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SMARTinMED project training session Zagreb, November 26th, 2014 Intellectual property defense and patent research Lecturer: Yuri Borgianni yuri.borgianni@unifi.it

Summary Patent fundaments What patents protect Where and when The main patent authorities Patenting procedures Who the involved subjects are Fees and costs Patent documents Structure and fields of patents Patent classifications Patent search Fields for searching patents Public databases Searching with Patentscope t Search results with Patentscope Problems with patent searching and management Sources for improving patent searching Some contents and slides have been readapted d from the material included d in: -The course Metodi e Strumenti per l Innovazione, Università degli Studi di Firenze, Italy --The Seminar Search Matters 2014, organized by the European Patent Office and held in The Hague, The Netherlands, 3-4 April 2014 2

Patent fundaments Where? What? Exclusive rights When? Who? 3

What? Exclusive rights 4

To grant a patent or to keep a trade secret? Source: http://machinedesign.com/archive/defensive-publishing-protect-your- intellectual-property t l t 5

What? A technical finding (a product, a process): New Exclusive rights Original (non-obvious) Useful/applicable in the industry Licit Patentable 6

Is my technical solution not-obvious? 7

To learn more about patent laws and procedures in the countries of the SMARTinMED partners Croatia http://www.dziv.hr/hr/intelektualno-vlasnistvo/patenti/ France http://www.inpi.fr/fr/brevets.html Greece http://www.obi.gr/obi/default.aspx?tabid=114 (more material in Greek language) Italy http://www.uibm.gov.it/index.php/brevetti/che-cos-e-un-brevetto/cos-eun-invenzione-industriale http://www.fi.camcom.it/default.asp?idtema=1&page=informazioni&action it/default asp?idtema=1&page=informazioni&action =readall&index=1&idtemacat=1&idcategoria=1915 Portugal http://www.marcasepatentes.pt/index.php?section=423 Spain http://www.oepm.es/es/propiedad_industrial/normativa/normas_sobre_protindustrial/normativa/normas sobre prot eccion_de_invenciones/nacionales/ 8

The patent law in other countries USA: http://www.uspto.gov/patents/law/ http://www.uspto.gov/patents/process/index.jsp UK: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/the uk/government/publications/the-patents-act-1977patents act Germany: http://www.dpma.de/docs/service/veroeffentlichungen/broschueren_en/patents _engl.pdf Russia: http://www.rupto.ru/rupto/nfile/3b05468f-4b25-11e1-36f8-9c8e9921fb2c/civil_code.pdf China: http://english.sipo.gov.cn/laws/lawsregulations/201101/t20110119_566244.html Japan: http://www.japaneselawtranslation.go.jp/law/detail/?id=42&vm=04&re=01 l j l il & 01 South Korea: http://www.kipo.go.kr/upload/en/download/patent%20act_201308.pdf Brazil: http://www.inpi.gov.br/portal/artigo/guia_basico_patentes Morocco: http://www.ompic.org.ma/ompic_en_234.shtm Saudi Arabia: http://www.kacst.edu.sa/en/innovation/patents/pages/regulations.aspx 9

The patent law in WIPO countries http://www.wipo.int/wipolex/en/ 10

Where? National patent tauthorities International procedures Unitary patents for more countries 11

National patents Source: http://www.hawkip.com/advice/what-is-the-timescale-of-a-patent- is the timescale of a patent application-procedure 12

Dates Patents expire 20 years after the priority date upon the payment of maintenance fees. The period is extended up to 25 years in the pharmaceutical field 13

The European Patent Convention The European Patent Office (EPO) grants European patents for the Contracting States to the European Patent Convention. The EPO provides a single patent grant procedure, but not a single patent from the point of view of enforcement. Hence the patents granted are not European Union patents or even Europe-wide patents, but a bundle of national patents. Besides granting g European patents, the EPO is also in charge of establishing Search Reports (SR) for national patent applications on behalf of several patent offices. 14

Procedure for the European Patent Office Filing to international procedures (extension) can be made within 12 months after entering the national phase (priority date) FILING Examination Filing or Formal Requirements SEARCH Search Report (if in time) A1 (SR) 18 months A2 SEARCH A3 (SR) Expired patent Amended patent (B2) Opposition Reject Accept (B1) Request for Examination 15

What are these codes? The kind code is an alpha-numeric suffix which gives information about the type of patent document. Generally, A kind codes are used for applications and B kind codes are used for issued/granted patents. The following summary of the principal kind codes may be useful. European patents A1 application without search report A2 application with search report A3 search report A4 supplementary search report (code on document is A3) B1 issued patent B2 issued patent after modification US patents A granted patent (to 2000 - replaced by B1 and B2 from 2001) A1 application, first publication (from 2001) A2 application, re-published (from 2001) A9 corrected application (from 2001) B1 granted ga edpatent, first publication (from 2001) B2 granted patent, second publication (from 2001) All the codes at http://www.delphion.com/help/kindcodes 16

What is the Search Report? 17

More on the European Patent The European Patent Convention: http://documents.epo.org/projects/babylon/eponet.nsf/0/00e0cd7fd461c0d5c1257 C060050C376/$File/EPC_15th_edition_2013.pdf How to grant an European Patent http://documents.epo.org/projects/babylon/eponet.nsf/0/e6ce616afbb87afac125773b 004b93b5/$FILE/EPO_EuroPatente13_en.pdf https://e-courses.epo.org/wbts/htgaep courses.epo.org/wbts/htgaep_en/index.htmlen/index.html Filing languages English, French, German Numbers and statistics http://www.epo.org/about-us/annual-reports-statistics.html 18

The Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT) The Patent Cooperation Treaty is an international patent law treaty, concluded in 1970. It provides a unified procedure for filing patent applications to protect inventions in each of its contracting states. A patent application filed under the PCT is called an international application, or PCT application. Updated list of the 148 contracting countries http://www.wipo.int/pct/en/pct_contracting_states.html 19

The PCT procedure Starting the national phase (priority date) 16 months 18 months 9 months if there s no national phase 12 months International SR performed by an assigned International Search Authority (e.g. EPO) Publication PCT application (any receiving office listed at http://www.wipo.int/pctwipo int/pctsafe/en/support/easy_ro.htm) Patentability opinion Supplementary International Patent Search (not mandatory) 30 months Entering selected (other) national or regional phases International Patent Examination by the International Search Authority (not mandatory) 20

More on the PCT World Intellectual Property Office (WIPO) http://www.wipo.int/portal/en/index.html The Treaty and the dates http://www.wipo.int/pct/en/faqs/faqs.html Official Languages Arabic, Chinese, English, French, German, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, Russian and Spanish Guide for entering the national phases http://www.wipo.int/pct/en/appguide/npindex.jspwipo int/pct/en/appguide/npindex Statistics: http://www.wipo.int/ipstats/en/#data 21

Regional offices All the links of national and regional Patent authorities at: http://www.wipo.int/directory/en/urls.jsp p p 22

The (upcoming) unitary European Patent http://www.epo.org/news-issues/issues/unitary-patent.html Starting ti from the date of entry into force of the Unified Patent Court (some conditions have still to be ratified), the Unitary Patent will guarantee exclusive rights of patents in all UE27 countries with the exception of Italy and Spain 23

Who? The inventor corresponds to the owner (assignee) of the patent The inventor is a person (or a group of people) Its/their company owns the patent rights (assignee) Intellectual property: immutable Industrial property: can be negotiated with third parties 24

Something we didn t mention before: how much? Fees for a national Patent Office (e.g. Germany) These costs don t include expenditures for patent attorneys 25

Something we didn t mention before: how much? Fees for granting a European Patent Basic activities Fee ( ) Online filing 120 European Search 1285 Designation for all EPO countries 580 Examination 1620 Grant and printing i 915 Yearly renewal 465-1560 http://www.epo.org/applying/forms-fees/fees.html org/applying/forms fees/fees html 26

Something we didn t mention before: how much? Maintenance fees for some European Countries Find the fees for all the countries at http://www.epo.org/law-practice/legaltexts/html/natlaw/en/vi/index.htm 27

Something we didn t mention before: how much? Fees for patenting through the PCT Basic activities International filing 1330 Supplementary Search 200 Handling 200 Basic fee (CHF) All PCT and renewal fees at: http://www.wipo.int/export/sites/www/pct/en/fees.pdf 28

How patent documents are made Pt Patents t are structured t according to a (roughly) shared set of fields, which allow undertaking patent searches through the web. The structure includes: the title; the number, constituted by the two-digit code of the Patent authority that releases the document and a numeric string; the inventor(s) and its/their provenience; the assignee (applicant), i.e. the subject that requests/obtains the exclusive rights about the invention; usually information i about its provenience is included too 29

How patent documents are made priority, application and publication dates according to the followed procedures; patent class(es), which indicate the industrial or technological fields in which the invention is relevant; cited patent documents, i.e. the references useful to describe the technical problem and the state-of-the-art relevant for the disclosed solution; non-patent literature, scientific articles and/or additional documents which participate to shape the stateof-the-art for the provided technical solution; 30

How patent documents are made the abstract, which describes the most remarkable aspects of the invention; the figures, which help people skilled in the given industrial domain to understand how a device and/or a process works; 31

How patent documents are made the detailed description of the invention and the figures, which generally specifies the problem to be solved, the review of existing methods and systems that perform similar functions, the preferred embodiment of the solution in terms of being the most suitable to solve the recalled problem; the claims, which describe what is new in legal l terms and hence circumscribe the matter of exclusive rights; they are organized in main (independent) and dependant claims, whereas the latter illustrate variants of the former. 32

Patent families A patent family is "a set of patents taken in various countries to protect a single invention (when a first application in a country the priority is then extended to other offices)." In other words, a patent family is "the same invention disclosed by a common inventor(s) and patented in more than one country. Patent families can be regarded as a "fortuitous by-product of the concept of priorities for patent applications". 33

Patent families INPADOC, which stands for International Patent Documentation Center, is an international patent collection. The database is produced and maintained by the European Patent Office (EPO). It contains patent families and legal status information, and is updated weekly. 34

Patent classes: the IPC International ti lpt PatentClassification (mandatory for allpct authorities) i A system to cluster patentable technologies into 8 sections (A-H), further categorized into more and more detailed levels (subsections, classes, subclasses, groups, subgroups) Browse at http://web2.wipo.int/ipcpub/#refresh=page 35

Patent classes: the CPC Cooperative Pt PatentClassification http://www.cooperativepatentclassification.org/ 36

Patent classes: the CPC The past 140 000 European Classification (ECLA) entries are expected to grow to some 200.000 entries 37

Patent classes: the CPC 38

Browsing the classifications worldwide.espacenet.comespacenet com 39

Browsing the classifications 40

Patent searching strategies State of the art prior art looking for solutions Keywords (title, abstract, description, claims) Patent classes Citations Dates and patent authorities to limit the search Competition monitoring Applicants Inventors Country of applicants/inventors Patent infringment checking legal status Search by patent number with Espa@cenet INPADOC links Pay attention using truncated words, synonyms, antonyms and logical operators: they can make the search more powerful 41

Searching patents: popular public patent databases Tool Link Coverage Search flexibility Patentscope (WIPO) http://patentscope.wipo.int/search/ en/search.jsf All the main patent offices High Esp@cenet (EPO) http://worldwide.espacenet.com/ Worldwide Low PatFT AppFT (USPTO) http://patft.uspto.gov/netahtml/pt O/index.html US documents Very high DEPATISnet (German Patent Office) http://www.dpma.de/english/servic e/e-services/depatisnet/ All the main patent offices Moderate Google Patents http://www.google.com/advanced_ patent_search US, EP and WO documents Low 42

Patentscope for searching and organizing data 43

Patentscope for searching and organizing data 44

Patentscope for searching and organizing data 45

Patentscope for searching and organizing data 46

Patentscope for searching and organizing data 47

Patentscope for searching and organizing data 48

Patentscope for searching and organizing data 49

Patentscope for searching and organizing data 50

Patentscope for searching and organizing data 51

Patentscope for searching and organizing data From INPADOC 52

Patentscope for searching and organizing data 53

What commercial software can do 54

Notes on patent searches There is not a definitive database and a definitive strategy for performing a PI search The best thing is to combine subset of keywords and criteria at scope of restricting the analysis to subset(s) of documents deserving full reading and analysis Keyword search in indexed databases Date Patent classification Keyword search in full-text databases Inventor, applicant name Source: L. Falciola 55

Learning to search patents Full Patentscope guide: http://www.wipo.int/edocs/pubdocs/en/patents/434/wipo_pub_l434_08.pdf Espacenet online tutorial: http://application.epo.org/wbt/espacenet/assistant.php?lg=en ti / t/ i t t h EPO online training: http://www.epo.org/learning-events/e-learning.html EPO Search seminars, e.g. contents and videos of Search Matters 2014 : http://e-courses.epo.org/wbts/sm2014_en/index.html PatFT guide at USPTO: http://patft.uspto.gov/netahtml/pto/help/help.htm Last but not least: o write down how many results your patent search strategy has provided, what you expected to find and you didn t, what you didn t expect to find, but you did, the share of relevant documents o modify your search strategy according to previous results and insights: your goal is to get closer to an ideal search which includes all (and only) the pertinent results 56

Final recommendations Improve your patent searching skills to be aware what competitors have invented and patented, but never trust yourself when writing patents (if you are not a patent attorney ) 57

58

Patents and applications European patents These have 7 digits (e.g. 1234567) US patents Granted patents have 1 to 7 digits (e.g. 4519 or 6523456). Design patents have 1 to 6 digits which should be preceded with a 'D' (e.g. D1 or D321321). Commas are optional (e.g. D323,406 or 5,231,340). 340) Applications have 11 numbers - a 4 digit ityear then 7 futher digits it (e.g. 20010000044). World (PCT) patents These can have 7, 8 or 10 digits. Early patents have a 2 digit year then 5 further digits (e.g. 0251230). Later patents have a 2 digit year then 6 further digits (e.g. 02051231). Finally, from 2004, patents have a 4 digit year then a further 6 digits (e.g. 2004058250). Japanese (JP) patents These can have 7, 8, 10 or 11 digits. Applications have a 4 digit year then 7 further digits. Publications are more complicated. From 2000 they have a 4 digit year then 6 further digits (e.g. 2004000123). Prior to this they had a 1-2 digit 'emperor' year followed by a further 6 digits (e.g. 1123456 and 10123456). [Applications may also be found with emperor years - if so the should be converted and entered as western years.] Japanese to Western year conversion table. 59

US patents B2: granted patent, second publication (from 2001) 60

US patents http://portal.uspto.gov/pair/publicpair 61

Provisional applications http://www.uspto.gov/patents/resources/types/provapp.jsp 62

Continuing patent applications The term continuation application refers to an application that is based on an original patent application (often referred to as a parent application), and has the same priority date and specification as the parent. When an application is a continuation of a parent application, it "claims priority" to the parent application. Continuation applications are often filed so that an applicant may pursue claims to inventions that were disclosed but not allowed in the parent application. In the U.S. and some other countries, there are several types of continuation applications: continuation applications (a sub-class of continuation applications),divisional applications, and continuation-in-part (CIP) applications. Source: http://www.patentlens.net/daisy/patentlens/2645.html 63

Continuing patent applications A continuation is a patent application filed by an applicant who wants to pursue additional claims to an invention disclosed in the parent application. The continuation uses the same specification as the parent application, claims the priority date of the parent, and generally names at least one of the same inventors as in the parent. This type of application is often filed when a patent examiner has allowed some but rejected other claims in an application, or where an applicant feels that he or she has not exhausted all useful ways of claiming different embodiments of the invention during the prosecution of the parent. A divisional application, or simply a divisional, is filed when the parent application contains more than one distinct invention. If multiple inventions are disclosed in a single application, the applicant may pursue claims to one of the multiple inventions in the parent application, and pursue the other inventions in subsequent divisional applications. The divisional applications generally have the same specification as the parent applications, claim the priority date of the parent, but have a different set of claims. In the U.S., divisional applications often result when the patent Examiner issues a restriction requirement, which limits each patent application to a single invention. Divisional applications in Europe and Australia are equivalent to a continuation application in the U.S. A continuation-in-part application (or CIP or CIP application), is an application to which the applicant has provided substantially the same specification as the parent application, but has disclosed additional subject matter that was not included in the parent. For a continuation-in-part application, claims to subject matter that was also disclosed in the parent are entitled to the parent s priority date, while claims to the additional subject matter are only entitled to the filing date of the CIP application. CIP applications are generally used to claim enhancements that were developed after the patent application was filed. For a tutorial about how to view continuity data for U.S. applications and patents, see How to View Continuity Data in PAIR. 64

US patents Different formats for applications, published applications and granted patents 11/874690 US20080262568-A1 US8000000-B2 Some application refers to provisional applications 60/852875 The same priority can give rise (in the USA) to a plurality of applications and patents 11/874690; 11/926044; 13/168653 US20080262568-A1; US20080097548-A1; US20110270354-A1 US7941224-B2; US8000000-B2; US8355795-B2 To correctly interpret application numbers: http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/ac/ido/oeip/taf/filingyr.htm 60/ individuates provisional applications 65

US patents 66

WIPO applications 67

WIPO applications 68

EP patents Codes are necessary to distinguish EP applications and patents: -EPyyyyxxxxxx: application (more on http://ep.espacenet.com/help?locale=en_ep&method=handlehelptopic&topic=applicationnumber) -EPxxxxxxxA*: published application -EPxxxxxxxB*: granted patent 69

EP patents: the EPO Register 70

EP patents: the EPO Register 71

EP patents: the EPO Register 72

EP patents: the EPO Register https://register.epo.org/regviewerepo org/regviewer 73

EP patents: the EPO Register 74 https:// /register.epo.org/advancedsearch?lng=en

EP patents: the EPO Register 75

EP patents: the EPO Register 76

EP patents When applications are published as A2, i.e. without SR, this is published in A3 version which does not contain the whole set of data, but just bibliographic information 77

EP patents 78

EP patents B2 patents have undergone modifications in compliance with opposition procedures 79

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How to find forward citations 81

How to find forward citations 82

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esp@cenet: smart search 84

esp@cenet: advanced search 85

esp@cenet: advanced search Fields are connected by the AND operator 86

esp@cenet: advanced search 87

esp@cenet: advanced search Database Worldwide European Patents WIPO patents Search fields Keywords in title, keywords in title or abstract, publication number, application number, priority number, publication date, applicant, inventor, ECLA class, IPC class Keywords in title, keywords in title or abstract, keywords in full text, publication number, application number, priority number, publication date, applicant, inventor, IPC class Keywords in title, keywords in title or abstract, keywords in full text, publication number, application number, priority number, publication date, applicant, inventor, IPC class 88

esp@cenet: search results 89

esp@cenet: search results Available fields Different versions of the same patent document that participate to form the patent tfamily 90

esp@cenet: exported search results 91

USPTO patent search 92

USPTO: quick search 93

USPTO: advanced search 94

USPTO: results 95

USPTO: results 96

USPTO: results 97

USPTO: results 98

USPTO: applications 99