SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 75
Download to read offline
1
The America Invents Act (AIA)
Brad Pedersen
June 7, 2012
American Invents Act (AIA) Overview
AIA Transitions
Changes
Post Issuance Proceedings
What You Need For a Patent
Comparisons
First Inventor to File with Grace (FTFG)
Prosecution Under FTFG
© 2011, 2012 Patterson Thuente Christensen Pedersen, P.A., May be distributed with attribution -
www.ptslaw.com
DISCLAIMER: This presentation and any information contained herein are intended for educational and
informational purposes only and should not be construed as legal advice.
Presentation for NIH
Brad D. Pedersen
June 7, 2012
The AIA
The Leahy-Smith America Invents Act (AIA)
Overview
• Signed into Law
– September 16th, 2011
• Three Big Changes
(1) First-Inventor-To-File
w/ Grace (FTFG)
(2) Improvements to Patent
Validity Challenges
(3) Fee Setting, but not Fee
Spending Authority
• Changes Not Included
– Contentious Litigation Issues
– But there was a TROLL
provision on limiting number
of defendants/law suit
3
4
Timetable for the AIA Transitions
9-16
2011
9-26
2011
11-15
2011
3-16
2012
9-16
2012
3-16
2013
Immediately – 9/16/2011
In – Prior User Rights (Sec. 5)
In – Micro Entity Fee (Sec. 10)
In – Virtual Marking (Sec. 16)
In – Pro bono program (SEC. 32)
Out – Tax strategies (SEC. 14)
Out – Multi-Defendant (SEC. 19)
Out – False Marking (SEC. 16)
Out – Human Organism (SEC. 33)
Done – Best mode (SEC. 15)
Change – SNQ Threshold (SEC. 6(c))
10 Days – 9/26/2011
Starts – 15% Surcharge (Sec. 11(i))
Starts – Fast Track Exam (Sec. 11(h))
60 Days – 11/15/2011
Starts – Electronic Filing Incentive -
$400 (Sec. 10(h))
6 Months – 3/16/2012
Starts – First To Publish (FTP) Grace
One Year – 9/16/2012
In – Assignee Oath/Decl (Sec. 4)
In – 3rd Party Submission (Sec. 8)
In – PTAB (Sec. 7)
In – Supplemental Exam (SEC. 12)
In – Inter Partes Review (SEC. 6(a))
In – Bus Method Pat Review (SEC. 18)
In – Post Grant Review (SEC. 6(d))
Out – Inter Partes Reexam (SEC. 19)
Starts – Important Tech Priority
Exam (Sec. 25)
18 Months – 3/16/2013
In – FTFG (Sec. 3)
In – New Sec. 102
In – Derivation Proceedings
Out – Statutory Invent Registration
4
AIA Changes That Have Already Been Made
• End of Best Mode?
– Gone as defense in litigation
– But doesn’t change prosecution?
• Expanded Prior User Rights
– All categories of patents, not just
business method patents
– New University exemption with an
exception to the exception
– Limited transfer of rights
• Patent Marking
– End of False Marking
– Start of Virtual Marking, now
owners can mark with web page
5
AIA Changes That Have Already Been Made
• Fast Track – 9/26
– $4800/$2400 fee (~$7K total)
– Prosecuted in 1 year
– 4 Ind. and 30 total claims
– Limit of 10,000 filings per FY
– Only 856 filings in FY2011
– So far 3500 filings in FY2012
– Key is actions turned around in
about 1 month
6
AIA Changes For September
• 3rd Party Submission
– Submission made before Notice of
Allowance and no later than
– 6 mos. after publication, or
– Mailing of FAOM
– 3rd party must now point out why art
is being submitted, but Office will
only reject skeleton statements
– Submission can include non-prior art
and address other than 102/103
– Owner cannot submit
– Fee $180/10 items, but fee waived if
less than 3 items are only submission
7
AIA Changes For September
• Filing by Assignee
– Combined Oath/Declaration
– Supposed to be easier proof of
obligation to assign and filing
up to Notice of Allowability
– Proposed Rules still require
early filing and current process
for unwilling inventor
– Word is that Office is looking to
fix these problems in the Final
Rules
8
Patent Office
AIA Changes For September
• Supplemental Examination
– New route into ex parte reexam (EPX)
– Allows owner to cleanse patent
– But attorney will not be cleared
– Proposed Rules
– Expensive - $21K to file for up to
10 items with $16K refunded if no
EPX
– Requires explanation of relevance
of each item
– Summarize items over 50 pages
– More than 1 Supp Exam can be
filed if more than 10 items
– EPX fees increased to $17K
9
Forgive me,
Patent
Office, for I
have …
Post Issuance Proceedings under the AIA
Five Different Regimes and Three Different Standards
Ex Parte
Reexam
and Older
Inter Partes
Reexams
(EPX/IPX)
Standard
SNQ
plus IPX only
post Nov
1999
IPX Filed
before
9/16/2011
Cutover
Inter Partes
Reexams
(IPX)
Standard
RLP
plus post
Nov 1999
Filed
between
9/16/11
and
9/16/12
New Inter
Partes
Reviews
(IPR)
Standard
RLP
for
All patents
Filed after
9/16/12
and
After 9 mos.
1st Window
New Bus
Method
Patent
Review
(CBM)
Standard
MLPTN
plus
Defendant*
Filed after
9/16/12
but
Before 9
mos.
1st Window
New Post
Grant
Review
(PGR)
Standard
MLPTN
For
FTFG patent
Filed after
3/16/13
but
Before 9
mos.
1st Window
10
11
Post Issuance Proceedings Comparison
Ex Parte
Reexam
Inter Partes
Reexam (rev.)
Inter Partes
Review (new)
Post-Grant Review (PGR)
(new)
SEC. 18 Proceeding
(new)
Threshold
& Pleading
• 35 USC §303(a)
(current law):
Substantial new
question of
patentability (SNQ)
•Reasonable likelihood
of prevailing (RLP)
•SNQ continues to
apply to pre-9/16/11
requests
• 35 USC §314(a): RLP
• 35 USC §315(a): Has
not “filed” a civil action
challenging validity
• 35 USC §324(a):“More likely
than not” (MLTN) that at least 1
claim is unpatentable
• §325(a): Must not have filed a
civil action challenging validity
• SEC. 18(a)(1)(B) : must be
sued or charged with
infringement
• Otherwise same as PGR
Estoppel:
•Civil actions
•ITC
•PTO
• None 35 USC §315(c)
(current law): “Raised
or could have raised”
Applies to civil actions,
not ITC
Also not PTO
• 35 USC §315(e)
• “Raised or reasonably
could have raised”
(RORCHR)
• May not “assert” issue
• Final written decision
• Civil actions, ITC & PTO
• 35 USC §325(e)
• RORCHR
• May not “assert” issue
• Final written decision
• Civil actions ITC & PTO
• SEC. 18(a)(1)(D)
• Any ground “raised” (not
RORCHR)
• Otherwise same as PGR
Patents
Covered
All Filed Post Nov 1999 All patents Only FTFG patent issued under
the AIA
• SEC. 18(a)(1)(A) & (d)
• “Covered business
method patents”
• Not “technological
inventions”
Scope, Grounds,
Bases
• 35 USC §§302
and 301 (current
law): Patents and
printed
publications
• 35 USC §§311(a)
and 301 (current law):
Patents and printed
publications
• 35 USC §311(b):
Patents or printed
publications
• 35 USC §312(a)(3)(B):
Can be supported by
expert opinions,
affidavits, etc.
• 35 USC §321(b): Issues relating
to invalidity under §282(b)(2) or
(3)
• 35 USC §324(b): Novel or
unsettled question important to
other patents or patent
applications (does not require
MLTN)
•Same as PGR
When • Any time • Any time • 35 USC §311(c)
• After later of:
• 9 months after
issuance (reissuance); or
• PGR is terminated
• 35 USC §321(c): ≤9 months
after issuance (or reissuance)
• 35 USC §325(f): No challenge
to non-broadened reissue claims
after original 9-month PGR period
• SEC. 18(a)(1)(B)
• Any time after suit or
charge of infringement
11
12
So, What Will You Need for a Patent
Under the AIA New Section 102?
12
13
Prior art exists under new 102(a) if a disclosure establishes that:
(1) “the claimed invention was patented, described in a
printed publication, or in public use, on sale, or otherwise
available to the public before the effective filing date. . .”
or
(2) “the claimed invention was described in a patent issued
under section 151, or in an application for patent published
or deemed published under section 122(b), in which the
patent or application, as the case may be, names another
inventor and was effectively filed before the effective filing
date . . .”
13
A disclosure of the claimed invention was
publicly availablebefore the effective filing
date.
The claimed invention was described in a later-
published U.S./U.S. PCT patent application or patent
of another inventor, effectively filed before the
inventor’s effective filing date.
§102(a)(1)
§102(a)(2)
Public
Availability
Anywhere in
World
Non-Public
“US” Patent
Filings That
Later Become
Public
New 102(a) defines 2 kinds of Prior Art:
Publicly Available (“PA”) Art + Patent Filing (“PF”) Art
14 14
Prior PA art
have two
separate
“Exceptions.”
Prior-filed,
later-publish
PF art have
three
“Exceptions.”
New 102(b) defines Exceptions to Prior Art:
Publicly Available (PA) Art and Patent Filing (PF) Art
§102(b)(1)
exceptions
deal only
with
§102(a)(1)
prior art.
§102(b)(2)
exceptions
deal only
with
§102(a)(2)
prior art.
A disclosure under §102(a)(1) is excepted if:
(A) “the disclosure was made by the inventor or
joint inventor or by another who obtained the
subject matter disclosed directly or indirectly from
the inventor or a joint inventor“ or
(B) “the subject matter disclosed had, before such
disclosure, been publicly disclosed by the
inventor or a joint inventor or another who
obtained the subject matter disclosed directly or
indirectly from the inventor or a joint inventor”
15
Exceptions for art that is first publicly disclosed not
more than 1-year before “effective filing date” –
§102(b)(1)(A)
§102(b)(1)(B)
The disclosure represents the inventor’s
own work – Full Year grace period.
A subsequent disclosure by anyone else is
not prior art with respect to subject matter
in an inventor’s earlier public disclosure –
the First to Publish (FTP) grace period
16
§102(b)(2)(B)
Exceptions for art that is earlier (not-yet-public) patent
filings as of when effectively filed…
An earlier patent filing under §102(a)(2) is excepted if:
(A) “the subject matter disclosed was obtained directly or
indirectly from the inventor or a joint inventor“ or
(B) “the subject matter disclosed had, before such subject
matter was effectively filed under subsection (a)(2), been
publicly disclosed by the inventor or a joint inventor or
another who obtained the subject matter disclosed
directly or indirectly from the inventor or a joint inventor”
or
(C) “the subject matter disclosed and the claimed invention,
not later than the effective filing date of the claimed
invention, were owned by the same person or subject to
an obligation of assignment to the same person.”
16
The inventor’s co-workers and
research collaborators patent filings.
The inventor’s own work – Full year +
grace period.
Earlier patent filings of others to the
extent of inventor’s public disclosures
before such filings – FTP grace period.
§102(b)(2)(A)
§102(b)(2)(C)
Prior Art under the AIA - Domestic
Not “PF” Prior Art:
Abandoned Applications
Applications with secrecy orders*
Unconverted Provisional
Applications*
Not “PA” Prior Art:
Offers for Sale
“Secret” Prior Art
Patent Filing (“PF”)
Prior Art - 102(a)(2)
Later US Patent, Published
Application, or
“Deemed Published” 122(b)
Publicly Available (“PA”)
Prior Art - 102(a)(1)
Patented Printed Publication
Public Use
On Sale Otherwise available
17
Prior Art under the AIA - International
Publicly Available “PA”
Prior Art - 102(a)(1)
Patent Filing “PF”
Prior Art - 102(a)(2)
PCT Applications designating US
Now “PA” prior art:
In use or on sale
OUTSIDE the US - if publicly accessible
Not “PF” prior art:
Foreign Appls/PCT Appls
Not filed in/designating the US
18
19
Scenario 1.1: invents first and files first before
Party
Party
AIA RESULT: No change from current First To Invent (FTI)
wins
19
20
Scenario 1.2: invents first, but files first
Party
Party
AIA RESULT: Change from FTI – Old 102(a)/(g)
loses can no longer swear behind or win by
interference – now must “publish ahead” to
establish a First-To-Publish (FTP) Grace Period
20
21
Scenario 1.3: invents first, files first, but establishes
FTP Grace period by publishing before files
Party
Party
A’s FTP Grace
AIA RESULT: No effective change – New 102(b)(2)(B)
wins FTP Grace period exempts filing even
though it is before filing
21
22
Redline of New 102 with Old 102
22
35 U.S.C. 102 Conditions for patentability; novelty and loss of right to patent.
(a) NOVELTY; PRIOR ART.—A person shall be entitled to a patent unless —
(a) the invention was known or used by others in this country, or patented or described in a printed
publication in this or a foreign country, before the invention thereof by the applicant for patent, or
(b) (1) the claimed invention was patented or described in a printed publication, in this or a foreign
country or in public use, or on sale in this country, or otherwise available to the public more than one year
prior to the date of the application for patent in the United States before the effective filing date of the
claimed invention; or
(c) he has abandoned the invention, or
(d) the invention was first patented or caused to be patented, or was the subject of an inventor’s
certificate, by the applicant or his legal representatives or assigns in a foreign country prior to the date of
the application for patent in this country on an application for patent or inventor’s certificate filed more
than twelve months before the filing of the application in the United States, or
(e) (2) the claimed invention was described in a patent issued under section 151,— (1) or in an application
for patent, published or deemed published under section 122(b), by another filed in the United States
before the invention by the applicant for patent or (2) a patent granted on an application for patent by
another filed in the United States before the invention by the applicant for patent, except that an
international application filed under the treaty defined in section 351(a) shall have the effects for the
purposes of this subsection of an application filed in the United States only if the international application
designated the United States and was published under Article 21(2) of such treaty in the English language;
or in which the patent or application, as the case may be, names another inventor and was effectively filed
before the effective filing date of the claimed invention.
(f) he did not himself invent the subject matter sought to be patented, or
(g) (1) and (2) [Interference provisions]
23
Summary Comparison of New 102 with Old 102
Subsection New 102 Old 102 Notes on Changes
Non-Patent Art New 102(a)(1) Old 102(b) Changes definition based on “publicly available” approach,
see New 102(b)(1) for first-to-publish (FTP) grace period
Patent Filing Art New 102(a)(2) Old 102(e) Applies to both US and PCT filings that designate US and are
published in 1 of 10 PCT official languages
Full Year and
FTP Grace for Non-
Patent Art
New
102(b)(1)
Old 102(b) Up to 1 year - for inventor’s own work full year, but for 3rd
party only after triggered by ‘publicly disclosed’ FTP
Full Year + and
FTP Grace for
Patent Filing Art
New
102(b)(2)
Old 102(a) Up to 1 year after publication - for inventor’s own work full
year after publication, but for 3rd party only after triggered
by FTP - replaces swearing behind
Joint Development New 102(c) Old 103(c) Expands “team” exception to both New 102/New 103
Abandoned -------- Old 102(c) Changes to abandoned w/out publication, see New 102(a)(2)
Foreign patent -------- Old 102(d) Hilmer doctrine gone as non-English priority filings okayed
Not the Inventor -------- Old 102(f) Replaced by definitions of inventor under New 100(f)
Interference -------- Old 102(g) Replaced by new derivation proceedings under New 135
23
24
First Inventor to File w/ Grace (FTFG) Will Be Different
Comparison of Two Filer Scenarios
FIG. 1 – Scenarios where both parties are seeking a patent
(based on hypothetical evaluation of weighted likelihood of 200 typical
fact patterns from “The Matrix” article at Cybaris IP Law Review)
See, http://web.wmitchell.edu/cybaris/wp-
content/uploads/2010/05/01.Pedersen.05-12-10-
vFINAL.WITHAPPENDIX.pdf
24
First Inventor to File w/ Grace (FTFG) Will Be Different
Comparison of One Filer Scenarios
FIG. 2 – Scenarios where only 1 party is seeking a patent
(based on hypothetical evaluation of weighted likelihood of 200 typical
fact patterns from “The Matrix” article at Cybaris IP Law Review)
See, http://web.wmitchell.edu/cybaris/wp-
content/uploads/2010/05/01.Pedersen.05-12-10-
vFINAL.WITHAPPENDIX.pdf25
First Inventor to File w/ Grace (FTFG) Will Be Different
Comparison of Derivation Scenarios
FIG. 3 – Scenarios involving fact patterns with derivation issues
(based on hypothetical evaluation of weighted likelihood of 200 typical
fact patterns from “The Matrix” article at Cybaris IP Law Review)
See, http://web.wmitchell.edu/cybaris/wp-
content/uploads/2010/05/01.Pedersen.05-12-10-
vFINAL.WITHAPPENDIX.pdf26
27
Tips/Pointers for Transition
“Mind the Gap”
Pre-FTFG Transition
(Before 3/16/2013)
• First To Invent
• Ability to Swear Behind
• 1 Year Grace/Statutory Bar
• Team Exception
(at time of invention)
Post-FTFG Transition
(After 3/15/2013)
• First To File w/ Grace
• First To Publish Grace Period
(for 3rd Party NPL/Patent Filing)
• Full Year+ Grace Period
(for Work by/from Inventor)
• Expanded Team Exception
(at time of filing)
Avoid unintentionally bridging between FTI and FTFG
• For provisional-to-utility conversions
• For parent-to-child CIP applications
27
28
Open Questions for New 102:
The “Classic Coke®” vs. “New Coke®” Challenge
Patenting “Secret Prior Art”
Can long-held trade secrets
be considered for patenting
under FTFG?
Prior User Rights Under 273(g) Invalidity-
A patent shall not be deemed to be invalid
under section 102 or 103 solely because a
defense is raised or established under this
section.’
Does the AIA overrule Metalizing
Engineering?
• Coca Cola Classic recipe is
secret prior art
• Possible to file for patent but
trade secret protection for
120+ years makes this unlikely
• There are Prior User rights
• New Coke recipe is also secret
prior art
• Prior User Rights lost by Coke
as to anyone else patenting
New Coke recipe due to
abandonment for 18 months
29
Open Questions for New 102:
Is There Symmetry Between PF Art & FTP Grace Exception?
“Available to the
Public”
•PA Art under 102(a)(1)
beyond:
•Printed publication,
•In Public Use
•On Sale
“Publicly Disclosed”
•FTP Grace under
102(b)(1/2)(B)
•By inventor
•For inventor
•From Inventor
Is Intersection
of 102(a)(1) and
102(b)(1/2)(B):
• Empty Set, or
• Something Else?
29
30
Open Questions for New 102:
What Is “Publicly Disclosed” for 102(b)(1/2)(B) Exceptions?
“Publicly
Disclosed”
Enabled
Meets
Section 112
Standards
Inherency
Express and
Implied
Disclosure
Obviousness
What POSITA
would know
Anticipation
Only Express
Disclosures
30
31
Open Questions for New 102:
What Is “Described In” for 102(d) Effective Prior Art Filing Date?
“Described
In”
Enabled
Meets
Section 112
Standards
Inherency
Express and
Implied
Disclosure
Obviousness
What POSITA
would know
Anticipation
Only Express
Disclosures
31
32
Open Questions for New 102:
What Will PTO Use As Presumptive FTFG Search Date?
Provisional
Filing Date
Assume Support
in Earliest
Provisional Case
and Search for
Art Before That
Date
FTP Publication
Date
Ask Applicant’s to
Submit Earliest
Asserted FTP Date
and Search Only
Art Dated Prior to
that Date
Utility Filing Date
Assume No Support in
Provisional or Use of FTP
Grace Period with
Applicant Having to
Prove Entitlement to
Earlier Date
Current FTI Answer:
MPEP 201.08 provides that
there is no need to determine
whether applicant is entitled to
an earlier claimed priority date
unless that filing date is actually
need to overcome a reference
32
33
Prosecution under FTFG:
33
34
Prosecution under FTFG:
34
35
Prosecution under FTFG:
35
36
Scenario 1: and both file, but neither publishes
Scenario 2: publishes and files, but only publishes
Scenario 3: and both publish and file
Scenario 4: claims priority to OUS filings
Scenario 5: has non-published patent filing
Scenario 6: and have cases with varying disclosures
Scenario 7: derives from
Scenario 8: and are working together/sharing info
Scenario 9: and are bridging “the Gap”
Party Party
First Inventor to File w/ Grace (FTFG) -
Examples of How New 102
works under the AIA
37
Scenario 2.1: invents first and files first before is
publicly available
Party
Party
No change from FTI
AIA RESULT:
wins
38
Party
Scenario 2.2a: invents first, but files after has itself
been publicly available for more than 1 year
A’s Full Year Grace
No effective change – New 102(b)(1)(A)
public actions are outside Full Year Grace
period for actions by/for or derived from inventor
AIA RESULT:
wins
39
Party
Scenario 2.2b: invents first, but files after has itself
been publicly available for less than 1 year
A’s Full Year Grace
No effective change – New 102(b)(1)(A)
public actions are inside Full Year Grace
period for actions by/for or derived from inventor
AIA RESULT:
wins
40
Scenario 2.3: invents first, but files after has been
publicly available for more than 1 year
Party
Party 1 year
AIA RESULT: No change from FTI
loses
41
Scenario 2.4a: invents first, but files after has been
publicly available for less than 1 year
Party
Party
1 year
AIA RESULT: Change from FTI - New 102(b)(1)(B)
loses 3rd party First To Publish (FTP) Grace period
only if makes invention publicly available
42
Scenario 2.4b: invents first and publishes first, but files after
has been publicly available for less than 1 year
Party
Party
A’s FTP Grace
1 year
Change from FTI - New 102(b)(1)(B)
If is publicly available for less than 1 year and
before is publicly available – inside FTP Grace period
AIA RESULT:
wins
43
Scenario 2.4c: invents first, but publishes and files after has
been publicly available for less than 1 year
Party
Party
1 year
A’s FTP
AIA RESULT: Change from FTI - New 102(b)(1)(B)
loses If is publicly available for less than 1 year but
after was publicly available – outside FTP grace period
44
A’s FTP Grace
B’s FTP Grace
Scenario 3: invents first, publishes first and files before
files or is publicly available for less than 1 year
Party
Party
1 year
AIA RESULT: No effective change – New 102(b)(1)(B)
wins FTP Grace period (exempting public
activity) is before FTP Grace period
45
Scenario 4.1a: files US application after claimed
priority in PCT/US case published in English
1 year Paris
Party
Party
18 mo nat’l stage
Filed as nat’l case
in any language
Filed as PCT/US
in English
No effective change – New 102(a)(2)
PCT filing designating the US is given the earlier effective
filing date (even if B doesn’t enter national stage in the US)
AIA RESULT:
wins
46
Scenario 4.1b: files US application after priority in
PCT/US case published in any PCT language
1 year Paris
Party
Party
18 mo nat’l stage
Filed as PCT/US in
any PCT language
Filed as nat’l case
in any language
AIA RESULT: Change from FTI – New 102(a)(2)
loses PCT filing no longer has to be in English
(Current - Arabic, Chinese, English, French, German,
Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, Russian, and Spanish)
47
Scenario 4.2a: files US application after priority date
but before is published as national case
Party
Party
18 mo publication
Published as
nat’l case
Filed as nat’l case
in any language
No effective change – New 102(a)(2)
patent publication alone other than by US
or PCT is not prior art to as of priority date
Doesn’t
matter if
patent
issues or
not
AIA RESULT:
wins
48
Scenario 4.2b: Same as 4.2a, except invented first and
case is patented
Party
Party
18 mo publication
Published in
any language
Filed in any language Patented in
any language
No effective change – New 102(a)(1)
patent outside of US or PCT/US case is only prior
by US art to as of issue date – In re Ekenstam.
MPEP 2126.
AIA RESULT:
wins
49
Scenario 5: invents first and files first, but case is
never published or issued
Party
Party
Request for non-publication or
non-converted provisional Abandoned
No effective change – New 102(a)(2)
patent application is not prior art because
it never publishes and is equivalent to
abandoned aspect of Old 102(g)
AIA RESULT:
wins
50
Scenario 6.1a: invents X + Y and invents X +Z -
Y and Z are patentably distinct from X alone
Party
Party
AIA RESULT: No change from FTI
and
both win
51
Scenario 6.1b: Same as 6.1a, except invents X + Z before
invents X + Y
Party
Party
AIA RESULT: Change from FTI – Old 102(a)/(g)
and But wins patent to X instead of , who wins
both win under FTI by swearing behind or interference
52
Scenario 6.1c: Same as 6.1b, except Y’ Z’ are patentably
indistinct when added with X
Party
Party
Change from FTI for X – Old 102(a)/(g)
wins patent to X instead of , and filing
is now patent filing prior art to for X + Z’
AIA RESULT:
Only wins
53
Scenario 6.1d: Same as 6.1b, but Y” Z” are distinct when
added with X, but indistinct from each other
Party
Party
Change from FTI – Old 102(a)/(g)
wins patent to X instead of , and cannot
swear behind filing for X + Y” for X + Z”
AIA RESULT:
Only wins
54
Scenario 6.2a: files provisional with X and then utility with
X Y, files utility with X Z before utility
Party
Party
1 year conversion deadline
No change from FTI
If X + Y and X + Z patentable over X and each
other, prov. only defeats claim to X
and filing, while prior, does not defeat
AIA RESULT:
and
both win
55
Scenario 6.2b: Same as 6.2a, except invents X + Y before
invents X + Z
Party
Party
1 year conversion deadline
No change from FTI
Same as 4.1a, invention date does not
change this example where Y and Z are
patentably distinct when added to X
AIA RESULT:
and
both win
56
Scenario 6.3a: Same as 6.2a, but Y” Z” are distinct when
added with X, but indistinct from each other
Party
Party
1 year conversion deadline
No effective change
filing for X + Z” now defeats claim to
X + Y” instead of being unable to swear
behind earlier invention of X + Z”
AIA RESULT:
and
both win
57
Scenario 6.3b: Same as 6.3a, except invents X + Y” before
invents X + Z”
Party
Party
1 year conversion deadline
Change from FTI – Old 102(a)/(g)
filing for X + Z” now defeats claim to
X + Y” instead of being unable to swear
behind earlier invention of X + Z”
AIA RESULT:
and
both win
58 58
Scenario 6.4a: Same as 6.2a and 6.2b, except that
publishes X Y before files with X Z
AIA RESULT: No change from FTI
and Same result as 4.2a and 4.2b – FTP grace
both win period doesn’t change results
Party
Party
A’s FTP
1 year conversion deadline
59
Scenario 6.4b: Same as 6.4a, except that publishes X, Y
and Z before files with X and Z
Party
Party 1 year conversion deadline
A’s FTP
Change from FTI – New 102(b)(1)(B)
wins patent to X+Z and X+Y instead of
because uses FTP grace period to trump
AIA RESULT:
Only wins
60
Scenario 6.4c: Similar to 6.3a and 6.3b, except publishes
X Y” before files and files for X Y” Z”
Party
Party
A’s FTP
1 year conversion deadline
Change from FTI – New 102(b)(1)(B)
wins patent to X+Z” instead of
because uses FTP grace period to trump
AIA RESULT:
Only wins
61
Scenario 7.1: invents first and files not more than 1 year
after , but derived invention X from
Party
18 mo publication 1 year grace
A’s Full Year+ Grace
No effective change – New 102(b)(2)(A)
“Anticipation-type” derivation will definitely
be protected under the AIA
AIA RESULT:
wins
Party
62
Scenario 7.2: invents first and files not more than 1 year
after , but derived invention X from
Party
Party
18 mo publication 1 year grace
A’s Full Year+ Grace
Change – New 102(b)(2)(A)
“Obviousness-type” derivation will now
be protected under the AIA (based on Group 2 Rules)
AIA RESULT:
wins
63
Scenario 8.1: invents first and files after , but and
work for same company
Party
Party
Same Company
Change from FTI – New 102(b)(3)
filing for X + Y” is not prior art to claim both win
to X if and are at same company as of
filing date; compared to invention date for FTI
AIA RESULT:
and
64
Scenario 8.2: invents first and files after , but and
are parties for CREATE Act joint development
Party Create Act JDA
AIA RESULT: Change from FTI – New 102(c)
and filing for X + Y” is not prior art to claim
both win to X if and are under JDA as of
filing date; compared to invention date for FTI
Party
65
Scenario 8.3a: invents first and shares information
informally with before filing, does sharing
constitute “PA” prior art under 102(a)(1)?
Party
AIA RESULT: No Effective Change
should disclosure of X to in an “informal” context is not
still get patent prior art to because it falls under 102(b)(1)(A) exception
as inventor’s own work
Party
66
Scenario 8.3b: invents X first and shares X informally
with before filing, but publishes X before
files within 1 year of publishing?
Party
AIA RESULT: No Effective Change
should disclosure of X to in an “informal” context is not
still get patent prior art to because it still falls under 102(b)(1)(A) exception
as indirectly attributable to inventor’s own work
Party
67
Scenario 8.3c: invents first and shares X informally with B
before filing, but now conceives of Y and
publishes X and Y before files?
Party
AIA RESULT: Change – B’s publication of X and Y is PA art under 102(a)(1)
should get disclosure of X to in an “informal” context is not
X but not prior art and still falls under 102(b)(1)(A), but publication
X and Y of Y will be PA prior art under 102(a)(1)
Party
68
Scenario 8.3d: Same as 8.3c, but and execute CREATE
JDA before files?
Party
AIA RESULT: Change – A’s publication of X and Y is not exempt
should get disclosure of X is not PA prior art under 102(b)(1)(A),
X but not but publication of Y will be PA prior art under 102(a)(1)
X and Y as the “team” exception of the JDA only applies to PF art
Party
Create Act JDA
69
Party
Scenario 9.1: New Matter Added From Provisional to Utility
March 16, 2013
FTI FTFG
AIA RESULT: Changeover from FTI to FTFG
can claims for X + Y are evaluated under FTI unless
Patent Both also includes claims to X + Y + Z, then both claims
are evaluated under FTFG - AIA Sec 3(n)
70
Party
Scenario 9.2: New Matter Added After 3/16/13 but not claimed
March 16, 2013
Party
70
No Change because FTI applies
wins patent to X+Y governed by FTI and
can swear behind
AIA RESULT:
wins
71
The New 102 - FTFG:
Theory vs. Practice
Idealized
Patent Filing
Fully Complete
Disclosure with
no Additional
Development
Always Filed
Before Any
Public Availability
First-to-Publish
(FTP) Grace
Period Not Used
Reality for
Most Corps.
Initial Invention
Disclosure with
Subsequent
Development
Filed After
Approval By
Patent Review
Committee
Limited Use of
Provisional/FTP
Grace Based on
Product Release
Reality for
Startups
Initial Concepts
with Subsequent
Development
Patent Filings
Efforts
Competing with
Fund Raising
Typical Use of
Provisional
Filings to
Minimize Cost
Reality for
Universities
Research
Concepts Instead
of Product
Concepts
Patent Filings
Contend with
Demands of
Publish or Perish
Will Make Most
Use of
Provisional/FTP
Grace
71
72
So, What Happens to Patent Applications?
Less Complicated:
< 50 claims
< 3 priority claims
1 inventive entity
More Complicated:
> 49 claims
> 2 priority claims
> 1 inventive entity
AFTER THE TRANSITION
Less Complicated Cases will be Easier
More Complicated Cases will have More Options and Expense
So, expectation is there will be a relative increase in Less Complicated Filings
73
Changes Impact Different Technologies Differently
73
Thank You!
About Brad Pedersen
Brad Pedersen is a patent attorney with more than 25 years of experience in patent law, engineering,
business and entrepreneurship. He is a partner and the chair of the patent practice group at Patterson
Thuente Christensen Pedersen, P.A., an intellectual property law firm in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Brad
concentrates his practice in the areas of high-technology, computer, software and medical device patent
prosecution strategy, licensing and litigation.
Brad is one of the more knowledgeable IP attorneys in the U.S. when it comes to the patent reform. Since
it was first introduced in 2005, he has actively followed the developments and debate surrounding patent
reform at the agency, legislative and judicial levels. He educates clients and colleagues by writing and
presenting on the imminent changes and strategies for dealing with the reforms.
A special thanks to Robert Armitage, Matt Rainey, Steve Kunin, Justin Woo, Tracy Dann, and Michelle
Arcand for their invaluable help on these materials.
Brad can be reached at pedersen@ptslaw.com or (612) 349.5774
About Patterson Thuente IP
Patterson Thuente Christensen Pedersen, P.A. helps creative and inventive clients worldwide protect, and
profit from, their ideas. Practicing in the areas of patents, trademark, copyright, trade secrets, IP litigation,
international IP protection, licensing and post-grant proceedings, the firm’s attorneys excel at finding
strategic solutions to complex intellectual property matters.
Visit us online at www.ptslaw.com.
74
75
Some Really Helpful Links
USPTO Links to AIA Related Materials
• Final AIA bill as enacted – a required read, and then reread
• http://www.uspto.gov/aia_implementation/bills-112hr1249enr.pdf
• Patent Office website on AIA implementation
• http://www.uspto.gov/aia_implementation/index.jsp
• Patent Office effective dates of various AIA provisions
• http://www.uspto.gov/aia_implementation/aia-effective-dates.pdf
75

More Related Content

What's hot

Patentability Search- Importance and How to Do Patentability Search
Patentability Search- Importance and How to Do Patentability SearchPatentability Search- Importance and How to Do Patentability Search
Patentability Search- Importance and How to Do Patentability SearchTT Consultants
 
Patent search analysis and report
Patent search analysis and reportPatent search analysis and report
Patent search analysis and reportYash Patel
 
Basics of specification drafting
Basics of specification draftingBasics of specification drafting
Basics of specification draftingBananaIP Counsels
 
General And Provisional Specifications Of Patents
General And Provisional Specifications Of PatentsGeneral And Provisional Specifications Of Patents
General And Provisional Specifications Of PatentsAbhas Agrawal
 
Intellectual Property Right
Intellectual Property RightIntellectual Property Right
Intellectual Property Rightrohit kamboj
 
Presentation on the Patent Process in US
Presentation on the Patent Process in USPresentation on the Patent Process in US
Presentation on the Patent Process in USBananaIP Counsels
 
Patent landscape
Patent landscapePatent landscape
Patent landscapeSagar Patil
 
Patent: A presentation on "Patent Drafting" by Ms. Vinita Radhakrishnan - Ban...
Patent: A presentation on "Patent Drafting" by Ms. Vinita Radhakrishnan - Ban...Patent: A presentation on "Patent Drafting" by Ms. Vinita Radhakrishnan - Ban...
Patent: A presentation on "Patent Drafting" by Ms. Vinita Radhakrishnan - Ban...BananaIP Counsels
 
Intellectual Property Strategy
Intellectual Property StrategyIntellectual Property Strategy
Intellectual Property StrategyElijah Ezendu
 
Overview of Patent Litigation in the United States - Knobbe Practice Webinar...
 Overview of Patent Litigation in the United States - Knobbe Practice Webinar... Overview of Patent Litigation in the United States - Knobbe Practice Webinar...
Overview of Patent Litigation in the United States - Knobbe Practice Webinar...Knobbe Martens - Intellectual Property Law
 
Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) of Computer Software
Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) of Computer SoftwareIntellectual Property Rights (IPR) of Computer Software
Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) of Computer SoftwareManjulaSandirigama
 
Doctrine of equivalants
Doctrine of equivalantsDoctrine of equivalants
Doctrine of equivalantsAltacit Global
 

What's hot (20)

Patent
PatentPatent
Patent
 
Patentability Search- Importance and How to Do Patentability Search
Patentability Search- Importance and How to Do Patentability SearchPatentability Search- Importance and How to Do Patentability Search
Patentability Search- Importance and How to Do Patentability Search
 
Patent search analysis and report
Patent search analysis and reportPatent search analysis and report
Patent search analysis and report
 
Registration and grant of Patent
Registration and grant of PatentRegistration and grant of Patent
Registration and grant of Patent
 
patents law
patents lawpatents law
patents law
 
Basics of specification drafting
Basics of specification draftingBasics of specification drafting
Basics of specification drafting
 
General And Provisional Specifications Of Patents
General And Provisional Specifications Of PatentsGeneral And Provisional Specifications Of Patents
General And Provisional Specifications Of Patents
 
Intellectual Property Right
Intellectual Property RightIntellectual Property Right
Intellectual Property Right
 
Presentation on the Patent Process in US
Presentation on the Patent Process in USPresentation on the Patent Process in US
Presentation on the Patent Process in US
 
Design Law India
Design Law IndiaDesign Law India
Design Law India
 
Patents
Patents Patents
Patents
 
Patent landscape
Patent landscapePatent landscape
Patent landscape
 
IPR
IPRIPR
IPR
 
The Meaning of Patent Infringement and Patent Litigation
The Meaning of Patent Infringement and Patent LitigationThe Meaning of Patent Infringement and Patent Litigation
The Meaning of Patent Infringement and Patent Litigation
 
Patent: A presentation on "Patent Drafting" by Ms. Vinita Radhakrishnan - Ban...
Patent: A presentation on "Patent Drafting" by Ms. Vinita Radhakrishnan - Ban...Patent: A presentation on "Patent Drafting" by Ms. Vinita Radhakrishnan - Ban...
Patent: A presentation on "Patent Drafting" by Ms. Vinita Radhakrishnan - Ban...
 
Intellectual Property Strategy
Intellectual Property StrategyIntellectual Property Strategy
Intellectual Property Strategy
 
Overview of Patent Litigation in the United States - Knobbe Practice Webinar...
 Overview of Patent Litigation in the United States - Knobbe Practice Webinar... Overview of Patent Litigation in the United States - Knobbe Practice Webinar...
Overview of Patent Litigation in the United States - Knobbe Practice Webinar...
 
Patent Drafting
Patent DraftingPatent Drafting
Patent Drafting
 
Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) of Computer Software
Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) of Computer SoftwareIntellectual Property Rights (IPR) of Computer Software
Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) of Computer Software
 
Doctrine of equivalants
Doctrine of equivalantsDoctrine of equivalants
Doctrine of equivalants
 

Similar to The America Invents Act (AIA)

America Invents Act May 2012
America Invents Act May 2012America Invents Act May 2012
America Invents Act May 2012Tracy Dann
 
The Leahy-Smith American Invents Act: More Complicated than 3D Chess?
The Leahy-Smith American Invents Act: More Complicated than 3D Chess?The Leahy-Smith American Invents Act: More Complicated than 3D Chess?
The Leahy-Smith American Invents Act: More Complicated than 3D Chess?Patterson Thuente IP
 
America Invents Act: Recent Changes to US Patent Law and Practice
America Invents Act:  Recent Changes to US Patent Law and PracticeAmerica Invents Act:  Recent Changes to US Patent Law and Practice
America Invents Act: Recent Changes to US Patent Law and PracticeGary M. Myles, Ph.D.
 
The America Invents Act: Final USPTO Rules for 35 U.S.C. 102
The America Invents Act: Final USPTO Rules for 35 U.S.C. 102The America Invents Act: Final USPTO Rules for 35 U.S.C. 102
The America Invents Act: Final USPTO Rules for 35 U.S.C. 102Patterson Thuente IP
 
The American Invents Act (AIA): Final USPTO Rules
The American Invents Act (AIA): Final USPTO RulesThe American Invents Act (AIA): Final USPTO Rules
The American Invents Act (AIA): Final USPTO RulesPatterson Thuente IP
 
Five major differences between IPRs and invalidation proceedings
Five major differences between IPRs and invalidation proceedingsFive major differences between IPRs and invalidation proceedings
Five major differences between IPRs and invalidation proceedingsAlexandraPuYang
 
Innovaters Patents
Innovaters PatentsInnovaters Patents
Innovaters PatentsIncuba8
 
US patent practice tips
US patent practice tipsUS patent practice tips
US patent practice tipsKisuk Lee
 
America Invents Act 2011 Dec 15 2011 Slides
America Invents Act 2011 Dec 15 2011 SlidesAmerica Invents Act 2011 Dec 15 2011 Slides
America Invents Act 2011 Dec 15 2011 Slidesemanzo7672
 
Stats and Insights From 6 Months of Review Proceedings
Stats and Insights From 6 Months of Review ProceedingsStats and Insights From 6 Months of Review Proceedings
Stats and Insights From 6 Months of Review ProceedingsPatterson Thuente IP
 
Protecting Innovation Under the American Invents Act
Protecting Innovation Under the American Invents ActProtecting Innovation Under the American Invents Act
Protecting Innovation Under the American Invents ActPatterson Thuente IP
 
Patenting in united kingdom
Patenting in united kingdomPatenting in united kingdom
Patenting in united kingdomSaravanan A
 

Similar to The America Invents Act (AIA) (20)

The American Invents Act (AIA)
The American Invents Act (AIA)The American Invents Act (AIA)
The American Invents Act (AIA)
 
America Invents Act May 2012
America Invents Act May 2012America Invents Act May 2012
America Invents Act May 2012
 
The Leahy-Smith American Invents Act: More Complicated than 3D Chess?
The Leahy-Smith American Invents Act: More Complicated than 3D Chess?The Leahy-Smith American Invents Act: More Complicated than 3D Chess?
The Leahy-Smith American Invents Act: More Complicated than 3D Chess?
 
America Invents Act: Recent Changes to US Patent Law and Practice
America Invents Act:  Recent Changes to US Patent Law and PracticeAmerica Invents Act:  Recent Changes to US Patent Law and Practice
America Invents Act: Recent Changes to US Patent Law and Practice
 
The American Invents Act (AIA)
The American Invents Act (AIA)The American Invents Act (AIA)
The American Invents Act (AIA)
 
IPR Presentation
IPR PresentationIPR Presentation
IPR Presentation
 
AIA Patent Etiquete
AIA Patent EtiqueteAIA Patent Etiquete
AIA Patent Etiquete
 
The America Invents Act: Final USPTO Rules for 35 U.S.C. 102
The America Invents Act: Final USPTO Rules for 35 U.S.C. 102The America Invents Act: Final USPTO Rules for 35 U.S.C. 102
The America Invents Act: Final USPTO Rules for 35 U.S.C. 102
 
The American Invents Act (AIA): Final USPTO Rules
The American Invents Act (AIA): Final USPTO RulesThe American Invents Act (AIA): Final USPTO Rules
The American Invents Act (AIA): Final USPTO Rules
 
Five major differences between IPRs and invalidation proceedings
Five major differences between IPRs and invalidation proceedingsFive major differences between IPRs and invalidation proceedings
Five major differences between IPRs and invalidation proceedings
 
Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT)- PCT How to Amend the Application as well as ...
Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT)- PCT How to Amend the Application as well as ...Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT)- PCT How to Amend the Application as well as ...
Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT)- PCT How to Amend the Application as well as ...
 
Innovaters Patents
Innovaters PatentsInnovaters Patents
Innovaters Patents
 
US patent practice tips
US patent practice tipsUS patent practice tips
US patent practice tips
 
America Invents Act 2011 Dec 15 2011 Slides
America Invents Act 2011 Dec 15 2011 SlidesAmerica Invents Act 2011 Dec 15 2011 Slides
America Invents Act 2011 Dec 15 2011 Slides
 
Stats and Insights From 6 Months of Review Proceedings
Stats and Insights From 6 Months of Review ProceedingsStats and Insights From 6 Months of Review Proceedings
Stats and Insights From 6 Months of Review Proceedings
 
Protecting Innovation Under the American Invents Act
Protecting Innovation Under the American Invents ActProtecting Innovation Under the American Invents Act
Protecting Innovation Under the American Invents Act
 
America Invents Act
America Invents ActAmerica Invents Act
America Invents Act
 
Patenting in united kingdom
Patenting in united kingdomPatenting in united kingdom
Patenting in united kingdom
 
USA Patent Reform
USA Patent ReformUSA Patent Reform
USA Patent Reform
 
03-Brief Overview of U.S. Utility Patent Law and Practice
03-Brief Overview of U.S. Utility Patent Law and Practice03-Brief Overview of U.S. Utility Patent Law and Practice
03-Brief Overview of U.S. Utility Patent Law and Practice
 

More from Patterson Thuente IP

IP Attorney - Tom Dickson - Providing protection for new ideas
IP Attorney - Tom Dickson - Providing protection for new ideasIP Attorney - Tom Dickson - Providing protection for new ideas
IP Attorney - Tom Dickson - Providing protection for new ideasPatterson Thuente IP
 
IP Attorney - Paul Onderick - We get to see new, fresh ideas before anyone else
IP Attorney - Paul Onderick - We get to see new, fresh ideas before anyone elseIP Attorney - Paul Onderick - We get to see new, fresh ideas before anyone else
IP Attorney - Paul Onderick - We get to see new, fresh ideas before anyone elsePatterson Thuente IP
 
IP Attorney - Jim Patterson - Excellence stems from empathy
IP Attorney - Jim Patterson - Excellence stems from empathyIP Attorney - Jim Patterson - Excellence stems from empathy
IP Attorney - Jim Patterson - Excellence stems from empathyPatterson Thuente IP
 
IP Attorney - Jim Patterson - Focus on the clients
IP Attorney - Jim Patterson - Focus on the clientsIP Attorney - Jim Patterson - Focus on the clients
IP Attorney - Jim Patterson - Focus on the clientsPatterson Thuente IP
 
IP Attorney - Eric Chadwick - Innovation is the engine that makes our economy go
IP Attorney - Eric Chadwick - Innovation is the engine that makes our economy goIP Attorney - Eric Chadwick - Innovation is the engine that makes our economy go
IP Attorney - Eric Chadwick - Innovation is the engine that makes our economy goPatterson Thuente IP
 
IP Attorney - Dan Bruzzone - Ideas are worth everything
IP Attorney - Dan Bruzzone - Ideas are worth everythingIP Attorney - Dan Bruzzone - Ideas are worth everything
IP Attorney - Dan Bruzzone - Ideas are worth everythingPatterson Thuente IP
 
IP Attorney - Chris Hansen - It's possible to cut corners, but we absolutely ...
IP Attorney - Chris Hansen - It's possible to cut corners, but we absolutely ...IP Attorney - Chris Hansen - It's possible to cut corners, but we absolutely ...
IP Attorney - Chris Hansen - It's possible to cut corners, but we absolutely ...Patterson Thuente IP
 
IP Attorney - Casey Kniser - Ideas give you the advantage
IP Attorney - Casey Kniser - Ideas give you the advantageIP Attorney - Casey Kniser - Ideas give you the advantage
IP Attorney - Casey Kniser - Ideas give you the advantagePatterson Thuente IP
 
Patents After the AIA: Evolving Law and Practice
Patents After the AIA: Evolving Law and PracticePatents After the AIA: Evolving Law and Practice
Patents After the AIA: Evolving Law and PracticePatterson Thuente IP
 
Claiming Strategies for Medical Device Patent Application PLUS - Bonus Update...
Claiming Strategies for Medical Device Patent Application PLUS - Bonus Update...Claiming Strategies for Medical Device Patent Application PLUS - Bonus Update...
Claiming Strategies for Medical Device Patent Application PLUS - Bonus Update...Patterson Thuente IP
 
Patent Reform Act of 2009: Overview of Recent Developments
Patent Reform Act of 2009: Overview of Recent DevelopmentsPatent Reform Act of 2009: Overview of Recent Developments
Patent Reform Act of 2009: Overview of Recent DevelopmentsPatterson Thuente IP
 
Intellectual Property Considerations for Manufacturing
Intellectual Property Considerations for ManufacturingIntellectual Property Considerations for Manufacturing
Intellectual Property Considerations for ManufacturingPatterson Thuente IP
 

More from Patterson Thuente IP (20)

IP Attorney - Tom Dickson - Providing protection for new ideas
IP Attorney - Tom Dickson - Providing protection for new ideasIP Attorney - Tom Dickson - Providing protection for new ideas
IP Attorney - Tom Dickson - Providing protection for new ideas
 
IP Attorney - Paul Onderick - We get to see new, fresh ideas before anyone else
IP Attorney - Paul Onderick - We get to see new, fresh ideas before anyone elseIP Attorney - Paul Onderick - We get to see new, fresh ideas before anyone else
IP Attorney - Paul Onderick - We get to see new, fresh ideas before anyone else
 
IP Attorney - Jim Patterson - Excellence stems from empathy
IP Attorney - Jim Patterson - Excellence stems from empathyIP Attorney - Jim Patterson - Excellence stems from empathy
IP Attorney - Jim Patterson - Excellence stems from empathy
 
IP Attorney - Jim Patterson - Focus on the clients
IP Attorney - Jim Patterson - Focus on the clientsIP Attorney - Jim Patterson - Focus on the clients
IP Attorney - Jim Patterson - Focus on the clients
 
IP Attorney - Eric Chadwick - Innovation is the engine that makes our economy go
IP Attorney - Eric Chadwick - Innovation is the engine that makes our economy goIP Attorney - Eric Chadwick - Innovation is the engine that makes our economy go
IP Attorney - Eric Chadwick - Innovation is the engine that makes our economy go
 
IP Attorney - Dan Bruzzone - Ideas are worth everything
IP Attorney - Dan Bruzzone - Ideas are worth everythingIP Attorney - Dan Bruzzone - Ideas are worth everything
IP Attorney - Dan Bruzzone - Ideas are worth everything
 
IP Attorney - Chris Hansen - It's possible to cut corners, but we absolutely ...
IP Attorney - Chris Hansen - It's possible to cut corners, but we absolutely ...IP Attorney - Chris Hansen - It's possible to cut corners, but we absolutely ...
IP Attorney - Chris Hansen - It's possible to cut corners, but we absolutely ...
 
IP Attorney - Casey Kniser - Ideas give you the advantage
IP Attorney - Casey Kniser - Ideas give you the advantageIP Attorney - Casey Kniser - Ideas give you the advantage
IP Attorney - Casey Kniser - Ideas give you the advantage
 
Patents After the AIA: Evolving Law and Practice
Patents After the AIA: Evolving Law and PracticePatents After the AIA: Evolving Law and Practice
Patents After the AIA: Evolving Law and Practice
 
Patent Prosecution Under the AIA
Patent Prosecution Under the AIAPatent Prosecution Under the AIA
Patent Prosecution Under the AIA
 
UVAs and IP Law
UVAs and IP LawUVAs and IP Law
UVAs and IP Law
 
First-Inventor-to-File (FITF)
First-Inventor-to-File (FITF)First-Inventor-to-File (FITF)
First-Inventor-to-File (FITF)
 
The New Patent Law
The New Patent LawThe New Patent Law
The New Patent Law
 
Update on Patent Reform
Update on Patent ReformUpdate on Patent Reform
Update on Patent Reform
 
Update on Patent Reform
Update on Patent ReformUpdate on Patent Reform
Update on Patent Reform
 
Claiming Strategies for Medical Device Patent Application PLUS - Bonus Update...
Claiming Strategies for Medical Device Patent Application PLUS - Bonus Update...Claiming Strategies for Medical Device Patent Application PLUS - Bonus Update...
Claiming Strategies for Medical Device Patent Application PLUS - Bonus Update...
 
Protecting IP Globally
Protecting IP GloballyProtecting IP Globally
Protecting IP Globally
 
Patent Reform Update
Patent Reform UpdatePatent Reform Update
Patent Reform Update
 
Patent Reform Act of 2009: Overview of Recent Developments
Patent Reform Act of 2009: Overview of Recent DevelopmentsPatent Reform Act of 2009: Overview of Recent Developments
Patent Reform Act of 2009: Overview of Recent Developments
 
Intellectual Property Considerations for Manufacturing
Intellectual Property Considerations for ManufacturingIntellectual Property Considerations for Manufacturing
Intellectual Property Considerations for Manufacturing
 

Recently uploaded

Good Governance Practices for protection of Human Rights (Discuss Transparen...
Good Governance Practices for protection  of Human Rights (Discuss Transparen...Good Governance Practices for protection  of Human Rights (Discuss Transparen...
Good Governance Practices for protection of Human Rights (Discuss Transparen...shubhuc963
 
如何办理(UNK毕业证书)内布拉斯加大学卡尼尔分校毕业证学位证书
如何办理(UNK毕业证书)内布拉斯加大学卡尼尔分校毕业证学位证书如何办理(UNK毕业证书)内布拉斯加大学卡尼尔分校毕业证学位证书
如何办理(UNK毕业证书)内布拉斯加大学卡尼尔分校毕业证学位证书SD DS
 
John Hustaix - The Legal Profession: A History
John Hustaix - The Legal Profession:  A HistoryJohn Hustaix - The Legal Profession:  A History
John Hustaix - The Legal Profession: A HistoryJohn Hustaix
 
如何办理(CQU毕业证书)中央昆士兰大学毕业证学位证书
如何办理(CQU毕业证书)中央昆士兰大学毕业证学位证书如何办理(CQU毕业证书)中央昆士兰大学毕业证学位证书
如何办理(CQU毕业证书)中央昆士兰大学毕业证学位证书SD DS
 
Vanderburgh County Sheriff says he will Not Raid Delta 8 Shops
Vanderburgh County Sheriff says he will Not Raid Delta 8 ShopsVanderburgh County Sheriff says he will Not Raid Delta 8 Shops
Vanderburgh County Sheriff says he will Not Raid Delta 8 ShopsAbdul-Hakim Shabazz
 
Legal Alert - Vietnam - First draft Decree on mechanisms and policies to enco...
Legal Alert - Vietnam - First draft Decree on mechanisms and policies to enco...Legal Alert - Vietnam - First draft Decree on mechanisms and policies to enco...
Legal Alert - Vietnam - First draft Decree on mechanisms and policies to enco...Dr. Oliver Massmann
 
昆士兰科技大学毕业证学位证成绩单-补办步骤澳洲毕业证书
昆士兰科技大学毕业证学位证成绩单-补办步骤澳洲毕业证书昆士兰科技大学毕业证学位证成绩单-补办步骤澳洲毕业证书
昆士兰科技大学毕业证学位证成绩单-补办步骤澳洲毕业证书1k98h0e1
 
Arbitration, mediation and conciliation in India
Arbitration, mediation and conciliation in IndiaArbitration, mediation and conciliation in India
Arbitration, mediation and conciliation in IndiaNafiaNazim
 
Trial Tilak t 1897,1909, and 1916 sedition
Trial Tilak t 1897,1909, and 1916 seditionTrial Tilak t 1897,1909, and 1916 sedition
Trial Tilak t 1897,1909, and 1916 seditionNilamPadekar1
 
定制(BU文凭证书)美国波士顿大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一
定制(BU文凭证书)美国波士顿大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一定制(BU文凭证书)美国波士顿大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一
定制(BU文凭证书)美国波士顿大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一st Las
 
如何办理(UCD毕业证书)加州大学戴维斯分校毕业证学位证书
如何办理(UCD毕业证书)加州大学戴维斯分校毕业证学位证书如何办理(UCD毕业证书)加州大学戴维斯分校毕业证学位证书
如何办理(UCD毕业证书)加州大学戴维斯分校毕业证学位证书SD DS
 
如何办理(USF文凭证书)美国旧金山大学毕业证学位证书
如何办理(USF文凭证书)美国旧金山大学毕业证学位证书如何办理(USF文凭证书)美国旧金山大学毕业证学位证书
如何办理(USF文凭证书)美国旧金山大学毕业证学位证书Fs Las
 
国外大学毕业证《奥克兰大学毕业证办理成绩单GPA修改》
国外大学毕业证《奥克兰大学毕业证办理成绩单GPA修改》国外大学毕业证《奥克兰大学毕业证办理成绩单GPA修改》
国外大学毕业证《奥克兰大学毕业证办理成绩单GPA修改》o8wvnojp
 
如何办理(ISU毕业证书)爱荷华州立大学毕业证学位证书
如何办理(ISU毕业证书)爱荷华州立大学毕业证学位证书如何办理(ISU毕业证书)爱荷华州立大学毕业证学位证书
如何办理(ISU毕业证书)爱荷华州立大学毕业证学位证书SD DS
 
如何办理新加坡南洋理工大学毕业证(本硕)NTU学位证书
如何办理新加坡南洋理工大学毕业证(本硕)NTU学位证书如何办理新加坡南洋理工大学毕业证(本硕)NTU学位证书
如何办理新加坡南洋理工大学毕业证(本硕)NTU学位证书Fir L
 
如何办理(GWU毕业证书)乔治华盛顿大学毕业证学位证书
如何办理(GWU毕业证书)乔治华盛顿大学毕业证学位证书如何办理(GWU毕业证书)乔治华盛顿大学毕业证学位证书
如何办理(GWU毕业证书)乔治华盛顿大学毕业证学位证书SD DS
 
Model Call Girl in Haqiqat Nagar Delhi reach out to us at 🔝8264348440🔝
Model Call Girl in Haqiqat Nagar Delhi reach out to us at 🔝8264348440🔝Model Call Girl in Haqiqat Nagar Delhi reach out to us at 🔝8264348440🔝
Model Call Girl in Haqiqat Nagar Delhi reach out to us at 🔝8264348440🔝soniya singh
 
如何办理(uOttawa毕业证书)渥太华大学毕业证学位证书
如何办理(uOttawa毕业证书)渥太华大学毕业证学位证书如何办理(uOttawa毕业证书)渥太华大学毕业证学位证书
如何办理(uOttawa毕业证书)渥太华大学毕业证学位证书SD DS
 
Special Accounting Areas - Hire purchase agreement
Special Accounting Areas - Hire purchase agreementSpecial Accounting Areas - Hire purchase agreement
Special Accounting Areas - Hire purchase agreementShubhiSharma858417
 

Recently uploaded (20)

Good Governance Practices for protection of Human Rights (Discuss Transparen...
Good Governance Practices for protection  of Human Rights (Discuss Transparen...Good Governance Practices for protection  of Human Rights (Discuss Transparen...
Good Governance Practices for protection of Human Rights (Discuss Transparen...
 
如何办理(UNK毕业证书)内布拉斯加大学卡尼尔分校毕业证学位证书
如何办理(UNK毕业证书)内布拉斯加大学卡尼尔分校毕业证学位证书如何办理(UNK毕业证书)内布拉斯加大学卡尼尔分校毕业证学位证书
如何办理(UNK毕业证书)内布拉斯加大学卡尼尔分校毕业证学位证书
 
John Hustaix - The Legal Profession: A History
John Hustaix - The Legal Profession:  A HistoryJohn Hustaix - The Legal Profession:  A History
John Hustaix - The Legal Profession: A History
 
如何办理(CQU毕业证书)中央昆士兰大学毕业证学位证书
如何办理(CQU毕业证书)中央昆士兰大学毕业证学位证书如何办理(CQU毕业证书)中央昆士兰大学毕业证学位证书
如何办理(CQU毕业证书)中央昆士兰大学毕业证学位证书
 
young Call Girls in Pusa Road🔝 9953330565 🔝 escort Service
young Call Girls in  Pusa Road🔝 9953330565 🔝 escort Serviceyoung Call Girls in  Pusa Road🔝 9953330565 🔝 escort Service
young Call Girls in Pusa Road🔝 9953330565 🔝 escort Service
 
Vanderburgh County Sheriff says he will Not Raid Delta 8 Shops
Vanderburgh County Sheriff says he will Not Raid Delta 8 ShopsVanderburgh County Sheriff says he will Not Raid Delta 8 Shops
Vanderburgh County Sheriff says he will Not Raid Delta 8 Shops
 
Legal Alert - Vietnam - First draft Decree on mechanisms and policies to enco...
Legal Alert - Vietnam - First draft Decree on mechanisms and policies to enco...Legal Alert - Vietnam - First draft Decree on mechanisms and policies to enco...
Legal Alert - Vietnam - First draft Decree on mechanisms and policies to enco...
 
昆士兰科技大学毕业证学位证成绩单-补办步骤澳洲毕业证书
昆士兰科技大学毕业证学位证成绩单-补办步骤澳洲毕业证书昆士兰科技大学毕业证学位证成绩单-补办步骤澳洲毕业证书
昆士兰科技大学毕业证学位证成绩单-补办步骤澳洲毕业证书
 
Arbitration, mediation and conciliation in India
Arbitration, mediation and conciliation in IndiaArbitration, mediation and conciliation in India
Arbitration, mediation and conciliation in India
 
Trial Tilak t 1897,1909, and 1916 sedition
Trial Tilak t 1897,1909, and 1916 seditionTrial Tilak t 1897,1909, and 1916 sedition
Trial Tilak t 1897,1909, and 1916 sedition
 
定制(BU文凭证书)美国波士顿大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一
定制(BU文凭证书)美国波士顿大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一定制(BU文凭证书)美国波士顿大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一
定制(BU文凭证书)美国波士顿大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一
 
如何办理(UCD毕业证书)加州大学戴维斯分校毕业证学位证书
如何办理(UCD毕业证书)加州大学戴维斯分校毕业证学位证书如何办理(UCD毕业证书)加州大学戴维斯分校毕业证学位证书
如何办理(UCD毕业证书)加州大学戴维斯分校毕业证学位证书
 
如何办理(USF文凭证书)美国旧金山大学毕业证学位证书
如何办理(USF文凭证书)美国旧金山大学毕业证学位证书如何办理(USF文凭证书)美国旧金山大学毕业证学位证书
如何办理(USF文凭证书)美国旧金山大学毕业证学位证书
 
国外大学毕业证《奥克兰大学毕业证办理成绩单GPA修改》
国外大学毕业证《奥克兰大学毕业证办理成绩单GPA修改》国外大学毕业证《奥克兰大学毕业证办理成绩单GPA修改》
国外大学毕业证《奥克兰大学毕业证办理成绩单GPA修改》
 
如何办理(ISU毕业证书)爱荷华州立大学毕业证学位证书
如何办理(ISU毕业证书)爱荷华州立大学毕业证学位证书如何办理(ISU毕业证书)爱荷华州立大学毕业证学位证书
如何办理(ISU毕业证书)爱荷华州立大学毕业证学位证书
 
如何办理新加坡南洋理工大学毕业证(本硕)NTU学位证书
如何办理新加坡南洋理工大学毕业证(本硕)NTU学位证书如何办理新加坡南洋理工大学毕业证(本硕)NTU学位证书
如何办理新加坡南洋理工大学毕业证(本硕)NTU学位证书
 
如何办理(GWU毕业证书)乔治华盛顿大学毕业证学位证书
如何办理(GWU毕业证书)乔治华盛顿大学毕业证学位证书如何办理(GWU毕业证书)乔治华盛顿大学毕业证学位证书
如何办理(GWU毕业证书)乔治华盛顿大学毕业证学位证书
 
Model Call Girl in Haqiqat Nagar Delhi reach out to us at 🔝8264348440🔝
Model Call Girl in Haqiqat Nagar Delhi reach out to us at 🔝8264348440🔝Model Call Girl in Haqiqat Nagar Delhi reach out to us at 🔝8264348440🔝
Model Call Girl in Haqiqat Nagar Delhi reach out to us at 🔝8264348440🔝
 
如何办理(uOttawa毕业证书)渥太华大学毕业证学位证书
如何办理(uOttawa毕业证书)渥太华大学毕业证学位证书如何办理(uOttawa毕业证书)渥太华大学毕业证学位证书
如何办理(uOttawa毕业证书)渥太华大学毕业证学位证书
 
Special Accounting Areas - Hire purchase agreement
Special Accounting Areas - Hire purchase agreementSpecial Accounting Areas - Hire purchase agreement
Special Accounting Areas - Hire purchase agreement
 

The America Invents Act (AIA)

  • 1. 1 The America Invents Act (AIA) Brad Pedersen June 7, 2012 American Invents Act (AIA) Overview AIA Transitions Changes Post Issuance Proceedings What You Need For a Patent Comparisons First Inventor to File with Grace (FTFG) Prosecution Under FTFG
  • 2. © 2011, 2012 Patterson Thuente Christensen Pedersen, P.A., May be distributed with attribution - www.ptslaw.com DISCLAIMER: This presentation and any information contained herein are intended for educational and informational purposes only and should not be construed as legal advice. Presentation for NIH Brad D. Pedersen June 7, 2012 The AIA
  • 3. The Leahy-Smith America Invents Act (AIA) Overview • Signed into Law – September 16th, 2011 • Three Big Changes (1) First-Inventor-To-File w/ Grace (FTFG) (2) Improvements to Patent Validity Challenges (3) Fee Setting, but not Fee Spending Authority • Changes Not Included – Contentious Litigation Issues – But there was a TROLL provision on limiting number of defendants/law suit 3
  • 4. 4 Timetable for the AIA Transitions 9-16 2011 9-26 2011 11-15 2011 3-16 2012 9-16 2012 3-16 2013 Immediately – 9/16/2011 In – Prior User Rights (Sec. 5) In – Micro Entity Fee (Sec. 10) In – Virtual Marking (Sec. 16) In – Pro bono program (SEC. 32) Out – Tax strategies (SEC. 14) Out – Multi-Defendant (SEC. 19) Out – False Marking (SEC. 16) Out – Human Organism (SEC. 33) Done – Best mode (SEC. 15) Change – SNQ Threshold (SEC. 6(c)) 10 Days – 9/26/2011 Starts – 15% Surcharge (Sec. 11(i)) Starts – Fast Track Exam (Sec. 11(h)) 60 Days – 11/15/2011 Starts – Electronic Filing Incentive - $400 (Sec. 10(h)) 6 Months – 3/16/2012 Starts – First To Publish (FTP) Grace One Year – 9/16/2012 In – Assignee Oath/Decl (Sec. 4) In – 3rd Party Submission (Sec. 8) In – PTAB (Sec. 7) In – Supplemental Exam (SEC. 12) In – Inter Partes Review (SEC. 6(a)) In – Bus Method Pat Review (SEC. 18) In – Post Grant Review (SEC. 6(d)) Out – Inter Partes Reexam (SEC. 19) Starts – Important Tech Priority Exam (Sec. 25) 18 Months – 3/16/2013 In – FTFG (Sec. 3) In – New Sec. 102 In – Derivation Proceedings Out – Statutory Invent Registration 4
  • 5. AIA Changes That Have Already Been Made • End of Best Mode? – Gone as defense in litigation – But doesn’t change prosecution? • Expanded Prior User Rights – All categories of patents, not just business method patents – New University exemption with an exception to the exception – Limited transfer of rights • Patent Marking – End of False Marking – Start of Virtual Marking, now owners can mark with web page 5
  • 6. AIA Changes That Have Already Been Made • Fast Track – 9/26 – $4800/$2400 fee (~$7K total) – Prosecuted in 1 year – 4 Ind. and 30 total claims – Limit of 10,000 filings per FY – Only 856 filings in FY2011 – So far 3500 filings in FY2012 – Key is actions turned around in about 1 month 6
  • 7. AIA Changes For September • 3rd Party Submission – Submission made before Notice of Allowance and no later than – 6 mos. after publication, or – Mailing of FAOM – 3rd party must now point out why art is being submitted, but Office will only reject skeleton statements – Submission can include non-prior art and address other than 102/103 – Owner cannot submit – Fee $180/10 items, but fee waived if less than 3 items are only submission 7
  • 8. AIA Changes For September • Filing by Assignee – Combined Oath/Declaration – Supposed to be easier proof of obligation to assign and filing up to Notice of Allowability – Proposed Rules still require early filing and current process for unwilling inventor – Word is that Office is looking to fix these problems in the Final Rules 8 Patent Office
  • 9. AIA Changes For September • Supplemental Examination – New route into ex parte reexam (EPX) – Allows owner to cleanse patent – But attorney will not be cleared – Proposed Rules – Expensive - $21K to file for up to 10 items with $16K refunded if no EPX – Requires explanation of relevance of each item – Summarize items over 50 pages – More than 1 Supp Exam can be filed if more than 10 items – EPX fees increased to $17K 9 Forgive me, Patent Office, for I have …
  • 10. Post Issuance Proceedings under the AIA Five Different Regimes and Three Different Standards Ex Parte Reexam and Older Inter Partes Reexams (EPX/IPX) Standard SNQ plus IPX only post Nov 1999 IPX Filed before 9/16/2011 Cutover Inter Partes Reexams (IPX) Standard RLP plus post Nov 1999 Filed between 9/16/11 and 9/16/12 New Inter Partes Reviews (IPR) Standard RLP for All patents Filed after 9/16/12 and After 9 mos. 1st Window New Bus Method Patent Review (CBM) Standard MLPTN plus Defendant* Filed after 9/16/12 but Before 9 mos. 1st Window New Post Grant Review (PGR) Standard MLPTN For FTFG patent Filed after 3/16/13 but Before 9 mos. 1st Window 10
  • 11. 11 Post Issuance Proceedings Comparison Ex Parte Reexam Inter Partes Reexam (rev.) Inter Partes Review (new) Post-Grant Review (PGR) (new) SEC. 18 Proceeding (new) Threshold & Pleading • 35 USC §303(a) (current law): Substantial new question of patentability (SNQ) •Reasonable likelihood of prevailing (RLP) •SNQ continues to apply to pre-9/16/11 requests • 35 USC §314(a): RLP • 35 USC §315(a): Has not “filed” a civil action challenging validity • 35 USC §324(a):“More likely than not” (MLTN) that at least 1 claim is unpatentable • §325(a): Must not have filed a civil action challenging validity • SEC. 18(a)(1)(B) : must be sued or charged with infringement • Otherwise same as PGR Estoppel: •Civil actions •ITC •PTO • None 35 USC §315(c) (current law): “Raised or could have raised” Applies to civil actions, not ITC Also not PTO • 35 USC §315(e) • “Raised or reasonably could have raised” (RORCHR) • May not “assert” issue • Final written decision • Civil actions, ITC & PTO • 35 USC §325(e) • RORCHR • May not “assert” issue • Final written decision • Civil actions ITC & PTO • SEC. 18(a)(1)(D) • Any ground “raised” (not RORCHR) • Otherwise same as PGR Patents Covered All Filed Post Nov 1999 All patents Only FTFG patent issued under the AIA • SEC. 18(a)(1)(A) & (d) • “Covered business method patents” • Not “technological inventions” Scope, Grounds, Bases • 35 USC §§302 and 301 (current law): Patents and printed publications • 35 USC §§311(a) and 301 (current law): Patents and printed publications • 35 USC §311(b): Patents or printed publications • 35 USC §312(a)(3)(B): Can be supported by expert opinions, affidavits, etc. • 35 USC §321(b): Issues relating to invalidity under §282(b)(2) or (3) • 35 USC §324(b): Novel or unsettled question important to other patents or patent applications (does not require MLTN) •Same as PGR When • Any time • Any time • 35 USC §311(c) • After later of: • 9 months after issuance (reissuance); or • PGR is terminated • 35 USC §321(c): ≤9 months after issuance (or reissuance) • 35 USC §325(f): No challenge to non-broadened reissue claims after original 9-month PGR period • SEC. 18(a)(1)(B) • Any time after suit or charge of infringement 11
  • 12. 12 So, What Will You Need for a Patent Under the AIA New Section 102? 12
  • 13. 13 Prior art exists under new 102(a) if a disclosure establishes that: (1) “the claimed invention was patented, described in a printed publication, or in public use, on sale, or otherwise available to the public before the effective filing date. . .” or (2) “the claimed invention was described in a patent issued under section 151, or in an application for patent published or deemed published under section 122(b), in which the patent or application, as the case may be, names another inventor and was effectively filed before the effective filing date . . .” 13 A disclosure of the claimed invention was publicly availablebefore the effective filing date. The claimed invention was described in a later- published U.S./U.S. PCT patent application or patent of another inventor, effectively filed before the inventor’s effective filing date. §102(a)(1) §102(a)(2) Public Availability Anywhere in World Non-Public “US” Patent Filings That Later Become Public New 102(a) defines 2 kinds of Prior Art: Publicly Available (“PA”) Art + Patent Filing (“PF”) Art
  • 14. 14 14 Prior PA art have two separate “Exceptions.” Prior-filed, later-publish PF art have three “Exceptions.” New 102(b) defines Exceptions to Prior Art: Publicly Available (PA) Art and Patent Filing (PF) Art §102(b)(1) exceptions deal only with §102(a)(1) prior art. §102(b)(2) exceptions deal only with §102(a)(2) prior art.
  • 15. A disclosure under §102(a)(1) is excepted if: (A) “the disclosure was made by the inventor or joint inventor or by another who obtained the subject matter disclosed directly or indirectly from the inventor or a joint inventor“ or (B) “the subject matter disclosed had, before such disclosure, been publicly disclosed by the inventor or a joint inventor or another who obtained the subject matter disclosed directly or indirectly from the inventor or a joint inventor” 15 Exceptions for art that is first publicly disclosed not more than 1-year before “effective filing date” – §102(b)(1)(A) §102(b)(1)(B) The disclosure represents the inventor’s own work – Full Year grace period. A subsequent disclosure by anyone else is not prior art with respect to subject matter in an inventor’s earlier public disclosure – the First to Publish (FTP) grace period
  • 16. 16 §102(b)(2)(B) Exceptions for art that is earlier (not-yet-public) patent filings as of when effectively filed… An earlier patent filing under §102(a)(2) is excepted if: (A) “the subject matter disclosed was obtained directly or indirectly from the inventor or a joint inventor“ or (B) “the subject matter disclosed had, before such subject matter was effectively filed under subsection (a)(2), been publicly disclosed by the inventor or a joint inventor or another who obtained the subject matter disclosed directly or indirectly from the inventor or a joint inventor” or (C) “the subject matter disclosed and the claimed invention, not later than the effective filing date of the claimed invention, were owned by the same person or subject to an obligation of assignment to the same person.” 16 The inventor’s co-workers and research collaborators patent filings. The inventor’s own work – Full year + grace period. Earlier patent filings of others to the extent of inventor’s public disclosures before such filings – FTP grace period. §102(b)(2)(A) §102(b)(2)(C)
  • 17. Prior Art under the AIA - Domestic Not “PF” Prior Art: Abandoned Applications Applications with secrecy orders* Unconverted Provisional Applications* Not “PA” Prior Art: Offers for Sale “Secret” Prior Art Patent Filing (“PF”) Prior Art - 102(a)(2) Later US Patent, Published Application, or “Deemed Published” 122(b) Publicly Available (“PA”) Prior Art - 102(a)(1) Patented Printed Publication Public Use On Sale Otherwise available 17
  • 18. Prior Art under the AIA - International Publicly Available “PA” Prior Art - 102(a)(1) Patent Filing “PF” Prior Art - 102(a)(2) PCT Applications designating US Now “PA” prior art: In use or on sale OUTSIDE the US - if publicly accessible Not “PF” prior art: Foreign Appls/PCT Appls Not filed in/designating the US 18
  • 19. 19 Scenario 1.1: invents first and files first before Party Party AIA RESULT: No change from current First To Invent (FTI) wins 19
  • 20. 20 Scenario 1.2: invents first, but files first Party Party AIA RESULT: Change from FTI – Old 102(a)/(g) loses can no longer swear behind or win by interference – now must “publish ahead” to establish a First-To-Publish (FTP) Grace Period 20
  • 21. 21 Scenario 1.3: invents first, files first, but establishes FTP Grace period by publishing before files Party Party A’s FTP Grace AIA RESULT: No effective change – New 102(b)(2)(B) wins FTP Grace period exempts filing even though it is before filing 21
  • 22. 22 Redline of New 102 with Old 102 22 35 U.S.C. 102 Conditions for patentability; novelty and loss of right to patent. (a) NOVELTY; PRIOR ART.—A person shall be entitled to a patent unless — (a) the invention was known or used by others in this country, or patented or described in a printed publication in this or a foreign country, before the invention thereof by the applicant for patent, or (b) (1) the claimed invention was patented or described in a printed publication, in this or a foreign country or in public use, or on sale in this country, or otherwise available to the public more than one year prior to the date of the application for patent in the United States before the effective filing date of the claimed invention; or (c) he has abandoned the invention, or (d) the invention was first patented or caused to be patented, or was the subject of an inventor’s certificate, by the applicant or his legal representatives or assigns in a foreign country prior to the date of the application for patent in this country on an application for patent or inventor’s certificate filed more than twelve months before the filing of the application in the United States, or (e) (2) the claimed invention was described in a patent issued under section 151,— (1) or in an application for patent, published or deemed published under section 122(b), by another filed in the United States before the invention by the applicant for patent or (2) a patent granted on an application for patent by another filed in the United States before the invention by the applicant for patent, except that an international application filed under the treaty defined in section 351(a) shall have the effects for the purposes of this subsection of an application filed in the United States only if the international application designated the United States and was published under Article 21(2) of such treaty in the English language; or in which the patent or application, as the case may be, names another inventor and was effectively filed before the effective filing date of the claimed invention. (f) he did not himself invent the subject matter sought to be patented, or (g) (1) and (2) [Interference provisions]
  • 23. 23 Summary Comparison of New 102 with Old 102 Subsection New 102 Old 102 Notes on Changes Non-Patent Art New 102(a)(1) Old 102(b) Changes definition based on “publicly available” approach, see New 102(b)(1) for first-to-publish (FTP) grace period Patent Filing Art New 102(a)(2) Old 102(e) Applies to both US and PCT filings that designate US and are published in 1 of 10 PCT official languages Full Year and FTP Grace for Non- Patent Art New 102(b)(1) Old 102(b) Up to 1 year - for inventor’s own work full year, but for 3rd party only after triggered by ‘publicly disclosed’ FTP Full Year + and FTP Grace for Patent Filing Art New 102(b)(2) Old 102(a) Up to 1 year after publication - for inventor’s own work full year after publication, but for 3rd party only after triggered by FTP - replaces swearing behind Joint Development New 102(c) Old 103(c) Expands “team” exception to both New 102/New 103 Abandoned -------- Old 102(c) Changes to abandoned w/out publication, see New 102(a)(2) Foreign patent -------- Old 102(d) Hilmer doctrine gone as non-English priority filings okayed Not the Inventor -------- Old 102(f) Replaced by definitions of inventor under New 100(f) Interference -------- Old 102(g) Replaced by new derivation proceedings under New 135 23
  • 24. 24 First Inventor to File w/ Grace (FTFG) Will Be Different Comparison of Two Filer Scenarios FIG. 1 – Scenarios where both parties are seeking a patent (based on hypothetical evaluation of weighted likelihood of 200 typical fact patterns from “The Matrix” article at Cybaris IP Law Review) See, http://web.wmitchell.edu/cybaris/wp- content/uploads/2010/05/01.Pedersen.05-12-10- vFINAL.WITHAPPENDIX.pdf 24
  • 25. First Inventor to File w/ Grace (FTFG) Will Be Different Comparison of One Filer Scenarios FIG. 2 – Scenarios where only 1 party is seeking a patent (based on hypothetical evaluation of weighted likelihood of 200 typical fact patterns from “The Matrix” article at Cybaris IP Law Review) See, http://web.wmitchell.edu/cybaris/wp- content/uploads/2010/05/01.Pedersen.05-12-10- vFINAL.WITHAPPENDIX.pdf25
  • 26. First Inventor to File w/ Grace (FTFG) Will Be Different Comparison of Derivation Scenarios FIG. 3 – Scenarios involving fact patterns with derivation issues (based on hypothetical evaluation of weighted likelihood of 200 typical fact patterns from “The Matrix” article at Cybaris IP Law Review) See, http://web.wmitchell.edu/cybaris/wp- content/uploads/2010/05/01.Pedersen.05-12-10- vFINAL.WITHAPPENDIX.pdf26
  • 27. 27 Tips/Pointers for Transition “Mind the Gap” Pre-FTFG Transition (Before 3/16/2013) • First To Invent • Ability to Swear Behind • 1 Year Grace/Statutory Bar • Team Exception (at time of invention) Post-FTFG Transition (After 3/15/2013) • First To File w/ Grace • First To Publish Grace Period (for 3rd Party NPL/Patent Filing) • Full Year+ Grace Period (for Work by/from Inventor) • Expanded Team Exception (at time of filing) Avoid unintentionally bridging between FTI and FTFG • For provisional-to-utility conversions • For parent-to-child CIP applications 27
  • 28. 28 Open Questions for New 102: The “Classic Coke®” vs. “New Coke®” Challenge Patenting “Secret Prior Art” Can long-held trade secrets be considered for patenting under FTFG? Prior User Rights Under 273(g) Invalidity- A patent shall not be deemed to be invalid under section 102 or 103 solely because a defense is raised or established under this section.’ Does the AIA overrule Metalizing Engineering? • Coca Cola Classic recipe is secret prior art • Possible to file for patent but trade secret protection for 120+ years makes this unlikely • There are Prior User rights • New Coke recipe is also secret prior art • Prior User Rights lost by Coke as to anyone else patenting New Coke recipe due to abandonment for 18 months
  • 29. 29 Open Questions for New 102: Is There Symmetry Between PF Art & FTP Grace Exception? “Available to the Public” •PA Art under 102(a)(1) beyond: •Printed publication, •In Public Use •On Sale “Publicly Disclosed” •FTP Grace under 102(b)(1/2)(B) •By inventor •For inventor •From Inventor Is Intersection of 102(a)(1) and 102(b)(1/2)(B): • Empty Set, or • Something Else? 29
  • 30. 30 Open Questions for New 102: What Is “Publicly Disclosed” for 102(b)(1/2)(B) Exceptions? “Publicly Disclosed” Enabled Meets Section 112 Standards Inherency Express and Implied Disclosure Obviousness What POSITA would know Anticipation Only Express Disclosures 30
  • 31. 31 Open Questions for New 102: What Is “Described In” for 102(d) Effective Prior Art Filing Date? “Described In” Enabled Meets Section 112 Standards Inherency Express and Implied Disclosure Obviousness What POSITA would know Anticipation Only Express Disclosures 31
  • 32. 32 Open Questions for New 102: What Will PTO Use As Presumptive FTFG Search Date? Provisional Filing Date Assume Support in Earliest Provisional Case and Search for Art Before That Date FTP Publication Date Ask Applicant’s to Submit Earliest Asserted FTP Date and Search Only Art Dated Prior to that Date Utility Filing Date Assume No Support in Provisional or Use of FTP Grace Period with Applicant Having to Prove Entitlement to Earlier Date Current FTI Answer: MPEP 201.08 provides that there is no need to determine whether applicant is entitled to an earlier claimed priority date unless that filing date is actually need to overcome a reference 32
  • 36. 36 Scenario 1: and both file, but neither publishes Scenario 2: publishes and files, but only publishes Scenario 3: and both publish and file Scenario 4: claims priority to OUS filings Scenario 5: has non-published patent filing Scenario 6: and have cases with varying disclosures Scenario 7: derives from Scenario 8: and are working together/sharing info Scenario 9: and are bridging “the Gap” Party Party First Inventor to File w/ Grace (FTFG) - Examples of How New 102 works under the AIA
  • 37. 37 Scenario 2.1: invents first and files first before is publicly available Party Party No change from FTI AIA RESULT: wins
  • 38. 38 Party Scenario 2.2a: invents first, but files after has itself been publicly available for more than 1 year A’s Full Year Grace No effective change – New 102(b)(1)(A) public actions are outside Full Year Grace period for actions by/for or derived from inventor AIA RESULT: wins
  • 39. 39 Party Scenario 2.2b: invents first, but files after has itself been publicly available for less than 1 year A’s Full Year Grace No effective change – New 102(b)(1)(A) public actions are inside Full Year Grace period for actions by/for or derived from inventor AIA RESULT: wins
  • 40. 40 Scenario 2.3: invents first, but files after has been publicly available for more than 1 year Party Party 1 year AIA RESULT: No change from FTI loses
  • 41. 41 Scenario 2.4a: invents first, but files after has been publicly available for less than 1 year Party Party 1 year AIA RESULT: Change from FTI - New 102(b)(1)(B) loses 3rd party First To Publish (FTP) Grace period only if makes invention publicly available
  • 42. 42 Scenario 2.4b: invents first and publishes first, but files after has been publicly available for less than 1 year Party Party A’s FTP Grace 1 year Change from FTI - New 102(b)(1)(B) If is publicly available for less than 1 year and before is publicly available – inside FTP Grace period AIA RESULT: wins
  • 43. 43 Scenario 2.4c: invents first, but publishes and files after has been publicly available for less than 1 year Party Party 1 year A’s FTP AIA RESULT: Change from FTI - New 102(b)(1)(B) loses If is publicly available for less than 1 year but after was publicly available – outside FTP grace period
  • 44. 44 A’s FTP Grace B’s FTP Grace Scenario 3: invents first, publishes first and files before files or is publicly available for less than 1 year Party Party 1 year AIA RESULT: No effective change – New 102(b)(1)(B) wins FTP Grace period (exempting public activity) is before FTP Grace period
  • 45. 45 Scenario 4.1a: files US application after claimed priority in PCT/US case published in English 1 year Paris Party Party 18 mo nat’l stage Filed as nat’l case in any language Filed as PCT/US in English No effective change – New 102(a)(2) PCT filing designating the US is given the earlier effective filing date (even if B doesn’t enter national stage in the US) AIA RESULT: wins
  • 46. 46 Scenario 4.1b: files US application after priority in PCT/US case published in any PCT language 1 year Paris Party Party 18 mo nat’l stage Filed as PCT/US in any PCT language Filed as nat’l case in any language AIA RESULT: Change from FTI – New 102(a)(2) loses PCT filing no longer has to be in English (Current - Arabic, Chinese, English, French, German, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, Russian, and Spanish)
  • 47. 47 Scenario 4.2a: files US application after priority date but before is published as national case Party Party 18 mo publication Published as nat’l case Filed as nat’l case in any language No effective change – New 102(a)(2) patent publication alone other than by US or PCT is not prior art to as of priority date Doesn’t matter if patent issues or not AIA RESULT: wins
  • 48. 48 Scenario 4.2b: Same as 4.2a, except invented first and case is patented Party Party 18 mo publication Published in any language Filed in any language Patented in any language No effective change – New 102(a)(1) patent outside of US or PCT/US case is only prior by US art to as of issue date – In re Ekenstam. MPEP 2126. AIA RESULT: wins
  • 49. 49 Scenario 5: invents first and files first, but case is never published or issued Party Party Request for non-publication or non-converted provisional Abandoned No effective change – New 102(a)(2) patent application is not prior art because it never publishes and is equivalent to abandoned aspect of Old 102(g) AIA RESULT: wins
  • 50. 50 Scenario 6.1a: invents X + Y and invents X +Z - Y and Z are patentably distinct from X alone Party Party AIA RESULT: No change from FTI and both win
  • 51. 51 Scenario 6.1b: Same as 6.1a, except invents X + Z before invents X + Y Party Party AIA RESULT: Change from FTI – Old 102(a)/(g) and But wins patent to X instead of , who wins both win under FTI by swearing behind or interference
  • 52. 52 Scenario 6.1c: Same as 6.1b, except Y’ Z’ are patentably indistinct when added with X Party Party Change from FTI for X – Old 102(a)/(g) wins patent to X instead of , and filing is now patent filing prior art to for X + Z’ AIA RESULT: Only wins
  • 53. 53 Scenario 6.1d: Same as 6.1b, but Y” Z” are distinct when added with X, but indistinct from each other Party Party Change from FTI – Old 102(a)/(g) wins patent to X instead of , and cannot swear behind filing for X + Y” for X + Z” AIA RESULT: Only wins
  • 54. 54 Scenario 6.2a: files provisional with X and then utility with X Y, files utility with X Z before utility Party Party 1 year conversion deadline No change from FTI If X + Y and X + Z patentable over X and each other, prov. only defeats claim to X and filing, while prior, does not defeat AIA RESULT: and both win
  • 55. 55 Scenario 6.2b: Same as 6.2a, except invents X + Y before invents X + Z Party Party 1 year conversion deadline No change from FTI Same as 4.1a, invention date does not change this example where Y and Z are patentably distinct when added to X AIA RESULT: and both win
  • 56. 56 Scenario 6.3a: Same as 6.2a, but Y” Z” are distinct when added with X, but indistinct from each other Party Party 1 year conversion deadline No effective change filing for X + Z” now defeats claim to X + Y” instead of being unable to swear behind earlier invention of X + Z” AIA RESULT: and both win
  • 57. 57 Scenario 6.3b: Same as 6.3a, except invents X + Y” before invents X + Z” Party Party 1 year conversion deadline Change from FTI – Old 102(a)/(g) filing for X + Z” now defeats claim to X + Y” instead of being unable to swear behind earlier invention of X + Z” AIA RESULT: and both win
  • 58. 58 58 Scenario 6.4a: Same as 6.2a and 6.2b, except that publishes X Y before files with X Z AIA RESULT: No change from FTI and Same result as 4.2a and 4.2b – FTP grace both win period doesn’t change results Party Party A’s FTP 1 year conversion deadline
  • 59. 59 Scenario 6.4b: Same as 6.4a, except that publishes X, Y and Z before files with X and Z Party Party 1 year conversion deadline A’s FTP Change from FTI – New 102(b)(1)(B) wins patent to X+Z and X+Y instead of because uses FTP grace period to trump AIA RESULT: Only wins
  • 60. 60 Scenario 6.4c: Similar to 6.3a and 6.3b, except publishes X Y” before files and files for X Y” Z” Party Party A’s FTP 1 year conversion deadline Change from FTI – New 102(b)(1)(B) wins patent to X+Z” instead of because uses FTP grace period to trump AIA RESULT: Only wins
  • 61. 61 Scenario 7.1: invents first and files not more than 1 year after , but derived invention X from Party 18 mo publication 1 year grace A’s Full Year+ Grace No effective change – New 102(b)(2)(A) “Anticipation-type” derivation will definitely be protected under the AIA AIA RESULT: wins Party
  • 62. 62 Scenario 7.2: invents first and files not more than 1 year after , but derived invention X from Party Party 18 mo publication 1 year grace A’s Full Year+ Grace Change – New 102(b)(2)(A) “Obviousness-type” derivation will now be protected under the AIA (based on Group 2 Rules) AIA RESULT: wins
  • 63. 63 Scenario 8.1: invents first and files after , but and work for same company Party Party Same Company Change from FTI – New 102(b)(3) filing for X + Y” is not prior art to claim both win to X if and are at same company as of filing date; compared to invention date for FTI AIA RESULT: and
  • 64. 64 Scenario 8.2: invents first and files after , but and are parties for CREATE Act joint development Party Create Act JDA AIA RESULT: Change from FTI – New 102(c) and filing for X + Y” is not prior art to claim both win to X if and are under JDA as of filing date; compared to invention date for FTI Party
  • 65. 65 Scenario 8.3a: invents first and shares information informally with before filing, does sharing constitute “PA” prior art under 102(a)(1)? Party AIA RESULT: No Effective Change should disclosure of X to in an “informal” context is not still get patent prior art to because it falls under 102(b)(1)(A) exception as inventor’s own work Party
  • 66. 66 Scenario 8.3b: invents X first and shares X informally with before filing, but publishes X before files within 1 year of publishing? Party AIA RESULT: No Effective Change should disclosure of X to in an “informal” context is not still get patent prior art to because it still falls under 102(b)(1)(A) exception as indirectly attributable to inventor’s own work Party
  • 67. 67 Scenario 8.3c: invents first and shares X informally with B before filing, but now conceives of Y and publishes X and Y before files? Party AIA RESULT: Change – B’s publication of X and Y is PA art under 102(a)(1) should get disclosure of X to in an “informal” context is not X but not prior art and still falls under 102(b)(1)(A), but publication X and Y of Y will be PA prior art under 102(a)(1) Party
  • 68. 68 Scenario 8.3d: Same as 8.3c, but and execute CREATE JDA before files? Party AIA RESULT: Change – A’s publication of X and Y is not exempt should get disclosure of X is not PA prior art under 102(b)(1)(A), X but not but publication of Y will be PA prior art under 102(a)(1) X and Y as the “team” exception of the JDA only applies to PF art Party Create Act JDA
  • 69. 69 Party Scenario 9.1: New Matter Added From Provisional to Utility March 16, 2013 FTI FTFG AIA RESULT: Changeover from FTI to FTFG can claims for X + Y are evaluated under FTI unless Patent Both also includes claims to X + Y + Z, then both claims are evaluated under FTFG - AIA Sec 3(n)
  • 70. 70 Party Scenario 9.2: New Matter Added After 3/16/13 but not claimed March 16, 2013 Party 70 No Change because FTI applies wins patent to X+Y governed by FTI and can swear behind AIA RESULT: wins
  • 71. 71 The New 102 - FTFG: Theory vs. Practice Idealized Patent Filing Fully Complete Disclosure with no Additional Development Always Filed Before Any Public Availability First-to-Publish (FTP) Grace Period Not Used Reality for Most Corps. Initial Invention Disclosure with Subsequent Development Filed After Approval By Patent Review Committee Limited Use of Provisional/FTP Grace Based on Product Release Reality for Startups Initial Concepts with Subsequent Development Patent Filings Efforts Competing with Fund Raising Typical Use of Provisional Filings to Minimize Cost Reality for Universities Research Concepts Instead of Product Concepts Patent Filings Contend with Demands of Publish or Perish Will Make Most Use of Provisional/FTP Grace 71
  • 72. 72 So, What Happens to Patent Applications? Less Complicated: < 50 claims < 3 priority claims 1 inventive entity More Complicated: > 49 claims > 2 priority claims > 1 inventive entity AFTER THE TRANSITION Less Complicated Cases will be Easier More Complicated Cases will have More Options and Expense So, expectation is there will be a relative increase in Less Complicated Filings
  • 73. 73 Changes Impact Different Technologies Differently 73
  • 74. Thank You! About Brad Pedersen Brad Pedersen is a patent attorney with more than 25 years of experience in patent law, engineering, business and entrepreneurship. He is a partner and the chair of the patent practice group at Patterson Thuente Christensen Pedersen, P.A., an intellectual property law firm in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Brad concentrates his practice in the areas of high-technology, computer, software and medical device patent prosecution strategy, licensing and litigation. Brad is one of the more knowledgeable IP attorneys in the U.S. when it comes to the patent reform. Since it was first introduced in 2005, he has actively followed the developments and debate surrounding patent reform at the agency, legislative and judicial levels. He educates clients and colleagues by writing and presenting on the imminent changes and strategies for dealing with the reforms. A special thanks to Robert Armitage, Matt Rainey, Steve Kunin, Justin Woo, Tracy Dann, and Michelle Arcand for their invaluable help on these materials. Brad can be reached at pedersen@ptslaw.com or (612) 349.5774 About Patterson Thuente IP Patterson Thuente Christensen Pedersen, P.A. helps creative and inventive clients worldwide protect, and profit from, their ideas. Practicing in the areas of patents, trademark, copyright, trade secrets, IP litigation, international IP protection, licensing and post-grant proceedings, the firm’s attorneys excel at finding strategic solutions to complex intellectual property matters. Visit us online at www.ptslaw.com. 74
  • 75. 75 Some Really Helpful Links USPTO Links to AIA Related Materials • Final AIA bill as enacted – a required read, and then reread • http://www.uspto.gov/aia_implementation/bills-112hr1249enr.pdf • Patent Office website on AIA implementation • http://www.uspto.gov/aia_implementation/index.jsp • Patent Office effective dates of various AIA provisions • http://www.uspto.gov/aia_implementation/aia-effective-dates.pdf 75