Although Tel-Law information is periodically reviewed, it is important for you to realize that changes may occur in this area of law. This information is not intended to be legal advice regarding your particular problem, and it is not intended to replace the work of an attorney.
If you do not have an attorney, the Oregon State Bar Lawyer Referral Service can help you. Online Lawyer Referral Service information and a fill-in form is available. Or you may contact the service by phone: The number to call from the Portland area is 503-684-3763 or toll-free from anywhere else in Oregon, 1-800-452-7636.
The following information regarding Patents, Trademarks
and Copyright is brought to you as a public service by the lawyers
of the State of Oregon. The material presented is general legal information
intended to alert you to possible legal problems and solutions.
Patents are intended to protect inventions of a functional or design
nature. Trademarks provide protection for indicators of the source of
products and services used in commercial trade, such as words or logos.
Copyrights provide protection for literary and artistic expressions.
Patents, trademarks and copyrights are collectively referred to as intellectual
property.
Patents are granted by the federal government to protect inventions
for a limited period of time. There are three types of patents: utility
patents, design patents, and plant patents. A utility patent gives the
patent holder the right to exclude others from making, using, importing,
offering to sell and selling his or her invention for a period of 20
years from the date of filing a patent application. A utility patent
may be obtained for processes, machines, articles of manufacture, or
compositions of matter if the invention meets three basic criteria.
(1) It must be useful; (2) it must be novel, in that it has not been
previously known by others; and (3) it must be sufficiently different
from what was previously known that it would not be obvious to someone
having ordinary skill in that field. Design patents are available for
new and original ornamental designs for an article of manufacture. A
design patent protects the design for 14 years from the grant of the
patent. Plant patents may be obtained for certain types of asexually
reproduced plants that do not occur naturally, for example, new varieties
of roses.
An inventor may prepare and file a patent application directly with
the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. However, the availability and
scope of protection depend on how a patent application is prepared,
so it is recommended that an inventor first consult a registered patent
attorney or agent.
At the outset, the attorney or agent may suggest that a novelty search
be performed to see if a similar invention has been described in a previously
issued patented. If an invention appears to be sufficiently different
from what is known to exist, he or she can prepare the necessary papers
to apply for a patent.
Utility patent applications include a detailed description and drawings
of the invention, as well as claims that legally define what protection
is requested. It is possible to file a temporary application, referred
to as a provisional application, before filing a regular utility application.
A provisional application also must have a detailed description and
drawings of the invention, but is not examined. A regular utility patent
application that is filed within one year of the provisional application
will be treated as though it was filed when the provisional application
was filed. A patent attorney or agent can inform you of the advantages
and disadvantages of filing a provisional application.
There are strict statutory requirements in the United States regarding
the time within which a patent application must be filed after an invention
has been publicly used, or sold, or offered for sale. It is important
that an inventor be prompt in seeking help in protecting his or her
invention. If your invention has been in public use, offered for sale,
sold or otherwise commercialized for more than one year before your
patent application is filed, the inventor is barred from obtaining a
patent in the U.S. unless the inventor can show that the public use
was primarily experimental. Other countries have different bars, which
are generally much more strict than those in the U.S., so it is best
to consult a patent attorney or agent before you do anything to commercialize
your invention or disclose it to others.
The words "patent applied for" or "patent pending"
mean that an application has been filed in the U.S. Patent and Trademark
Office. Such notices create no legal rights, however, as patent rights
are created when the patent is granted.
A United States patent provides no protection in foreign countries;
however, filing a patent application in the United States prior to any
non-confidential disclosure of the invention will temporarily preserve
the inventor's rights in most foreign countries, so long as applications
are filed in those countries within one year after the U.S. filing date.
However, so long as inventions are kept confidential, applications can
be filed in other countries at any time.
A patent is a property right that may be held for one's own use, sold
outright to another, or licensed to others.
After a patent is issued, the federal government does not police the
market for violations or infringements. If others infringe the patent,
it is up to the patent owner to assert his or her rights.
A trademark is a word, a name, a symbol, a device, a combination of
these, or other indicator used exclusively to identify the source of
products and distinguish them from others. Examples are "Kodak"
for cameras, and "Chevrolet" for automobiles. Service marks
are like trademarks, except that they identify services. Examples of
these would be "McDonald's" for restaurants, and "Holiday
Inn" for motels.
There is a hierarchy of protection for trademarks and service marks.
The strongest are coined or arbitrary marks that in no way suggest or
describe the product or service. An example is "Kodak" which
was a coined or made-up word when first adopted.
Next, and also protectable, are marks that merely suggest the product
or service or suggest some characteristic or quality of the product
or service.
At the bottom of the list, and generally not protectable, are descriptive
marks. Generic terms can never become valid trademarks.
Rights in a trademark or service mark are acquired in the United States
by being the first to use the mark in commerce on or in connection with
the goods or services. Rights also may be established by filing an application
for trademark registration in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office based
on a bona fide intention to use a mark at a later date. A mark is not
registered until it has actually been used on a product or service.
It is not necessary to register a trade or service mark. It can be protected
under state and federal laws without registration. However, it is beneficial
to register the mark, either with the Oregon Secretary of State, or
if interstate commerce is involved, with the U.S. Patent and Trademark
Office.
When a mark is registered, particularly at the federal level, the registration
provides to others notice of the registrant's claim of ownership, and
it gives federal courts jurisdiction to hear infringement claims. Once
a trademark is registered with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office,
it may be accompanied by an "R" in a circle, or by some other
notice indicating that it is registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark
Office.
Before you adopt a mark for use on either a product or service, you
should have a search performedto determine if someone else has previously
established rights in the same or a similar mark. Again, an attorney
may be helpful to you in making such searches before you adopt a mark
and in later registering your mark.
Additional information on patents and trademarks is also available at
the web site of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, www.uspto.gov.
Copyrights seek to promote literary and artistic creativity by protecting
what the U.S. Constitution broadly calls "writings of authors".
Copyrightable works include literary works, musical and dramatic works,
sculptures, motion pictures and other audio-visual works, sound recordings
and computer programs.
A copyright protects only the particular expressions of ideas and not
the ideas themselves. To be protectable, a work must be original and
it must evidence some creativity. Depending on the nature of the work,
the owner of copyright has the exclusive right to reproduce the work,
to prepare derivative works, to distribute copies of the work, to perform
the work, to display the work, and to authorize others to do these things.
Once a copyrightable work has been created and fixed in a tangible form,
such as being written down or recorded, it is protectable, whether it
has been published or not. If it is to be published, all copies of the
work that are published should preferably bear a copyright notice. The
statutory copyright notice consists of the symbol of a "C"
in a circle or the word "copyright," the year of first publication,
and the name of the owner of the copyright. In the case of sound recordings,
a "P" in a circle must be used in place of the "C"
in a circle. Audio-visual works should bear both the circle "P"
and circle "C" indicators.
Copyrights may be registered with the Copyright Office in the Library
of Congress. As of 1989, it is no longer necessary to place a copyright
notice on a work, nor is it a requirement to apply for registration
with the Library of Congress, but such notices and filings are strongly
recommended to obtain advantages in the event that a copyright is to
be enforced in a court of law. For example, registration is still to
bring a lawsuit, and the existence of a registration prior to an infringing
act may entitle the copyright owner to additional monetary awards by
a court.
An individual's copyright lasts for the author's lifetime plus 70 years.
A copyright registered anonymously, under a pseudonym or as an entity
lasts 120 years from creation or 95 years from the date it is first
published, whichever expires first.
Additional information about copyright is also available at the web
site of the U.S. Copyright Office, www.copyright.gov.
This information is from the Oregon State Bar's Tel-law service, a collection of recorded legal information messages prepared by the lawyers of Oregon. In addition to being online, the Tel-law service is accessible by telephone at 503-620-3000 or toll-free in Oregon only, 1-800-452-4776. A touch tone phone allows direct access 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. To receive a free Tel-law brochure listing the subjects available call 503-620-0222, ext. 0.
