Patent Searches: A Great Opportunity to Focus on What is Unique
No Comments » | Page viewed 559 times | Written by Gene QuinnPosted: Sunday, March 21, 2010 @ 10:46 pm
Posted in: Educational Information for Inventors, Gene Quinn, IP News, IPWatchdog.com Blog, Inventors Information, Patent Fools™, Patentability
A United States patent search is normally the first step in the patent application process. Such a search is used to determine whether the time and expense of moving forward with a patent application is a worthwhile endeavor. The patent process can be expensive, so the last thing you want to do is spend a lot of money preparing and filing an application when there is easy to find knock-out prior art that will prevent a patent, or at the very least make any patent that is obtained extremely narrow. For this reason many inventors and businesses will choose to begin the process by paying for some kind of patent search. Of course, careful review of the patent search report, any opinion or assessment provided by a patent attorney and thoughtful consideration of the patents that are found is critical. Unfortunately, in my experience a lot of inventors only give a cursory review of the patents found, thereby missing a great opportunity to use the prior art found to focus in on what is most likely unique and patentable.


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Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn. These are a few of the more popular Social Networking sites that you have probably already heard of and may already be using. But Social Networking platforms such as these are not just for playing online social games, taking quizzes, sending virtual gifts or reconnecting with friends and family. In fact Social Networking is another way to advertise yourself and your business for free or at a very low cost. In my last article
Presumably at some point the debate over health care will be over. Either the government will radically reform health care, or they won’t. While it is impossible to know for sure when the debate will be over, it does seem as if there is a light at the end of the tunnel. Whether that light is a train or not remains to be seen, of course. Within the next few days, few weeks or few months Congress will be released to consider other issues. Whether they actually will actually get anything done between whenever health care passes or fails and the November 2010 elections is likewise questionable, and remains to be seen. But one of the things that is seemingly on the horizon is consideration of patent reform, which itself has become a constant, nagging and unresolvable issue that has bogged down Congress for at least 5 years now. As I continue to review the pending patent reform legislation there are questions that I have, and changes that I would like made to the pending bill. So with the belief that sooner or later Congress will turn to patent reform, I present some of my thoughts on key changes that needs to be made to S. 515.
On February 12, 2010, the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences (BPAI) of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) issued an 


When you want to learn about a new business, the latest news, the upcoming weather or the current sales at your favorite store, what is the first thing you do? In today’s technologically savvy times, majority of all people asked this question would probably answer it the same way; they turn to the Internet. Computer prices have dropped significantly since the inception of the home personal computer and now most homes, schools and libraries now have computers. When we want to find out more about a company, now we simply go to our favorite search engine and search for the company by name. But how often do you find that the company you are looking to learn more about still does not have an Internet presence through a website of their own? When you go to business networking functions, do you still receive business cards only to find they have email address ending in @hotmail.com or the like? In today’s business world it is hard to fathom just how many businesses still do not have a web presence.
Earlier today Dale Halling, of 




On Friday, March 5, 2010, IPWatchdog, Inc., Gene Quinn and Renee Quinn filed responsive papers with the United States Federal District Court for the Northern District of New York (Syracuse, NY) in the matter of Invention Submission Corporation v. IPWatchdog, Inc. I have retained the services of
The Federal Circuit’s recent decision in 












