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by gamacodre
4404 days ago
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> That said, for both of those cases it would potentially be cheaper and equally effective to file defensive publications rather than patents. Do you mean a Statutory Invention Registration[1]? That seems almost as troublesome as putting together a regular application, just without some of the followthrough. Or is there actually a solid way to establish prior art just by publishing your method? I've been wondering if there's some threshold of "publication legitimacy" that's required for this, or if posting the method up on pastebin would work. I found a piece on how to establish prior invention for business methods[2], but that only protects the folks that can document their own prior use. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Statutory_Invent...
[2] http://www.fenwick.com/fenwickdocuments/new_defense.pdf |
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There is a service [1] that does this, and is registered as a "mandatory to search" resource with the WIPO. It costs $120/page, which is steep, but surely cheaper than patent prosecution. There are other "mandatory search" archives [2] under the Patent Cooperation Treaty "Minimum Documentation" rules, many of which are academic journals. These are not the only means of "public disclosure" but my (very limited) understanding is that the patent office is guaranteed to look at the sources on that list.
[1] http://www.researchdisclosure.com/publishing-disclosures
[2] http://www.wipo.int/standards/en/part_04.html