Posts Tagged ‘invention ideas’

What Inventions May Receive A Patent

Saturday, January 23rd, 2010

There are five requirements that control if your invention will be able to receive a patent. These five requirements were laid down by Congress and are always changing depending on the latest Supreme Court ruling. The last requirement is different than the other four because it has to due with how the inventor or his attorney write the patent. The first four, naturally, refer to the invention itself.

The first requirement is a patentable subject matter. Originally, everything was patentable; however, the Supreme Court has made limitations on this original rule. Three categories have been ruled off limits to inventions. These three categories are laws of nature, natural phenomena, and abstract ideas. Like all things in law, these limits have been pushed. The USPTO has tried to make new standards for patentable subject matter, including the addition of business methods; however, the Supreme Court requires that the business method have a computer involved.

An invention must be partially useful to pass the second requirement. Not only does the invention have to be useful, but it has to be described in enough detail that someone could figure out how it is useful. This seems like a very easy requirement to pass because it only has to be partially useful, but the invention can fail if it isn’t described well or if it doesn’t have a true use. If your logic is flawed or facts are inconsistent with logic, then you will also be denied a patent.

The third requirement, the novelty requirement, prompts the inventor to show that their invention is new in some way. An invention will fail this requirement if it is identical to a reference that has been previously made to your invention. In other words, if your patent would infringe on an existing patent, then it doesn’t pass this requirement. If the reference is a newspaper or some other form you have to ask: if the newspaper was issued a patent, would your new patent infringe?

In order for your invention to pass the fourth requirement, it must not be obvious. Your invention would be obvious if someone knowledgeable about the field combined a few past references and came to your invention. Therefore, an invention cannot consist of a simple combination of prior inventions; however, if the addition of the inventions isn’t considered already known, then it will be considered not obvious. This is why this requirement can be very tricky. So, in short, if an invention contains only obvious differences from prior art, then it will fail this requirement.

The last test is different because it has to do with how you write the patent instead of the invention itself. In order to pass this requirement, the invention must be explained so someone could understand, make and use the invention. There are three parts to the explanation. The enablement requirement requires that the invention is described so others can use and make it. Second, the best mode requirement says there must be a preferred way to carry out the invention described in the patent. The third requirement – the written description requirement – has shady guidelines, so describing your invention in great detail is the best to fulfill this requirement.

Check out Unborn Concepts – Home Of Invention for all of your inventing needs. If you want to start making money inventing, then come see us.

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Why The Average Person Isn’t Making Money From An Invention Idea

Saturday, January 9th, 2010

People aren’t focused: If you want to have a profitable invention idea you have to be focused all day long. I’m not talking about not paying attention to or thinking about anything else, but you have to be aware enough to notice when a good problem is introduced to you. You have to develop a sense of thinking for invention ideas; I use a little pocket journal to help me, this gives me an outlet for all of my ideas, so they don’t just pass through my brain unnoticed.

A lack of Information: A lot of people lack an understanding of the inventing process as a whole, especially the part after you have come up with an invention. There is a lot of legal work involved in inventing that most people don’t know the half about. The main part of the legal work is patents, which is the step that a lot of first time inventors fear. However, there are many ways for you to acquire information on the legal side of inventing. There are books and websites that have information, which are great places to start.

Fear of failure: The fear of failure impedes people from doing so many things they want to do. Inventing is the same. Many people are scared their invention won’t make it and they will be a failure. You can’t let this inhibit you. There is no such thing as a failure who keeps trying; you have to keep going even when it’s hard; don’t quit because you are scared you won’t be successful.

Criticism: People have a big problem with criticism, which comes into play when inventing. I guarantee someone will dislike your idea when you invent, and that stops a lot of people from inventing. Critics are able to convince many people that they are wrong, so people aren’t even willing to put their ideas to the test. A good inventor is able to take criticism and know when to use it or when to ignore it.

Lack of commitment: This is by far the biggest inhibitor for possible inventors. Honestly, this could lead to the rest of the things I have mentioned. You have to be fully submerged in what you are inventing. You have to have a vision that you are willing to do anything to accomplish. When you are busy, you have to make time; the easy way out is off limits. If you are completely committed, then the invention idea will come – anyone can do it.

For great information on how to be a profitable inventor, check out Unborn Concepts – The Home of Invention, where you can find great guides such as Get Started Inventing.

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