36. Copyright Rights • What can you do with a copyright? – Reproduce – Derivative works – Distribute copies – Perform publicly – Display publicly • Only protects expression, not idea of underlying work
  • 37. Copyright Term • Generally life of author plus 70 years • Work made for hire: 95 years from publication or 120 years from creation, whichever expires first
  • 38. Copyright Registration • Required to bring suit for infringement • Statutory damages and attorney fees • Actual or constructive notice
  • 39. Overlapping IP Protection ♦ More than one form of IP protection may apply ♦ Patent – Design patent on the bottle shape – Utility patent on method of fortifying drinks with vitamins ♦ Trademark on bottle shape and Coke ♦ Copyright on advertising and promotion ♦ Trade Secret on the formula
  • 40. Issues • Contact us for any advice – IP@NJIT.edu • For what types of IP protection does work quality? • Who owns the IP? – Each IP can have a different owner – Review NJIT Patent Policy – Review your employment agreement • Develop an overall strategy for IP from the start before the product is introduced