Looks like I had a great idea. Apparently it was good enough that I should have gone ahead and filed a patent application, as an F100 corp was recently awarded a patent on the same concept. 50% of the claims would have been nearly identical. The sad part, is I had the design completed in 98, vs the F100 did not even file their application until mid 2000.
I'm not really upset, simultaneous invention happens all the time. What bothers me, is that the F100 patent has effectively eliminated the possibility of going forward with my invention, unless I can work around those claims. In fairness though, I lack the marketing capability to go forward with it, so its not that big of a loss in this case.
Otoh, I can see this happening time and time again. Out of my lab notebooks, I have around 480 ideas, with most of them just as ideas, some closer to reality, and a few production ready, and some currently for sale.
I am certainly not in the financial position to go after 17 or more patents, nor are the markets for such inventions large enough imho to justify the cost. (at least at this time)
So my question is how to be proactive. My concern is not how to keep others from taking the idea and running with it, but how to keep an entity from patenting a simultaneous invention, and thus excluding me from pursuing it.
In doing some digging, it appears that statutory invention registration might be a possible avenue. Otoh, at least on the outset, this process looks like it requires a legal professional, and as a result may cost almost as much as a formal application, although as I understand things, one would not have to go through the examination process, thus saving some of the cost.
Yet another avenue would seem to be to get in on the market and have some sales records, thus making the claims of another inventor invalid due to prior art. Of course, such an approach would probably have to be resolved in court, especially when the F100 is involved. Then again, perhaps once their attorneys saw the sales records, they might not want to go up against me for infringing on their patent, as the prior art could invalidate some of their claims.
Granted, such an approach is not going to be used for all of my ideas. Where the idea has enough potential, I don't plan on giving away the farm.
What are some thoughts on the way to handle this, such that I don't end up loosing my rights to market my invention when someone else protects it.
Ron