Intellectual Property Forum
Intellectual Property Forum Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.  
News:
Due to spam with have restricted the number of posts of our members.
We will be doing a complete update to the website shortly, including new hardware and software.
We are sorry for the inconvenience.

 
   Main Forum Page   Help Search Login Register  
Pages: [1]
  Print  
Author Topic: Do I need to sign a licensing agreement first?  (Read 1895 times)
touchbase
Newbie
*
Posts: 9

« on: 03-06-10 at 11:53 am »

Hello, if my widget is "novel and unobvious" and it will have existing electronic components (prior art) integrated into it, must I sign a licensing agreement and confidentiality agreement with the patent holder prior to filing for a utility patent on my widget?

Thank you

tb
Logged
khazzah
Lead Member
*****
Posts: 1559


View Profile WWW
« Reply #1 on: 03-07-10 at 11:36 am »

You only need to license something if there is a patent on it. There is plenty of stuff that is "prior art" that isn't a patent, or that isn't a patent still in force, and in such cases you wouldn't have to license.

I'll assume for now that there *is* an issued patent, still in force.

Even so, you don't need a license to file a patent of your own. Patentability and infringement are two completely different things. That said, if your widget does in fact infringe this other issue patent, then when you MAKE, USE or SELL your thing you would need a license. Note that several years will probably elapse between the time you apply for a patent and the time you're granted one. So it's possible a license is premature.

Finally, you only need a license if your widget does infringe the claims of the issued patent. Reading the summary and looking at the drawings will not tell you what the claims of the patent cover. That's usually a determination best left to a patent attorney.

I'm really confused about confidentialy. You want the "patent holder" to keep your invention quiet?
Logged

Karen Hazzah
Patent Prosecution Blog
http://allthingspros.blogspot.com/

Information provided in this post is not legal advice and does not create any attorney-client relationship.
touchbase
Newbie
*
Posts: 9

« Reply #2 on: 03-09-10 at 10:53 am »

Thank you very much for your guidance and direction regarding my licensing question, it is greatly appreciated.

tb

You only need to license something if there is a patent on it. There is plenty of stuff that is "prior art" that isn't a patent, or that isn't a patent still in force, and in such cases you wouldn't have to license.

I'll assume for now that there *is* an issued patent, still in force.

Even so, you don't need a license to file a patent of your own. Patentability and infringement are two completely different things. That said, if your widget does in fact infringe this other issue patent, then when you MAKE, USE or SELL your thing you would need a license. Note that several years will probably elapse between the time you apply for a patent and the time you're granted one. So it's possible a license is premature.

Finally, you only need a license if your widget does infringe the claims of the issued patent. Reading the summary and looking at the drawings will not tell you what the claims of the patent cover. That's usually a determination best left to a patent attorney.

I'm really confused about confidentialy. You want the "patent holder" to keep your invention quiet?

Logged
rohb
Newbie
*
Posts: 3

« Reply #3 on: 05-07-10 at 12:13 am »

yes u need to sign a licensing agreement first
Logged
Pages: [1]
  Print  
 
Jump to:  

Powered by SMF 1.1.4 | SMF © 2006-2007, Simple Machines LLC
Page created in 0.398 seconds with 15 queries.