Home: Patents: 
              Inventors Handbook 
               
                
             B. Preliminary Patent Matters 
               
              I. “Idea” vs. “Invention” 
               
              Frequently, potential clients contact us to see if we can help them 
              protect an idea. Alternatively, potential clients approach us wishing 
              to sue a person or company whom they feel has stolen an idea. 
              It is important to distinguish between ideas; concepts that cannot 
              be the subject of intellectual property rights, and inventions; 
              specific machines, materials or processes that can be patented and 
              protected. 
               
              Ideas that merely address a problem to be solved, or propose a hypothetical 
              machine or method for solving a problem without specifically discussing 
              how the machine or method works are considered abstract ideas by 
              the Patent Office and may not be granted patent rights. 
               
              By contrast, when an inventor takes an idea and reduces it to practice 
              by establishing the best mode of carrying out the invention, and 
              can describe to a person of similar skill in the Art to which the 
              invention pertains, how the invention is made and used, patent rights 
              may be granted on such an invention. 
               
              Therefore, before attempting to pursue patent rights, it is important 
              to finish the inventive process, making sure that the subject matter 
              of a potential patent application consists of more than mere abstractions. 
               
              II. “Publishing” an Idea/Invention 
               
              Since mere ideas cannot be protected with patent rights, an idea 
              cannot be owned, and may be exploited by others. Therefore, when 
              an inventor is pursuing an invention based on an idea, it is best 
              not to reveal the idea to others who might pursue a similar competing 
              invention. 
               
              Although disclosing an idea doesn’t impact the right to patent 
              an invention based on that idea, there are rules that come into 
              play, once an invention is created. 
               
              In the U.S., inventions are not patentable if they have been in 
              public use or on sale more than one year before an application is 
              filed. By contrast, in many foreign jurisdictions, an absolute novelty 
              rule is observed; if an invention is published at all before a patent 
              application is filed, no patent may issue on that invention. For 
              these reasons, it is usually best not to publish, publicly use, 
              or sell an invention before filing a patent application. 
             
            
             
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