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stories filed under: "design patents"
Legal Issues

Legal Issues

by Mike Masnick


Filed Under:
design patents, novelty, ordinary observer, patents



Appeals Court Strengthens Design Patents

from the just-what-we-didn't-need dept

Most patent infringement lawsuits you hear about involve utility patents, but every once in a while we hear about cases involving design patents, which are about the ornamental design of a product, rather than the process or method. However, most IP attorneys are always quick to point out how weak design patents really are (which is why you rarely see them pop up in litigation). However, that may have just changed. CAFC (the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, who handles all patent related issues) has released a unanimous ruling that lowers the standard for infringement of a design patent from the "point of novelty" test that the court has used for almost 25 years (which required that any design patent actually have something novel) to a "ordinary observer" test -- where infringement will be deemed to occur if an "ordinary observer" would think the designs are the same. It's difficult to understand why the courts wouldn't keep a novelty requirement, considering the very purpose of the patent system, but we've been confused by CAFC rulings on a regular basis for years, now. Anyway, you can now expect more lawsuits over design patents and perhaps a few more questions about why we need design patents when trademarks already exist.

7 Comments | Leave a Comment..

 
Say That Again

Say That Again

by Mike Masnick


Filed Under:
design patents, patents



Patent Attorney Inadvertently Explains Why Design Patents Are Often Unnecessary

from the careful-what-you-say dept

Andy Blair writes "In an Op-Ed promoting 'shoring up' design patent protections, Chris Renk inadvertently shows us why in many cases design patents are unnecessary. He spends a couple of paragraphs talking about how the patent prosecution process is long and in many cases designs are obsolete by the time protection is granted. Renk then spends another paragraph or two talking about eroding enforceability. This demonstrates that innovation is happening despite questions about whether protection will be available or effective. If patent protection is an unnecessary component in the innovation equation, that pretty much negates the need to grant a temporary monopoly to incent that innovation. So the real reform necessary is not reinforcing protections, but evaluating whether they should be there at all, and if so in what form."

9 Comments | Leave a Comment..

 
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