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 4813-B Eisenhower Avenue, Alexandria, VA 22304, USA Firm Tel: 703.415.0012, Fax: 703.415.0013, Email: 
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4/15/99
Jump on Your Intellectual Property Rights
If you are a startup business looking for financing, you should
already have (1) acquired your IP rights (patents, trademarks,
and copyrights) and (2) cleared your business of any IP
infringement. Investors and competitors respect the value of
patent and trademarks and applications for them. Investors
should not invest in a startup, unless they are assured that
its product or service is not infringing anothers IP rights.
There is a saying in the law, dont sleep on your rights.
If you do not affirmatively acquire what could become your
patent and trademark rights, you will lose the opportunity to
do so. To often today a startup is shut down because it is
infringing anothers patent or trademark rights. That shut
down could have been avoided with appropriate foresight. The
infringed patent or trademark is one that the startup could
have obtained for itself by applying for those IP rights,
if it had acted early enough. Alternatively, an early due
diligence search could have identified anothers IP rights
that covered the proposed product or service, thereby providing
time for a design around and negotiations for a license to the
problem IP rights.
Patents provide a limited monopoly on your companys new product
or process. Monopoly translates into high profit margins due to
a lack of competition. Patents can be obtained on almost any
product or process that is useful, novel, and non-obvious.
Under prevailing case law, usefulness extends to any method of
calculating a number that has real world utility, including
business methods, and the novelty and non-obviousness
requirements are not as high a standard as many people believe.
Trademarks (and service marks) indicate the source or origin of
a product or service. Source or origin means that a consumer
can identify your product or service in the marketplace, and
thereby avoid using anothers similar product or service.
United States patents and trademarks are obtained by filing an
application for them in the United States Patent and Trademark
Office (USPTO). The USPTO then examines the application for
compliance with all statutory requirements, and eventually
issues complying applications and rejects noncomplying
applications. Obtaining these IP rights is expensive, primarily
due to the amount of high hourly rate attorney time required to
prepare an application and guide it through the USPTO. For
patents, part of that cost can be deferred by initially filing
a relatively simple provisional patent application the filing
date of which is prima facie proof of the date of invention.
A provisional patent application protects for one year the
right to pursue patent protection on the novel aspects of a
product or process at a very low cost, and it is accorded
respect by inventors and competitors. However, to get a patent,
a provisional application must be followed within one year of
its filing, by filing a more formal US application and any
foreign applications to obtain the benefit of the filing date
of the provisional application.
Substantial information on
patents and trademarks is provided at the USPTOs website at
http://www.uspto.gov.
Copyright Richard A. Neifeld.
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| We are patent attorneys located near the United States Patent and Trademark Office, providing IP counseling, US and foreign patent and trademark prosecution, search, licensing, interference, and general attorneys providing general legal services. |
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| ©Copyright 1999 Neifeld IP Law, PC, Patent Attorneys. Updated 2008. |
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