osapa:questions_for_the_uspto
questions_for_the_uspto
David Mohring asked [1][2][3]:
ABI/INFORM: Bell & Howell Information and Learning
Business & IndustryTM: Responsive Database Services, Inc.
Business Week: The McGraw-HillCompanies Publications Online
Business Wire: Business Wire
Computer DatabaseTM: The Gale Group
Conference Papers Index: Cambridge Scientific Abstracts
Dissertation Abstracts Online: Bell & Howell Information and Learning
GlobalbaseTM: The Gale Group
Inside Conferences: The British Library
INSPEC: INSPEC, Inc.
Internet & Personal Computing Abstracts: Information Today, Inc.
The McGraw-Hill Companies Publications Online: The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Microcomputer Software Guide Online: R. R. Bowker Company
New Product Announcements/Plus(NPA/Plus): The Gale Group
Newsletter DatabaseTM: The Gale Group
Newspapers
Financial Times Abstracts
New York Times Abstracts
San Jose Mercury News
Wall Street Journal Abstracts
PR Newswire: PR Newswire Association, Inc.
PROMT: The Gale Group
Softbase: Reviews, Companies, and Products: Information Sources, Inc.
Trade & Industry DatabaseTM: The Gale Group
Wilson Applied Science and Technology Abstracts: The H.W. Wilson Company
World Reporter: The Dialog Corporation, Dow Jones & Company and Financial Times Information
Do the patent examiners currently use Internet search engines such as Google ( http://www.google.com ) to locate instances of prior art?
“Prior art disclosures on the Internet or in an on-line database are considered to be publicly available as of the date the item was publicly posted. This is provided that the item is dated and not temporal, and can be indexed for subsequent retrieval. An example of a temporal item is a web broadcast that cannot be saved, retrieved or printed, e.g., a live simulcast feed that is not archived, and a “streaming” audio or video that “flashes” across the screen.”
[5]
Entries in Internet archives, such as
www.archive.org [6], for example, are time stamped and are routinely cited as prior art.
Larry Rosen asked:
Data processing inventions, including software, are generally classified in the major classes in the 700's. A complete list is found on the USPTO web site
[7] Class 705, for example, is for computer implemented business methods.
Each major class is further divided into a number of minor classes.
[8]
Paul McKenney asked:
McCullough Theodore asked:
As I presently understand the law, there exists no mechanism to put an Examiner on notice regarding a prior art reference after the patent application has published, but before it becomes a patent. What would be the legal mechanism for the public, including the Open Source Community, to direct an Examiner's attention?
Prior art can be sent to the examiner within two months of the publication date of a pending application. See
37 CFR 1.99.
If you miss the two month window, you can send the prior art directly to the inventor or their attorney/agent. If the prior art is material to the patentability of their claims, then they will be obligated to disclose the prior art to the examiner. See
37 CFR 1.56
Jan Kechel asks:
Yes. Once a patent application is published, all of the prior art cited against the application is made public on the USPTO's “Public PAIR” site
[9]. The Public PAIR site also posts all of the correspondance between the examiner and an applicant. This means that the public can monitor how the examiner is applying the prior art and how the applicant is responding.
osapa/questions_for_the_uspto.txt · Last modified: 2016/07/19 01:22 (external edit)