In this Article, I consider the possibility of giving the USPTO input from currently active technological practitioners in evaluating the obviousness of claimed inventions. Such input could potentially serve three useful functions. First, it could improve the accuracy of USPTO decisionmaking by providing access to the perspective of actual practitioners as to the obviousness of inventions from the perspective of the hypothetical PHOSITA. Second, it could help the USPTO document the evidentiary basis for rejections that rest in part upon tacit knowledge within technological communities. Third, it could provide a quality control mechanism that would improve the credibility of USPTO decisions as to what is obvious. This mechanism should provid...
One of the most common defenses that an accused infringer raises in a patent infringement lawsuit is...
This Article examines the balance between advancing one's arguments that a patent is invalid for lac...
One of the most important and delicate judicial tasks in patent law is to keep the obviousness doctr...
In this Article, I consider the possibility of giving the USPTO input from currently active technolo...
Over a century and a quarter have passed since the Supreme Court in Hotchkiss v. Greenwood held that...
Advances in artificial intelligence (AI) have enabled the technology to contribute significantly to ...
Patents are necessary to incentivize innovation because they grant owners the right to protect inven...
The Supreme Court of Canada recently revised the doctrine of non-obviousness in a pharmaceutical se...
Non-obviousness, codified in 35 U.S.C. § 103, has been called “the ultimate condition of patentabili...
As patents expand into e-commerce and methods of doing business more generally, both the uncertainty...
[Excerpt] “The question of whether an invention is an obvious variation of existing technology is on...
This Comment proposes the use of a specifically tailored obviousness standard as a new solution to t...
This Article was prepared for the Loyola University Chicago Law Journal’s Symposium “Decisions, Deci...
The requirement of nonobviousness, codified in 35 U.S.C. § 103, has been called “the ultimate condit...
One of the most important and delicate judicial tasks in patent law is to keep the obviousness doctr...
One of the most common defenses that an accused infringer raises in a patent infringement lawsuit is...
This Article examines the balance between advancing one's arguments that a patent is invalid for lac...
One of the most important and delicate judicial tasks in patent law is to keep the obviousness doctr...
In this Article, I consider the possibility of giving the USPTO input from currently active technolo...
Over a century and a quarter have passed since the Supreme Court in Hotchkiss v. Greenwood held that...
Advances in artificial intelligence (AI) have enabled the technology to contribute significantly to ...
Patents are necessary to incentivize innovation because they grant owners the right to protect inven...
The Supreme Court of Canada recently revised the doctrine of non-obviousness in a pharmaceutical se...
Non-obviousness, codified in 35 U.S.C. § 103, has been called “the ultimate condition of patentabili...
As patents expand into e-commerce and methods of doing business more generally, both the uncertainty...
[Excerpt] “The question of whether an invention is an obvious variation of existing technology is on...
This Comment proposes the use of a specifically tailored obviousness standard as a new solution to t...
This Article was prepared for the Loyola University Chicago Law Journal’s Symposium “Decisions, Deci...
The requirement of nonobviousness, codified in 35 U.S.C. § 103, has been called “the ultimate condit...
One of the most important and delicate judicial tasks in patent law is to keep the obviousness doctr...
One of the most common defenses that an accused infringer raises in a patent infringement lawsuit is...
This Article examines the balance between advancing one's arguments that a patent is invalid for lac...
One of the most important and delicate judicial tasks in patent law is to keep the obviousness doctr...