Home

Patent

A patent is a legal right granted by a government to an inventor, typically for a limited period, in exchange for full public disclosure of the invention. The patent allows the holder to exclude others from making, using, selling, or importing the claimed invention within the national or regional jurisdiction. The underlying goal is to promote innovation by providing an incentive to invest in research and development while enriching public knowledge.

Patents cover a range of subject matter. Utility patents protect new and useful processes, machines, manufactures,

To be eligible for patent protection, an invention must meet several criteria: novelty (not anticipated by prior

The patent process generally involves filing an application with a patent office, undergoing examination, potentially responding

Patents have economic and policy implications, balancing incentives for innovation with access and competition. Once expired,

or
compositions
of
matter,
and
their
improvements.
Design
patents
protect
the
ornamental
design
of
a
functional
item.
Plant
patents
cover
new
and
distinct
varieties
of
plants
that
have
been
asexually
reproduced.
The
term
of
protection
and
specific
rules
vary
by
jurisdiction
but
typically
utility
patents
last
about
20
years
from
filing,
while
design
and
plant
patents
have
different
duration
rules.
art),
non-obviousness
or
inventive
step
(not
obvious
to
a
skilled
person
in
the
field),
and
utility
or
industrial
applicability
(it
must
have
some
practical
use).
A
patent
specification
must
disclose
the
invention
sufficiently
to
enable
a
person
skilled
in
the
art
to
reproduce
it,
and
the
actual
granted
protection
is
defined
by
the
set
of
claims.
to
office
actions,
and,
if
approved,
paying
maintenance
fees.
Patent
rights
are
territorial,
so
protection
applies
only
in
the
jurisdictions
where
a
patent
is
granted.
International
paths,
such
as
the
Patent
Cooperation
Treaty,
help
streamline
filing
for
multiple
countries.
inventions
enter
the
public
domain.