Another day at work is over…another handful of client questions about solicitations they received via e-mail or postal mail regarding trademark related services offered for sale.

I tell them the same thing I always do…send me a copy and I’ll glance at it for you, but the chances are that it is either an outright scam, or an offer for services they probably don’t need (e.g., the client I talked with last week that received a solicitation that included an offer to register their Service Mark with U.S. Customs).

It makes you wonder…how many trademark owners fall victim to these scams every year?

At least the old “Chinese domain name” scam looks fishy. But, the trademark service solicitations are a different thing. They’re very carefully drafted, clearly intending to either (1) trick the trademark owner into thinking the communication came from the Trademark Office itself, or (2) scare the trademark owner into thinking they need to take immediate action (and send the solicitation firm immediate payment).

When the problem was invention promotion companies, the Federal Trade Commission and USPTO stepped in and addressed it, issuing a number of different publications (such as THIS ONE, and THIS ONE, THIS ONE, and THIS ONE), and promulgating regulations/prosecuting the crooks accordingly. Of course, that wasn’t until hundreds of millions of dollars had been conned out of small inventors that action was taken. But at least they did something.

Where’s the USPTO on this issue (other than creating a short warning published on the USPTO website)? Where’s the FTC?

Other trademark attorneys are sick and tired of the inaction. They’ve decided to take matters into their own hands. Erik M. Pelton has started a petition. Another law firm (Leason Ellis LLP in New York) has actually filed a civil lawsuit against one solicitor.

At least one state, California, has a state statute meant to address issues like this: California Civil Code Section 1716. Sadly, my state (Idaho) doesn’t have such a statute. Does yours?

It’s time for trademark attorneys to start asking their clients to ALWAYS send copies of such solicitations to them. Then, we need to start forwarding them (with the client’s permission, of course) to our state representatives, Governors, and state Attorney Generals (along with a copy of the California statute), asking for similar “payment solicitation” legislation to be added to our respective states’ codes.

It’s time…

 

The following quote from Senator Kyl from Arizona, speaking before Congress, explains quite a bit about what Congress understood about the new Patent Act they were voting on. Trust me…you’ve got to read it.

Among many of our most innovative companies, 70 percent of their licensing revenues come from overseas. Obviously, they are already going to be complying with the first-to-file rules. This bill does not, therefore, so much switch the system with which Americans are complying today as it simply allows American companies to only have to comply with one system rather than two. As I said before, the first-to-file concept is clearer, faster, more transparent, and provides more certainty to inventors and manufacturers.

On the other hand, the first-to-invent concept would make it impossible, in many instances, to know who has priority and which of the competing patents is the valid one. To determine who has priority under first to invent, extensive discovery must be conducted and the Patent Office and courts must examine notebooks and other evidence to determine who conceived of the invention first and whether the inventor then diligently reduced it to practice.

Under first-to-file, on the other hand, an inventor can get priority by filing a provisional application. This is an important point. It is easy. It is not as if the first-to-file is hard to do. This provisional application, which only costs $110 for the small inventor, only requires you to write a description of what your invention is and how it works. That is all. That is the same thing that an inventor’s notebook would have to contain under the first-to-invent concept if you are ever going to prevail in court by proving your invention date.

Because a provisional application is a government document, the date is clear. There is no opportunity for fraudulently backdating the invention date. There is no need for expensive discovery: What did the inventor know and when did he know it? You are essentially not requiring anything in addition. You file a provisional application. You have an entire year to get all of your work together and file your completed application, but your date is as of the time you file the provisional application.

As I said, for a small entity, the fee is only $110. That grace period makes it clear that the patent will not be invalid because of disclosures made by the inventor or someone who got information from an inventor during 1 year before filing. That is important.

A lot of academics and folks go to trade shows and begin talking about their concepts and what they have done. If you disclose this, you have a year to file after you disclose the information. And under the bill’s second, enhanced grace period, no other disclosure, regardless of whether it was obtained from the inventor, can then invalidate the invention.

The bill has been very carefully written to protect the small inventor or the academic. That is what it is designed to do. This is not a case of big versus small, although people both big and small support the legislation. If anybody suggests the Feinstein amendment will protect the small inventor, it does not protect the small inventor. In fact, as I said, the legislation is very carefully crafted to give the small inventor a variety of ways to ensure that he or she is protected.

Source: http://www.uspto.gov/aia_implementation/crec-2011-03-03-pt1-pgs1174.pdf, hat tip to Tim Van Tuinen.

 

Another great idea from Paul Graham. This time directed to the enforcement of software patents against small businesses.

See: The Patent Pledge.

 

Trick: if you know the Federal Reporter (F, F2.d, F3.d) citation, or the SCOTUS citation, just search (on Google, Bing, etc.) for “ftp” and the case citation. The top hit should be a link to a copy of the case on Public.Resource.Org’s caselaw database.

Example: Looking for In re Woodruff, 919 F.2d 1575, 16 USPQ2d 1934 (Fed. Cir. 1990), you’d search for:

ftp 919 F.2d 1575

Jul 232010
 

A couple post-Bilski podcasts to link to:

  • Patents in the Supreme Court: Bilski v. Kappos – A “panel podcast/debate” between Professor John Duffy (George Washington Law School) and David Olson (Boston College Law School), moderated by Professor Adam Mossoff (George Mason School of Law).
  • This Week in Law – Episode 68 – “Whiz Bang Click” – “Bilski decision and the validity of business method patents, improving the Patent Office, finding relevant prior art, and more.”  Host: Denise Howell, Guests: Erik Heels, J. Matthew Buchanan and Stephen Nipper.
 

This really is the best summary of 35 U.S.C. §101 caselaw as it relates to software and/or business method patents:

@erikjheels on:  A Mere Mortal’s Guide To Patents Post-Bilski (Or Why §101 Is A Red Herring)

Bookmark it.

 

I’ll be on This Week in Law (video podcast) this Friday, along with J. Matt Buchanan (Promote the Progress blog) discussing Bilski and whatever other interesting topics come up.

If you have any topics to suggest:

Watch/listen in online:  http://live.twit.tv/

When:  Friday, July 9th at 11 a.m. Pacific/noon Mountain/1 p.m. Central/2 p.m. Eastern

 

I doubt any readers of this blog don’t know that the Supreme Court decided In re Bilski on Monday.

Rather than summarize the case like every other patent blog…I’ll link to what everyone else is saying:

 

The problem:  If you perform a search engine search for a patent statute/rule, the USPTO’s copy of the statute/rule doesn’t appear in the search results.

  • Example:  Google search for 37 CFR 1.28.  In the results, the “bitlaw” copy of the rule is #1, and a number of pages on the USPTO’s website are #2 (none of which are the actual rule itself).

Why?  It’s a Search Engine Optimization (SEO) problem.

  • The actual USPTO page that includes Rule 1.28 has a title of “§ 1.28 Refunds when small entity status is later established; how errors in small entity status are excused. – Appendix R Patent Rules”.
  • The page itself, doesn’t include “37 CFR 1.28″ on it.

The fix?

  • Rename the page “37 CFR § 1.28 Refunds when small entity status is later established; how errors in small entity status are excused. – Appendix R Patent Rules”
  • Include “37 CFR 1.28″ on the page itself, preferably towards the top of the page.

I bet that making that simple change would make the USPTO’s page for the Rule show up at the top of the search results.

Agree?  Disagree?  The comments are open…

[update (2010.05.13):  Someone asked me "why does it matter?"  The answer to that question is that people tend to default to what is easy to find (e.g., the bitlaw copies of the regulations/statutes).   Instead, they should (to make sure the information they are using is the most current and accurate) always default to the USPTO copies of the information.

In my opinion, the USPTO needs to take steps to "try" to be #1 in Internet searches for its own source materials so as to satisfy its statutory duty to disseminate patent/trademark information to the public, particularly where the fix is so simple.]

 

The USPTO’s News and Notices page contains a link to an Official Gazette Notice dated today entitled:  Request for Comments on Proposed Change To Missing Parts Practice.  While the name may be quite innocuous, read the summary:

The United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), in response to a number of requests to reduce the costs due one year after filing a provisional application, is considering a change that would effectively provide a 12-month extension to the 12-month provisional application period (creating a net 24-month period). This change would be implemented through the missing parts practice in nonprovisional applications…

IPWatchdog explains why they are going the “missing parts” route.

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