Greenberg & Lieberman
Intellectual Property and Litigation

 Home Page  Contact Us  Terms Glossary  Patent FAQs
  

Patent Examples Such As " Patents And Inventors " Can Be Legally Complex. That's Why Our Patent Lawyers Are Ready To Help With:

• Cell Phone Patent
• Telecommunications Patent
• Invalidate Patent

Need Patent Help? Contact Our Lawyers!

  
 
 
See what other customers have to say about us.

   Patent Topics

   Patent Help Pages

 
 Do you have an idea to patent?
  • Is it an invention?
  • What kind of patent do you need?
  • What can you do to protect your rights while waiting for your patent?

Let Greenberg & Lieberman walk you through the patent maze and make it more like a stroll in the park.

Inventors like you -- and your ideas -- are as American as baseball and apple pie. Ideas are powerful because they lead to inventions. Inventions make daily tasks and products faster, simpler, more attractive, and more profitable. Typical inventions are physical objects, procedures, methods, and products. There are many types of inventions.

For an idea to be termed an invention, you must have an idea and then reduce it to practice. In other words, you must be capable of explaining how the idea will be reproducibly applied in a real world example. For instance, if an inventor conceives of a machine that can instantly transport a person from New York to Los Angeles, he has a great idea! But if the inventor actually knows how to build such a machine, he has a great invention. An idea needs to be more than just abstract to be an invention.

You don't need to build a model of an invention to make sure that it actually works, only describe how the idea will be embodied or practiced. Most commonly, an inventor writes down an idea and draws pictures or flow charts of how the idea will look or be practiced.

With strict confidentiality, Greenberg & Lieberman can guide you in determining whether your idea has become an invention. If it has, we will take steps to:

Go to Step 1
Determine what types of patents are applicable.

Bookmark:           
Permalink:  http://S-0.ORG/tLltZ5O


Did You Know?

A patent protects your invention.

A patent for an invention is a grant of property rights by the U.S. Government through the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. The patent grant excludes others from making, using, or selling the invention in the United States. The terms "Patent Pending" and "Patent Applied For" are used to inform the public that an application for a patent has been filed. Patent protection does not start until the actual grant of a patent. Marking of an article as patented, when it is not, is illegal and subject to penalty.

Contact our Patent Professionals to ensure you complete the patent filing process correctly or for violation of your patent rights.

Patent Transfer

FDA Licensing of Inventions Policy

Patenting By Geographic Region (NEW JERSEY), Breakout By ...

Library of Patent & Trademark Information

Patenting By Geographic Region (RHODE ISLAND), Breakout By ...

US Patent Practice

 Helpful Patent Terms

Collective Mar

Definition:
A trademark or service mark used, or intended to be used, in commerce, by the members of a cooperative, an association, or other collective group or organization, including a mark that indicates membership in a union, an association, or other organization

Final Office Action (rejection)

Definition:
An Office action on the second or any subsequent examination or consideration by an examiner that is intended to close the prosecution of a nonprovisional patent application.

See More Terms >

 

• Patent Help Terms
• Site Map

• United States Patent & Trademark Office Issues 7 Millionth Patent


• USDA Patents Microbes To Fight Wheat Fungus


• New Web-Based Filing System For Patent Applications

 

Patent Topics Our Firm Can Help With

Patent Amendments

License Patent

Patent Standards

Cutlery Patent

Patent Drafter

Flat Fee Patents

Patent Enforcement

Denied Patent

Patent Specification

Fuel Cells Patent


Do you need legal Patent help? Contact our Patent Lawyers today!