This document provides instructions and information for an FDP webinar. It includes directions to mute microphones, submit questions through a chat, and notes that the sequence of content may vary. It also provides a link to slides that will be shared on slideshare and information on how to read different parts of a patent document, including the bibliographic data, field of invention, claims, and more. Key details on different sections of a patent are summarized to help understand what information each section provides.
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For this FDP…
• Let us mute our mics
• Any question put on TAB. All the questions will
be compiled by team CMR and answers mailed
back to you
• Few questions may be taken up during the FDP
• The sequence of the content may vary please.
• Some issue unmute 1-2 representatives, talk
4. 4
www.ipadventure.in
Slides designed by the team. I am distant associate for
this startup. Slides will be made available on slideshare:
Topic name and slideshare
13. • Bibliographic data
• Field of Invention
• Background of the invention
• Prior art
• Object of the invention
• Summary of the invention
• Brief description of drawings
• Detailed description
• Claims
Anatomy of the Patent
16. • INID Codes-Internationally agreed numbers for
identification of bibliographic data.
• Kind codes- Indicate the status of the document
• Inventor – Who actually invented.
• Assignee- Whom it has been assigned (College in your case)
• International Patent Classification
• Reference- Prior art documents which inventor and
examiner have referred.
• Patent Examiner- An expert appointed by patent office to
examine the patent application.
• Patent Attorney- The legal firm which has been authorised
by the inventor to prosecute the patent application.
Some Key points in the Bibliographic
Data
24. • Usually written in two sentences
• Briefly describes the broad area of
technology under which the patent falls.
• Basically, it should be crisp and clear
enough so that the Examiner of patent
easily understands the nature of the
invention and classifies the technology
according to its general nature.
Field of Invention
25. • This section describes the state of the art in the
particular technical area to which the patent relates
and
• What problems remain to be solved or
disadvantages accompanying the prior art solutions.
• In other words, Background of the invention should
describe what others have done in the field, and
what problems have not been solved by this prior
work.
• It is always better to mention the status of the
closest technology, experiments, patents and patent
applications in this section.
Background of the Invention and
Prior art
26. • Object of invention should clearly reflect
the advantages of the invention.
• Each and every object and advantages of
the invention should be described in a
separate sentence.
• Basically, this portion is a comparative
analysis of the inventive technology over
the existing one.
Object of the invention
27. • Summary of invention describes a broad
overview of the invention and, thus,
provide a structure for understanding
the Detailed Description and Claim
sections of the specification.
• The summary of the invention describes
the invention overall, e.g., the purpose of
the invention, problems solved,
advantages offered, and so forth.
Summary of the invention
28. • The brief description of drawings
includes a written description of the
invention that explains how to make and
use it.
• It should point the reference numerals
used in the drawings and should be
specific.
• The details should be sufficient enough
for a person skilled in the art to
understand and perform the invention.
Brief description of the
drawings
29. • The detailed description describes in
detail what the invention is and how it
is made and used.
• It should reflect the complete picture of
the invention and should be sufficient
for a person skilled in the art to perform
the invention by developing necessary
technical know‐how.
Detailed description
30. • Claims are the essence of a patent.
• The claims define the invention which the inventor
holds as his exclusive property and has the right to
exclude others from making, using and selling.
• The claims specify the scope of ownership in a piece
of property, i.e. Intellectual Property.
• These claims are of paramount importance in both
patent prosecution in the Patent Office and patent
litigation in the courts.
• Therefore, during claim drafting the choice of words
used in the patent claims should be dealt in a great
understanding and thought.
Claims
31. • An abstract should be drafted in such a
manner to make it reflect the technical
field of the invention with the existing
technical problems and the solution to
overcome such problems.
• It should be briefly drafted and within
the limit of 150 words.
• The aim of abstract should be to provide
the better information to third parties.
Abstract
43. Let us take an example of US9221293
The regulatory group
who will draft, examine,
prosecute, grant and protect
this Patent
The Industry who would
potentially use the patent &
its inventors in the quest
for business, growth and
eventual profits.
The inventors who
invented this
Each of these areas of work offer a career
growth path
5/7/2020 43SP College, Pune
46. L.L.M. Studies in IPR
• WIPO
• Australian Universities (QUT)
• UK Universities (QMUL, Cambridge, UCL, Bournemouth,…)
• USA Universities (George Washington,….)
• EU Universities
• Maastricht University (The Netherlands)
• MIPLC (Munich, Germany)
• Turin University (Milan, Italy)
IP Study - Opportunities Abroad
5/7/2020 46SP College, Pune
47. Career in IPRs-
Combination of Science and Law
1) Industry is exponentially growing
2) Salary is good
Patent Analyst can easily start with salary
of 3 lac pa
(Pharma & BPO industry -12,000 per
month i.e. 1.44 lac pa)
Graduates with IPR + Mpharm/MBA
degree can begin with 5 lac pa
3) Growth is easy
Professionals with 2-3 years of experience
in IP industry are earning
10 lac pa. This kind of package is only
expected for B.E.+MBA
5/7/2020 47SP College, Pune
48. 4) You can work in “brand” companies
5) You can have international exposure
6) Work for 5 days a week!
5/7/2020 48SP College, Pune
49. 5/7/2020
Learning outcomes for students
• General idea about various types of IPRs
• Complete Patent Lifecycle
• Drafting
• A fair idea about Patinformatics
• Career opportunities in the Field of IPR
49SP College, Pune
58. IP- Intellectual Property
• Original Ideas, research Results
• A book or a novel protected by copyright
• Copyright need not be registered
• WIPO ( World Intellectual Property
Organisation)
• patents, copyrights, trademarks,
geographical indications, designs
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59. IP- Intellectual Property
• GI- Darjiling Tea
• Adidas Shoe- Aesthestics plus
functionality- No need to register
• Disney Character - register
• Trademarks- Logos
• Patent duration – 20 years from the date
of application
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60. IPR (Right)
• making, using, selling, marketing,
importing the product
• IPR (Legal entitlement)
• Violation of IPR- Infringement
• IP protected by IPR
60
62. IP- Scrutiny
• FER- First examination report
• Objections- technical/ substantial
• Patent Prosecution- Raising objection
over a patent application
• Trademarks Prosecution has less detail
and less analysis
• IP Office- IPAB Tribunal- High court-
Supreme Court
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63. Copyright
• Right to print publish, perform or record
• Work to be recorded or copied on some
medium
• Right to make copies
• Life of author plus 60 years
63
64. Trademark
• Symbol or word legally registered or
established by use
• Benz mark for undergarments was
stopped
• Trademark unlimited life IP
• Design- visual things
64
72. Patent Prosecution
• The process of registration of patent in
the patent office by drafting patent
specification
• The entire patent lifecycle
• Replicable
• Can generate revenue through sale
72
73. Types of Patent Applications
• Ordinary application- no priority
• Convention
• National Phase PCT ( Patent
Cooperation Treaty)
• Patent of Addition
• Divisional application
73
75. Patent War
• Qualcomm versus Apple- 6 infringement
suits
• Music producer Morris Levy and John
Lennon - copyright infringement case
• Microsoft and Google- xbox, Motorola
• HUL versus Amul- frozen
dessert/icecream
75