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How To Section |
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In general, the process begins with your completing the appropriate Invention Disclosure form found above. In addition to addressing some specific technical and economic assessments of the technology in question, you will also need to secure signatures from your dean (if a student, you will need your research managing faculty member's signature as well). After you submit your completed Invention Disclosure form to our office, the OTT Licensing Associate handling your case will send you a confirmation letter and establish an IP assessment review session with you. Please DO avail yourself of the online literature search resources in connection with your Invention Disclosure. You should expect to spend a few hours at the library either on NC A&T’s F.D. Bluford Library, UNC (NC live) and/or United State Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) online database librarian searching for inventions similar to your own. It is very important at this stage that you search for other material which is the same, or most similar, to your invention. This is an important early step in assessing how broad, if any, the available patent protection for your invention would be. With this information in hand, you will then meet with your Licensing Associate to discuss the potential patenting and licensing of your invention. An invention disclosure is a written record of a complete description of the invention and how it is made and used containing sufficient detail to permit a skilled reader to duplicate the invention and to describe the basic nature of the invention to an inexperienced reader. The essential elements of a disclosure are a complete description of the invention, the inventor's dated signature, and dated signature of witnesses who fully understand the invention. A disclosure serves three different purposes at the University:
Forms:
Disclose first, publish later. While publications are important in disseminating information about discoveries, the time of publications may prohibit patenting. In the U.S. an inventor has a grace period of one year to file an application after disclosure through publication. If, however, a development is published before the filing of an U.S. patent application, patent rights in most foreign countries are lost. A patent is a special type of publication which describes the invention to the public in exchange for protection against unauthorized use. If the invention already has been published (that is, in the public domain), the inventor, in effect, had nothing to exchange for the patent protection. Publication in the legal sense is difficult to avoid. Articles in newspapers, newsletters, bulletins, textbooks, journals, theses and report all qualify as publications. Oral presentations may constitute publication, as would distribution of a paper at a public meeting. The key test is that the publication must be enabling - it must describe the invention in sufficient detail that it could be duplicated or put into use. Disclose your idea to the Division of Research as soon as the invention is clearly conceptualized. The best advice is to consider any presentation outside your institution, whether oral or written, as a public disclosure and contact the Division of Research for specific advice on the timing and ramifications of publication.
A copyright is a legal mechanism that provides a creator of works of art and literature the right to control how his or her work of art or literature is disseminated. Copyright protects the expression of ideas, not the ideas themselves. The author or creator has intangible exclusive rights over their work, including the right to reproduce, distribute, adapt or perform the work. This protection is available to both published and unpublished works. The primary elements of NC A&T SU’s "Copyright" concepts fall into two board categories:
Here’s how these issues are typically viewed and decided.
A patent is a property right granted by a sovereign nation which gives the holder the exclusive right to exclude others from the manufacture, use, and sale of an invention for a period of years. To be patentable, an invention must be judged to satisfy three criteria:
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