imminent and recent changes in uspto policy and us patent practice: a proposed response for...

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Imminent and recent Imminent and recent changes in USPTO policy changes in USPTO policy and US patent practice: and US patent practice: A proposed response for A proposed response for inventors and investors inventors and investors Daniel M. Goldstein, Ph.D. Daniel M. Goldstein, Ph.D. Sanford T. Colb & Co. Sanford T. Colb & Co. [email protected] This presentation includes many general This presentation includes many general thoughts about the topics discussed, and is thoughts about the topics discussed, and is not intended to be legal advice. not intended to be legal advice.

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Page 1: Imminent and recent changes in USPTO policy and US patent practice: A proposed response for inventors and investors Daniel M. Goldstein, Ph.D. Sanford

Imminent and recent changes in Imminent and recent changes in USPTO policy and US patent USPTO policy and US patent

practice:practice:A proposed response for inventors A proposed response for inventors

and investorsand investorsDaniel M. Goldstein, Ph.D.Daniel M. Goldstein, Ph.D.

Sanford T. Colb & Co.Sanford T. Colb & [email protected]

This presentation includes many general thoughts about the This presentation includes many general thoughts about the topics discussed, and is not intended to be legal advice.topics discussed, and is not intended to be legal advice.

Page 2: Imminent and recent changes in USPTO policy and US patent practice: A proposed response for inventors and investors Daniel M. Goldstein, Ph.D. Sanford

Source: USPTO.gov

Page 3: Imminent and recent changes in USPTO policy and US patent practice: A proposed response for inventors and investors Daniel M. Goldstein, Ph.D. Sanford

US Patent Allowance Rate Increase

Chart From: PatentlyO May 11, 2010

Page 4: Imminent and recent changes in USPTO policy and US patent practice: A proposed response for inventors and investors Daniel M. Goldstein, Ph.D. Sanford

• KSR v. Teleflex(2007) invalidated the Teaching-Suggestion-Motivation test as the sole test for non-obviousness.

• Recent case-law still using motivation as a standard for determining obviousness in the unpredictable arts.

• Example: Procter & Gamble Co. v. Teva Pharmaceuticals USA, May 2009 (Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit)

“A party seeking to invalidate a patent based on obviousness must demonstrate by clear and convincing evidence that a skilled artisan would have been motivated to combine the teachings of the prior art references to achieve the claimed invention …“ Emphasis Added.

Weakening of KSR Holding

Page 5: Imminent and recent changes in USPTO policy and US patent practice: A proposed response for inventors and investors Daniel M. Goldstein, Ph.D. Sanford

USPTO ACCELERATION PROGRAMS:GREEN TECHNOLOGY AND PATENT PROSECUTION

HIGHWAY

Page 6: Imminent and recent changes in USPTO policy and US patent practice: A proposed response for inventors and investors Daniel M. Goldstein, Ph.D. Sanford

Green Technology

Categories of technology that can receive accelerated examination:

1. Energy Conservation2. Development of Renewable Resources 3. Greenhouse Gas Emission Reduction4. Materially Enhances Quality of the Environment

Page 7: Imminent and recent changes in USPTO policy and US patent practice: A proposed response for inventors and investors Daniel M. Goldstein, Ph.D. Sanford

Patent Prosecution Highway

• National patent offices share information relating to the examination process with each other

• Office of Second Filing advances out of turn an application that has been allowed in an Office of First Filing.

• To encourage use, USPTO eliminated fee for use

Page 8: Imminent and recent changes in USPTO policy and US patent practice: A proposed response for inventors and investors Daniel M. Goldstein, Ph.D. Sanford

Patent Prosecution Highway tidbits• Substantive examination of second

application must not have begun yet• National phases of PCT’s not currently eligible• US: average number of office actions before

allowance drops from 2.7 to 1.7 for “Highway” cases.

• US: 93% allowance rate, versus 44 percent for non-PPH cases.

• US1EP2 due to (1) US allows claims faster and (2) US allows claims of broader scope

Page 9: Imminent and recent changes in USPTO policy and US patent practice: A proposed response for inventors and investors Daniel M. Goldstein, Ph.D. Sanford

Other “Special Status” Application Areas Include:

• Superconductivity Technologies• Inventions Relation to HIV/AIDS and Cancer• Inventions for Countering Terrorism• Biotechnology Applications from Small Entities• Inventions Relating to Recombinant DNA• Infringement• Applicant’s Health or Age

Page 10: Imminent and recent changes in USPTO policy and US patent practice: A proposed response for inventors and investors Daniel M. Goldstein, Ph.D. Sanford

Software and Business MethodsIn Re: Bilski (Oral Argument heard November, 2009)

In re Bilski: • Machine or

Transformation Test versus

• Useful, Concrete, and Tangible Result

Page 11: Imminent and recent changes in USPTO policy and US patent practice: A proposed response for inventors and investors Daniel M. Goldstein, Ph.D. Sanford

DNA Patentability Association for Molecular Pathology v. USPTO, Myriad Genetics, et al. (April, 2010).

District Court for the Southern District Of New York

• Myriad Genetics patents on BRCA1 and BRCA2 invalidated by District Court

• Standard court used: Is there a transformation? Does the isolated DNA possess markedly different characteristics from the same DNA in vivo?

• Result: DNA claims without transformative step are invalid

• Stay tuned for appeal...

Page 12: Imminent and recent changes in USPTO policy and US patent practice: A proposed response for inventors and investors Daniel M. Goldstein, Ph.D. Sanford

False Marking… An Expensive Proposition

“Whoever marks upon… or uses in advertising in connection with any unpatented article the word "patent" or any word or number importing the same is patented, for the purpose of deceiving the public… Shall be fined not more than $500 for every such offense.” 35 U.S.C. § 292.

Page 13: Imminent and recent changes in USPTO policy and US patent practice: A proposed response for inventors and investors Daniel M. Goldstein, Ph.D. Sanford

• $500 is per item marked , not per decision to mark (Forest Group vs. Bon Tool, December 2009 )

• Anyone may bring a suit on behalf of the federal government, and receive half of the award.

• Result: Many opportunistic suits.

Page 14: Imminent and recent changes in USPTO policy and US patent practice: A proposed response for inventors and investors Daniel M. Goldstein, Ph.D. Sanford

Patent Term Adjustments (PTA)Wyeth v. Kappos, January 2010

• PTO has been incorrectly calculating patent term adjustments. The PTA for a large number of issued patents is therefore incorrect.

Page 15: Imminent and recent changes in USPTO policy and US patent practice: A proposed response for inventors and investors Daniel M. Goldstein, Ph.D. Sanford

• Wyeth court standard often yields more PTA days.

• Consider requesting a recalculation of your patent term adjustment in view of Wyeth, if your patent issued between December, 2009 and March 2, 2010.

Page 16: Imminent and recent changes in USPTO policy and US patent practice: A proposed response for inventors and investors Daniel M. Goldstein, Ph.D. Sanford

INFRINGEMENT

• Different types of infringement:– Direct– Indirect

(Contributory and Induced)

• To prove induced infringement, must show party had knowledge of the patent. (DSU Med Corp v. JMS, 2006)

Page 17: Imminent and recent changes in USPTO policy and US patent practice: A proposed response for inventors and investors Daniel M. Goldstein, Ph.D. Sanford

What constitutes knowledge?SEB S.A. v. Montgomery Ward & Co, February 2010

– Defendant copied the “cool touch” features of plaintiff’s deep fryer. Did not check for a patent.

– Hired an attorney to do a right-to-use study. Did not tell him they had copied the design.

– Jury found Defendant liable for infringement and inducement to infringe.

– Defendant appealed inducement finding on basis it had no knowledge of SEB’s patent.

Page 18: Imminent and recent changes in USPTO policy and US patent practice: A proposed response for inventors and investors Daniel M. Goldstein, Ph.D. Sanford

United States Court of Appeals:Deliberate Indifference = Induced Infringement

• A showing of deliberate indifference to whether one is infringing a patent satisfies the DSU knowledge requirement. (SEB S.A. v. Montgomery Ward & Co, February 2010)

Page 19: Imminent and recent changes in USPTO policy and US patent practice: A proposed response for inventors and investors Daniel M. Goldstein, Ph.D. Sanford

Numbers in Claims are (sometimes) OK

• Numbers are limiting and therefore usually avoided

• Numbers could be helpful to narrow claim to avoid prior art

Page 20: Imminent and recent changes in USPTO policy and US patent practice: A proposed response for inventors and investors Daniel M. Goldstein, Ph.D. Sanford

Divisional Applications

• NEW: 2 year filing deadline in Europe

• NO SECOND CHANCES: No right to amend claims of a divisional application between filing and searching

Page 21: Imminent and recent changes in USPTO policy and US patent practice: A proposed response for inventors and investors Daniel M. Goldstein, Ph.D. Sanford

Thanks to Elana Krupka

Daniel M. Goldstein, PhD

Sanford T. Colb & Co.

[email protected]

Tel: (050) 827 4677