Patent Claim Writing: Insight Into The Drafting Process
Last week, I attended PLI’s Fundamentals of Patent Prosecution 2010 Program: A Boot Camp for Claim Drafting and Amendment Writing in New York City. I was fortunate to hear an elite panel of experienced patent prosecutors talk about critical patent application topics.
Amongst the group, was Robert Faber, partner at Ostrolenk Faber LLP and one of our Practice Center Contributors. He spoke about claim drafting and gave some valuable tips as to how to write a well written claim. Faber said, ” you want to protect the invention in a claim such that you cover the concept the inventor has in mind and no matter how the particular concept is executed in years to come.” Faber advises that you should always describe the concept as broad as possible.
Below is an article Faber passed along, “Patent Claim Writing“, that helps us understand the basics of claim drafting, using a simple example:
United States Patents serve the important national goal of encouraging developments in the useful arts and sciences by granting inventors and their assignees patents that afford a limited time monopoly in their inventions in exchange for their disclosing the invention and how to practice it to the public. In the patent document, patent practitioners and patent owners= attorneys try to adequately disclose the invention and at least the best mode of practicing the invention sufficiently to enable persons skilled in the art to themselves practice the invention without undue experimentation. 35 U.S.C. ‘ 112, para. 1. That is the minimal disclosure that must be provided. (more…)
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06.18.10 | Claim Construction and Markman Hearings, Patent Case Management, Patent Litigation, Patent Prosecution, posts | Stefanie Levine