Filed Under:  Departments, Legal

Provisional Patent Applications: Cheap “Protection” or Dead Man’s Curve?

30th July 2012   ·   0 Comments

Bookmark and Share
You get what you pay for.  Case in point: provisional patent applications. 
U.S. law allows inventors to file “provisional” patent applications for a modest fee.  Since the costs for provisional applications beat the costs for regular patent applications by quite a bit, many entrepreneurs speed down this fork in the road assuming that they are “protected” (more on this later) and that they can easily convert their provisional applications into regular applications before the one year deadline for doing so.   
Here is the catch.  The claims of a patent application should define the invention while the remainder of the application should support those claims.  Provisional applications however rarely contain claims.  It should surprise no one then that provisional applications often gloss over or skip important points (in part) because these applications fail to define the invention with well-crafted sets of claims. 
Moreover, instead of supporting the claims, provisional applications often restrict what protection might subsequently be available.  For instance, provisional applications usually include large quantities of “patent swearing.”  Many of these English words have dual meanings.  In everyday, technical, and/or contractual language these terms convey what ought to be done to create a product (or service).  But, when read by a patent attorney (working for a competitor) these terms take on different legal meanings which can allow use of the idea potentially without infringement.  Worse still, even well-drafted regular applications which arise from poorly drafted provisional applications can legally inherit the flaws of the provisional applications. 
This is not to say never file a provisional application.  If you find yourself up against the guard rail of an offer-for-sale or public disclosure deadline (see previous postings) then filing a provisional application can make sense.  If the intent is to obtain cheap protection, though, entrepreneurs risk skidding over the cliff at Deadman’s Curve. 
For more information please contact Bob Villhard at bob@villhardpatents.com or 512-897-0399 or visit http://www.villhardpatents.com/.

Tags:  , , , , , , , , ,

About

Bob Villhard is a rocket scientist turned patent attorney with over 9 years of patent preparation and prosecution experience in Austin. He can be reached at bob@villhardpatents.com

Readers Comments (0)





Departments

Hall_Martin-150x150 Is your deal right for revenue-based funding?
We've had a lot of interest in the revenue-based financing model currently being presented ...
Hall_Martin-150x150 Jonathan Sandlund of CrowdCafe Talks about Equity Sites
Jonathan Sandlund of CrowdCafe Talks about Crowdfunding Equity Sites Where are you from originally? I originally hail ...
Bob Villhard Developing and Launching Products Without Patent Applications
Most start-ups find themselves faced with needing to use others to develop their technology ...
Cole harmonson Get Your Company Ready for Take-Off, 2013 is Coming
Three months of 2012 are left before we enter 2013.  How do you prepare ...
Thom Singer If Oprah and Michael Jordan Can Find Success…. So Can The Rest of Us video
RT (from twitter) @DavisHillAustin- Never let anyone tell you that you "Can't". Go get the ...
Thom Singer The Engaging Brand Podcast – Thom Singer Interview
I was interviewed for The Engaging Brand Podcastby the delightful Anna Farmery.  We talked ...
Nell Edgington - Social Velocity Creating UnSectored Social Innovation: An Interview with Jeff Raderstrong
In this month’s Social Velocity blog interview, we’re talking with Jeff Raderstrong, founder and ...
Cole harmonson How Long Will Austin’s Economy Thrive?
Austin’s economy is booming. That’s not new news, but new reports of the economic ...
Hall_Martin-150x150 Funded Deals for 2nd Quarter in Texas are Up
The Texas Entrepreneur Networks Startup Funding Report represents private investments made into Texas startup ...
marc nathan 3D Camp; Action Figure Labs on MyFoxHouston
Check out MyFoxHouston’s segment on 3D Camp Houston and entrepreneur Phil Leech of Action ...