This paper discusses the law relating to the patentability of products and methods of their use. Specifically, the paper examines the circumstance where an inventor has brought forth a product which has no known credible utility or industrial applicability, but adds some guesses to her patent application in the hopes that if she guesses correctly, she will obtain a valuable patent. If one of the guesses proves correct, should this be treated in essence as a constructive reduction to practice sufficient to justify the grant of a valid patent? This paper suggests that the proper answer should be no because a sound patent system should not encourage guessing where there is no sound scientific basis for the guess. My analysis of how such gu...
article published in law reviewIt is axiomatic in patent law that an invention must be useful. The u...
Arguably, no other biotechnological invention has been excoriated with so much confused rhetoric on ...
The view of patents as well defined property rights is as simplistic as it is ubiquitous. This paper...
Throughout the past two centuries, the U.S. patent system has defined the scope of (potentially) pat...
There is a “replicability crisis” in the scientific literature. Scientists attempting to redo experi...
Courts, the Patent Office, and commentators are in vigorous disagreement about what types of innovat...
Courts, the Patent Office, and commentators are in vigorous disagreement about what types of innovat...
Economists assume patented inventions contain new knowledge which creates the spillover benefits pro...
Patents are necessary to incentivize innovation because they grant owners the right to protect inven...
The novelty requirement seeks to ensure that a patent will not issue if the public already possesses...
Courts, the Patent Office, and commentators are in vigorous disagreement about what types of innovat...
The quest to achieve the impossible fuels creativity, spawns new fields of inquiry, illuminates old ...
The novelty requirement seeks to ensure that a patent will not issue if the public already possesses...
The Court of Customs and Patent Appeals has held that the mere fact that elements of a claimed metho...
Arguably, no other biotechnological invention has been excoriated with so much confused rhetoric on ...
article published in law reviewIt is axiomatic in patent law that an invention must be useful. The u...
Arguably, no other biotechnological invention has been excoriated with so much confused rhetoric on ...
The view of patents as well defined property rights is as simplistic as it is ubiquitous. This paper...
Throughout the past two centuries, the U.S. patent system has defined the scope of (potentially) pat...
There is a “replicability crisis” in the scientific literature. Scientists attempting to redo experi...
Courts, the Patent Office, and commentators are in vigorous disagreement about what types of innovat...
Courts, the Patent Office, and commentators are in vigorous disagreement about what types of innovat...
Economists assume patented inventions contain new knowledge which creates the spillover benefits pro...
Patents are necessary to incentivize innovation because they grant owners the right to protect inven...
The novelty requirement seeks to ensure that a patent will not issue if the public already possesses...
Courts, the Patent Office, and commentators are in vigorous disagreement about what types of innovat...
The quest to achieve the impossible fuels creativity, spawns new fields of inquiry, illuminates old ...
The novelty requirement seeks to ensure that a patent will not issue if the public already possesses...
The Court of Customs and Patent Appeals has held that the mere fact that elements of a claimed metho...
Arguably, no other biotechnological invention has been excoriated with so much confused rhetoric on ...
article published in law reviewIt is axiomatic in patent law that an invention must be useful. The u...
Arguably, no other biotechnological invention has been excoriated with so much confused rhetoric on ...
The view of patents as well defined property rights is as simplistic as it is ubiquitous. This paper...