United States Patent & Trademark Office Begins Pilot Program to
Open Patent Examination Process for Online Public Participation
United States
Patent and Trademark Office Begins Pilot Program to Open Patent
Examination Process for Online Public Participation
June 18, New York,
NY—Peer-to-Patent, an initiative of New York Law School’s
Institute for Information Law and Policy in cooperation with the United
States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), began on Friday of last week.
In an Official Gazette Notice published on June 6, 2007 (
www.uspto.gov/web/offices/pac/dapp/opla/preognotice/peerreviewpilot.pdf),
the USPTO announced that this pilot program to test the value of public
participation in the patent examination process will run for one year. The
USPTO has committed to provide feedback on the usefulness of public
submissions. The results of the pilot will be compiled by the USPTO and
New York Law School.
CA, GE, HP, IBM, Intel, International
Characters, Intellectual Ventures, Microsoft, Oracle, Out of the Box
Computing, Red Hat, Sun Microsystems, and Yahoo! have requested to
participate in the pilot. As of Friday, June 15, five applications (from
HP, IBM, Intel, and Red Hat) were made available for public review on the
Peer-to-Patent Web site at
www.peertopatent.org, and the
public has already begun to review and comment. Descriptions of the
applications are available at
http://dotank.nyls.edu/communitypatent/applications.html.
Special note: Peer-to-Patent Organizers
and Steering Committee members will present the project and answer
questions at the Peer-to-Patent auditorium on New York Law School’s
Democracy Island, Second Life on Monday, June 18 at 12 p.m. PST/3 p.m.
EST. Attendees can find the event by searching Second Life’s
directory for Democracy Island, or by following this link:
www.tiny.cc/rfqh3.
Patent applicants with computer software
patent applications to be published during the coming year may apply to
join the pilot by completing the form available from the USPTO at
www.uspto.gov/web/patents/peerpriorartpilot/submission.pdf.
Applications accepted to the pilot will be advanced out of turn and
reviewed at no charge within one year, instead of the average four-year
waiting period. Applicants can also request early publication without
payment of an early publication fee.
The Peer-to-Patent Web site enables the
public to find information to help the USPTO evaluate the patent
application. The custom-designed Web site facilitates:
-
review and discussion of posted
patent applications
-
sharing of research to locate references to relevant earlier
publications
-
submission of these prior art references with an explanation of
relevance
-
annotating and evaluating submitted prior art
-
winnowing of top ten prior art references, which, together with
commentary, will be forwarded to the USPTO patent education to inform
public participation
-
forwarding of public submissions directly to the USPTO for
consideration
Reviewing patent applications is free
and open to all via the Peer-to-Patent Web site at
www.peertopatent.org.
Peer-to-Patent offers the public the
opportunity to share the best 10 publications—known in patent law as
“prior art”—and commentary that will inform the patent
examiner about the invention. The goal of opening up the examination
process for public participation is to enable better decision making by
the patent examiner and improve patent quality. At present, examiners
must assess the validity of a patent application without public input.By
reviewing applications and submitting relevant prior art and/or
commentary, the public can help get information about publications or
fruitful avenues for research to the Patent Office that may otherwise not
be accessible.
The Peer-to-Patent software and pilot
program have been developed with the sponsorship of CA, GE, HP, IBM,
Intellectual Ventures, the MacArthur Foundation, Microsoft, Omidyar
Network, and Red Hat. Visit
www.dotank.nyls.edu/communitypatent
for more information or e-mail
reviewer@peertopatent.org to
become a community reviewer.