First Be a Skeptic; Then Be an Advocate
A truism of the patent business is that if a problem is one of
long standing, and could have been solved years ago, it probably
was! Thus an attorney presented with an invention that solves
an old problem and that was readily solvable with old technology
should bring a healthy dose of skepticism to the invention analysis
process.
The role of the attorney as skeptic also extends to the question
of obviousness under 35 U.S.C. 103. The attorney’s experience may tell him that the invention
as broadly presented by the inventor would likely be deemed obvious based on
the prior art. The inventor needs to be challenged in such a case to articulate,
with the attorney’s help, why an invention so broadly defined
would not have been so obvious after all.
The point of such skepticism is not to
talk the inventor out of seeking a patent. Indeed, the attorney’s
role is to be the inventor’s advocate and help him or her
secure whatever intellectual property that he or she is entitled
to. The point of such skepticism, rather, is to open a dialog that
will bring to the fore possible arguments against the obviousness
rejection the attorney believes is likely to come if the present
broad view of the invention is maintained.
More information about the book Invention
Analysis and Claiming: A Patent Lawyer’s Guide |
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