#provisional-patent-applications

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#patent-law
fromPatently-O
2 days ago
Intellectual property law

The Dark Matter of Patent Law: Nearly 25% of Office Actions Now Cite Secret Prior Art

Intellectual property law
fromPatently-O
5 days ago

How the Federal Circuit Is Rebuilding Inventorship Law After the AIA

The Federal Circuit ruled patents invalid due to uncorrectable inventorship errors, highlighting gaps in the current legal framework post-America Invents Act.
Intellectual property law
fromPatently-O
2 days ago

The Dark Matter of Patent Law: Nearly 25% of Office Actions Now Cite Secret Prior Art

Prior art can include unpublished applications, termed 'secret springing prior art', which complicates patent searches and affects rejection rates.
Intellectual property law
fromPatently-O
5 days ago

How the Federal Circuit Is Rebuilding Inventorship Law After the AIA

The Federal Circuit ruled patents invalid due to uncorrectable inventorship errors, highlighting gaps in the current legal framework post-America Invents Act.
Artificial intelligence
fromFortune
4 hours ago

These niche AI startups are trying to protect the Pentagon's secrets | Fortune

AI companies face challenges in balancing technology use with government secrecy, highlighted by Anthropic's conflict with the Pentagon.
#federal-circuit
Intellectual property law
fromPatently-O
1 day ago

Marked for Trouble: Settlement Licenses and the 287 Trap for NPEs

The Federal Circuit questioned appellant's counsel on patent-marking and sanctions in VDPP, LLC v. Volkswagen Group of America.
Intellectual property law
fromPatently-O
3 days ago

Moving Target: When Amended Claims Outrun Your Standing Declaration

Federal Circuit's standing requirements create challenges for patent challengers seeking appellate review after PTAB proceedings.
Intellectual property law
fromPatently-O
2 days ago

The Symmetry Problem: Printed Matter, Nexus, and the Federal Circuit's One-Way Ratchet

The Federal Circuit's tightening of the nexus requirement has significantly impacted the use of secondary considerations in patent nonobviousness analysis.
Intellectual property law
fromPatently-O
1 day ago

Marked for Trouble: Settlement Licenses and the 287 Trap for NPEs

The Federal Circuit questioned appellant's counsel on patent-marking and sanctions in VDPP, LLC v. Volkswagen Group of America.
Intellectual property law
fromPatently-O
3 days ago

Moving Target: When Amended Claims Outrun Your Standing Declaration

Federal Circuit's standing requirements create challenges for patent challengers seeking appellate review after PTAB proceedings.
Intellectual property law
fromPatently-O
2 days ago

The Symmetry Problem: Printed Matter, Nexus, and the Federal Circuit's One-Way Ratchet

The Federal Circuit's tightening of the nexus requirement has significantly impacted the use of secondary considerations in patent nonobviousness analysis.
#uspto
fromPatently-O
3 weeks ago
Intellectual property law

The 14-Month Fiction: Only 10% of First Actions Arrive on Time

USPTO frequently fails to meet the 14-month deadline for issuing a First Office Action or Notice of Allowance, impacting patent term adjustments.
fromPatently-O
2 months ago
Intellectual property law

Large Entities Achieve Double the Patent Allowance Rate of Micro Entities

Large entities secure patents at far higher rates than small and micro entities, with allowance rates of 80%, 61%, and 40% respectively.
Intellectual property law
fromPatently-O
3 weeks ago

The 14-Month Fiction: Only 10% of First Actions Arrive on Time

USPTO frequently fails to meet the 14-month deadline for issuing a First Office Action or Notice of Allowance, impacting patent term adjustments.
Intellectual property law
fromAlleywatch
3 days ago

Patlytics Raises $40M as AI Drives a Simultaneous Surge in Patent Filings and IP Litigation

AI is transforming patent law with specialized tools like Patlytics, which streamline the patent lifecycle and significantly reduce project time and costs.
#ptab
fromPatently-O
2 months ago
Intellectual property law

L'Office, C'est Moi: Director Squires and the Parchment Barriers of PTAB Institution Precedent

fromPatently-O
2 months ago
Intellectual property law

L'Office, C'est Moi: Director Squires and the Parchment Barriers of PTAB Institution Precedent

fromPatently-O
1 week ago

Disclosed but Still Secret? The Federal Circuit Weighs Patent Publications Against Trade Secret Claims

The technology at issue is a subcutaneous cosmetic penile implant, a silicone sleeve placed between the skin and 'Buck's fascia' to enhance girth and length.
Intellectual property law
#patent-eligibility
fromPatently-O
1 month ago
Intellectual property law

Tie Goes to the Runner? Three Months of SMED Practice at the USPTO

Patent Director John Squires implemented a policy favoring applicants in close Section 101 eligibility calls through Subject Matter Eligibility Declarations, shifting examination standards toward applicant-friendly interpretations.
Intellectual property law
fromPatently-O
3 weeks ago

Patent Law Year in Review: USC IP Institute 2026

The USC Intellectual Property Institute held its annual IP Year in Review session covering major patent law developments, featuring panels on trademarks, publicity rights, and copyright.
fromPatently-O
3 weeks ago

The Patent Term Distribution, and What it Reveals

Congress set the patent term at twenty years from the earliest effective filing date. 35 U.S.C. § 154(a)(2) (not counting provisional or foreign national filing). But that statutory baseline is just the starting point. But, the actual term is shaped by a series of prosecution decisions, USPTO delays, terminal disclaimers, and patent family structure.
Intellectual property law
Intellectual property law
fromPatently-O
3 weeks ago

Are Rising Maintenance Fees Shortening the Effective Patent Term?

Approximately 60% of U.S. patentees abandon their patents before expiration by not paying maintenance fees, with full-term maintenance rates declining to roughly 40%.
Intellectual property law
fromIPWatchdog.com | Patents & Intellectual Property Law
4 weeks ago

Other Barks & Bites for Friday, March 13: Former USPTO Patent Examiner Settles Conflict Allegations; EU Parliament Endorses EUIPO Register of Works Used to Train AI; U.S.-Based Operations Become Discretionary Denial Factor at PTAB

The U.S. Department of Justice settled a conflict of interest case with a former USPTO patent examiner for $122,480, marking the second such settlement in two weeks.
Intellectual property law
frompatentlyo.com
1 month ago

Untethered: USPTO Loosens the Article of Manufacture Requirement for Digital Designs

The USPTO relaxed design patent rules for computer-generated interfaces and icons, removing display panel requirements, allowing 'for' prepositions in claims, and extending eligibility to projected, holographic, virtual, and augmented reality designs.
Intellectual property law
fromPatently-O
1 month ago

The Expanding Patent Document: Fewer Claims, More Words, and a Trend That Predates Alice

Patent specifications have nearly doubled in length over twenty years to over 13,000 words, but claim counts have declined since 2005, contradicting expectations that Alice Corp. v. CLS Bank would cause a structural break in 2014-2015.
Intellectual property law
frompatentlyo.com
1 month ago

PTA Keeps Score: Patent Term Adjustment as a Measure of the USPTO Backlog

Patent Term Adjustment data reveals the USPTO's examination backlog has nearly returned to 2015 levels after years of improvement, with average PTA climbing from 120 days in 2021 to 296 days by December 2025.
Intellectual property law
fromPatently-O
1 month ago

Twenty and Done: The Fee-Driven Collapse of Claim Count Diversity

Patent fee structures have created a hard threshold at 20 claims, causing 28% of 2025 utility patents to issue with exactly 20 claims compared to 6% in 2005.
#uspto-allowance-rates
Intellectual property law
fromPatently-O
1 month ago

The Third Way: Examiner Action Dates and the Allowance Rate Curve

Examining USPTO allowance rates by anchoring outcomes to examiner mail dates provides the most direct measure of examination policy by capturing the moment examiners make final decisions.
Intellectual property law
fromPatently-O
1 month ago

The Third Way: Examiner Action Dates and the Allowance Rate Curve

Examining USPTO allowance rates by anchoring outcomes to examiner mail dates provides the most direct measure of examination policy by capturing the moment examiners make final decisions.
#patent-reform
Intellectual property law
fromPatently-O
1 month ago

Extolling the Virtues: 'Space-Efficient' Preamble Fails to Limit

The Federal Circuit reversed an indefiniteness ruling while affirming dismissal of breach-of-contract claims in NimbeLink Corp. v. Digi International Inc., with the patent issue centering on whether claim preambles impose substantive limitations.
#patent-strategy
#patent-allowance-rates
Intellectual property law
fromPatently-O
2 months ago

An Old Trick in the Patent Book: Targeted Drafting from 1876 to 2026

Patent applicants strategically draft filings to steer USPTO art‑unit assignment and increase claim allowance odds, a practice known as targeted drafting.
fromIPWatchdog.com | Patents & Intellectual Property Law
2 years ago

Since 2020, Patent Errors Have Decreased by 11.24%

In an ideal world, issued patents would not contain errors. In reality, patent drafting is tedious and time-consuming work and perfection is not an attainable goal. The patent industry seems to be steadily getting better, though. In a recent study, we uncovered an 11.24% decrease in errors per patent over the past four years. We observed this decrease by reviewing every patent issued by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) since 2020 - nearly 1.4 million patents.
Intellectual property law
Intellectual property law
fromPatently-O
2 months ago

Privity Without Duty: When Patent Inventors Are Bound but Not Represented

University-employed inventors often lose control and compensation decisions when universities and licensees litigate patents without including inventors.
Intellectual property law
fromPatently-O
2 months ago

When Obviousness Rejections Pile On: Rethinking Multi-Reference Combinations

Combining numerous prior art references to reject a patent claim often reflects hindsight and risks improper obviousness findings; doctrinal tests already address this.
fromIPWatchdog.com | Patents & Intellectual Property Law
2 months ago

Squires Issues Precedential Decision Holding Parallel Petitions on Same Patent Claims Should Be Rare

The Board's Trial Practice Guide explains that 'one petition should be sufficient to challenge the claims of a patent in most situations' and 'multiple petitions by a petitioner are not necessary in the vast majority of cases.'
Intellectual property law
fromIntellectual Property Law Blog
2 months ago

PTAB Overly Relied on Statements of Doubt in Determining Conception and Reduction to Practice in Interference Proceedings

Regents of the University of California ("Regents") and Broad Institute were engaged in a patent interference proceeding involving the adaptation of CRISPR systems to edit eukaryotic DNA. Both parties were engaged in extensive testing related to editing eukaryotic DNA during the time of the invention, and both filed multiple patent applications that became the subjects of the patent interference proceedings.
Intellectual property law
fromAbove the Law
2 months ago

From Cost Center To Value Engine: Patent Management In The AI Era - Above the Law

In a recent Tradespace and Above the Law survey, two-thirds of companies that draft patents in-house described IP as a value driver, while 71 percent of companies that outsource drafting viewed IP as a cost. When drafting and prosecution move inside, IP teams work closer to engineers and product leaders. This proximity improves invention quality, strengthens claim strategy, and aligns patent decisions with product direction, market timing, and business priorities.
Intellectual property law
fromIPWatchdog.com | Patents & Intellectual Property Law
6 months ago

If You Care About the Patent System, Consider Filing an Amicus Brief in Hyatt

The enormity of the problem cannot be understated. A Federal Circuit panel recently reached a final decision that, if not overturned, will destroy the U.S. patent system, and will ironically impact the most valuable patents disproportionately. The ruling was simple and continues a disturbing and inexplicable trend-a patent issued after more than six years in prosecution is presumed unenforceable as the result of prosecution laches.
Intellectual property law
Intellectual property law
fromPatently-O
2 months ago

A Dog's Breakfast: The Doctrinal Mess Surrounding "Configured To" Claim Language

"Configured to" and "configured for" mean "capable of" performing the recited function absent specification language suggesting a narrower construction.
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