Patent Infringement on new CLIP technology June 12, 2015 04:54PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 1 |
Re: Patent Infringement on new CLIP technology June 12, 2015 07:01PM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 1,401 |
Re: Patent Infringement on new CLIP technology June 12, 2015 07:02PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 396 |
Re: Patent Infringement on new CLIP technology June 13, 2015 11:14PM |
Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 661 |
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ggherbaz
As long as you do not sell or profit in any way from it you won't be breaking any rules. The minute you receive a penny from it, you better have a nice lawyer and plenty of money.
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The right conferred by the patent grant is, in the language of the statute and of the grant itself, “the right to exclude others from making, using, offering for sale, or selling” the invention in the United States or “importing” the invention into the United States. What is granted is not the right to make, use, offer for sale, sell or import, but the right to exclude others from making, using, offering for sale, selling or importing the invention. Once a patent is issued, the patentee must enforce the patent without aid of the USPTO
Re: Patent Infringement on new CLIP technology June 16, 2015 10:51AM |
Registered: 13 years ago Posts: 972 |
Re: Patent Infringement on new CLIP technology June 16, 2015 02:20PM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 869 |
If your design is functionally identical to the patent, making "your" design public isn't illegal, however if it was implemented or you made claim that it was your invention could open yourself up to liability to patent infringement. However if you took their patent and improved upon it, making it different, then that is the way the system is suppose to work. You would just cite it as prior art and how you differentiate in it.Quote
misan
On the other hand, making your design public seems, again, not being restricted by the law.
Say in your research that you find that if a piece of normal soda lime glass (non porous) with a sheet of kapton tape (not a rigid gas-permeable polymer or semipermeable fluoropolymer) created a similar "dead zone" that prevented polymerization immediately adjacent to the kapton tape. Since the CLIP patent specifically states that some type of an optically clear substance that has some degree of gas permeability is required, and you discovered a way that didn't require gas permeability, you could file a patent as a substitution invention, you're substituting your material for theirs.Quote
3. The method of claim 2, wherein said optically transparent member is comprised of a semipermeable fluoropolymer, a rigid gas-permeable polymer, porous glass, or a combination thereof.