Patent
prosecution and patent litigation are totally different from each other.
Patent
prosecution refers to the process of interacting with the patent office to have
claims allowed and the patent issued.
Litigation
refers to “court-related proceedings, ” typically AFTER a patent is issued
(say, suing someone for infringement, etc.)
Patent
prosecution happens when you (as an inventor), your patent attorney, and the
examiner at a patent office are engaged in the process of getting a patent
granted on your intellectual property.
Main
steps that are part of the patent prosecution process include:
b) A
patent office examiner responding to your filings and taking an office action
which may include legal arguments and reasons for rejecting or accepting your
claims and arguments.
c) You or
your patent attorney responding to an office action using sound
legal arguments and providing supporting facts in your favor.
d) Patent
office granting you a patent if everything goes well, and, thereby, granting
you rights as an inventor and giving your a monopoly on the use of your
patent’s methods for a fixed number of years.
Patent
litigation is a totally different beast. It happens only when you discover that
somebody (generally a corporation) is infringing upon your patent’s rights and
you take some concrete actions in order to stop infringement.
Inventors
are granted a monopoly power by the patent office on their intellectual
property in a known jurisdiction (e.g., US). Inventors are free to negotiate
and charge any licensing fees from others who want to use their intellectual
property.
If
somebody is using your invention without having any licensing rights from you
to use your invention, they are infringing upon your patent. Patent litigation
is a highly technical process because you (as an inventor) have to create
detailed claim charts (Claim
Chart: Everything You Need to Know) to prove infringement. It is a lengthy legal
process that is also highly expensive.
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