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by tptacek
4881 days ago
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It does not mean that. The filer has to prove they invented the idea, which they can't do if you've published it prior to their filing. If you weren't going to publish or file a patent, nothing changes for you at all; you're exactly as exposed to patent litigation as you were prior to the change, because your inaction was no more effective at blunting bad patents under "first to invent". If you invent something and keep it a secret, other people have always been able to patent the same idea, because the law does not require people to read your mind. Again, I think the issue is that the "move" from "inventing" to "filing" conveys a kind of paperwork urgency that just isn't there. |
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This is not right. Prior to AIA it was possible to invalidate a patent by showing secret invention by another inventor prior to the patent invention date, among other things.
See also: Metallizing Eng. v. Kenyon (secret commercial use by party) or Eggbert v. Lippman (secret use in public) or Gore v. Garlock (Secret use by third party).
In fact, there is a bunch of "secret prior art" that AIA eliminates.