1.The application is drafted. There are two
major sections: the claims, and the support for the claims in the form of
drawings and description of the drawings.
The claims are what you will actually have
patented if your patent is allowed; something like “1. A method for teleporting
a person from a first location to a second location, comprising: determining a
layout of atoms of a person, creating a wormhole between the first location and
second location using a nuclear fusion flux capacitor, sending the atoms of the
person through the wormhole, and reassembling the person using an electronic
atom manipulator and the determined layout.” “2. The method of claim 1, wherein
the layout is determined by a portable electron microscope.” and so on. The
description and drawings have to illustrate and provide sufficient technical
detail that an ordinary engineer or specialist in the relevant field would be
able to recreate your invention from the information provided.
2.The application is filed, along with various
administrative forms where the inventor affirms they are the true inventor, the
inventor/attorney disclose any relevant prior art they are aware of, and
initial filing and search fees are paid.
3.The patent office will do a preliminary check
to ensure that the formal requirements have all been met, like paying all fees
and having legible text and drawings, and will let you know if anything is
missing.
4.Within about a year to a year and a half, an
examiner will determine if your claims are valid, patent-eligible, and aren’t
already done by or obvious in light of what exists in the prior art.
5.If the examiner does reject your claims,
you’ll have an opportunity to change the claims and/or argue why the claims
should be allowed.
6.If the examiner is not convinced, you’ll have
to decide whether to pay fees to reopen examination and repeat step 5, appeal
the rejection to a review board (which can take several years), or abandon the
application.
7.If the examiner is convinced, your patent will be
granted, and you’ll pay some issuance fees and have an official copy of the
patent mailed to you. You’ll be able to license the patent or keep competitors
from practicing the invention
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