[_] invention - patents - where to start
Sam Mignano - Analyst
sam at beyondmetrix.com
Tue Jun 24 17:47:42 BST 2008
Cheers Darren, that's really helpful :) Sam Beyond Metrix Ltd ~ evolving business online ~ www.beyondmetrix.com Usability, Accessibility, Validation, Best Practice, SEO and online marketing. Need help with your website? Call us now for a free website audit consultation. 08456 44 88 54 A UK registered limited company. Company Registration Number: 5734561. VAT registration number 891 2460 17 -----Original Message----- From: Darren Beale [mailto:bealers at gmail.com] Sent: 24 June 2008 17:38 To: underscore at under-score.org.uk Subject: Re: [_] invention - patents - where to start HI Sam > Has anyone ever patented a product before and willing to share experiences? > Thanks in advance for any help - on or offlist, I don't mind. I tried once. Spent a 5 figure sum on an IP lawyer to draw up the relevant (extremely complicated & technical) documentation ready for submission only for the patent office to come back with some (wrong) examples of prior art so refused to issue it. At this point we had to make a decision whether to go back to the lawyers with another wheelbarrow of cash to get them to add clarifications & resubmit or not bother and walk away As the market had moved on quite a bit during the application process we decided to cut our losses and walk way. Ours cost so much 'cos the lawyer was very specialist in that technical area so charged an arm and a leg per hour; we know we could have done it quite a bit cheaper. I don't want to be accused of spreading FUD but that was my experience trying to patent a very subtle technical process, hence the need for detailed documentation to prove the uniqueness. My understanding is that one can simply provide a written description of <thing> in your own words and supply back of fag packet drawings and this will suffice though the more detailed your submission is the better chance you've got of enforcing it later. Only other nugget of information I can recall is that when one puts in a UK patent application (so you now have Pat Pending) you automatically have Pat Pending for a year, globally too, so you're covered if someone else brings out something similar in another country as you got in with the application first. You'd still need to apply for the other country's patent too, it's just that you've just a got a year to do it in. Good luck -- Darren Beale 07711 716 197 http://bealers.com -- underscore_ list info/archive -> http://www.under-score.org.uk/mailman/listinfo/underscore