Please consider signing this letter to the Commissioner for Patents about DAS

(Update:  The letter got sent on February 22, 2020.  See blog post.)

You can see here a letter that will get sent to the Commissioner for Patents, Drew Hirshfeld, on about February 22.  Please consider adding your name to the signature list of the letter.  

In the letter, the signers ask four things.

  • The signers ask that the USPTO discontinue its present practice of intentionally and actively aging PDX and DAS retrieval requests. They ask instead that going forward, the USPTO retrieve priority documents from PDX and DAS at the time that the applicant requests such retrieval.  See for example this blog article and this blog article.
  • The signers also ask that USPTO discontinue the PDX system, so that going forward, priority document retrieval from the EPO can take place through the DAS system.  See for example this blog article.
  • The signers suggest that Form PTO/SB/38 be reformatted so that the boxes for the important information (application number, DAS access code, filing date, Office of first filing) be large enough to permit text to be entered in a font that is easily read by the human eye even after the form has been degraded in the e-filing process.  See this blog article.
  • Finally, the signers ask that USPTO become a Depositing Office with respect to international patent applications (PCT applications) that have been filed at the RO/US (the receiving office of the USPTO).  See this blog article.

To see the letter, and to see how to sign it, click here.

 

Figuring out whether to file an Interim Copy of a priority application

(Update:  A letter got sent on February 22, 2020 to the Commissioner for Patents at the USPTO, asking the USPTO to stop its foot-dragging on retrieval of electronic certified copies from DAS and PDX.  See blog post.)

Here is the setup for today’s hypothetical question.  Your docket desk has contacted you to let you know that:

  • the crucial 4-and-16 date is imminent for one of your recently filed US utility patent applications in which you have made a Paris Convention priority claim, and
  • the PDX/DAS people at the USPTO have not yet retrieved an electronic certified copy of your priority application from the foreign patent office.  

You must now figure out whether to file an Interim Copy of the priority application at the USPTO.

This blog article offers a summary of Best Practices comments about this from some very experienced patent practitioners. Continue reading “Figuring out whether to file an Interim Copy of a priority application”

How some people get prompt Filing Receipts from DO/EO/US

If you are going to try to get a US patent from a PCT application, there are two possible paths — US national phase entry (also called “a 371 case”), and the filing of a bypass continuation.  How does this choice affect how long you have to wait to get a Filing Receipt?  If you pick the bypass route, the work gets done by the same folks who handle other ordinary patent applications.  It is OPAP (Office of Patent Application Processing).  These days OPAP often mails a Filing Receipt very promptly.  On the other hand, if you pick the national-phase-entry route, the work gets done by DO/EO/US.  And this office often takes a very long time to mail a Filing Receipt.  But some people have figured out how to get a very prompt Filing Receipt from DO/EO/US.  It is with some reluctance that I will now reveal how they do it. Continue reading “How some people get prompt Filing Receipts from DO/EO/US”

The 2019 Toteboards are published

It is my honor to post the 2019 Toteboards.  These are:

These Tote Boards rank the top patent and trademark firms for carrying out filings in 2019 in these categories.  The 2019 Toteboards join the previous fifteen Toteboards which go back as far as 2012.

The Patent Office absolutely trying to Do the Right Thing – IDSs in child cases

If you are a US patent practitioner, of course you should be subscribed to the EFS-Web listserv.  Here is a recent post to that listserv that prompted today’s blog article:

I swear I read something about a new PTO program for automatically listing all submitted and cited prior art on continuations and divisionals–to stop people from re-filing everything again. But, I cannot find anything today.

Was I dreaming? If not, is this working?

And yes there is a new PTO program for this, as I will explain. Continue reading “The Patent Office absolutely trying to Do the Right Thing – IDSs in child cases”

Today is the last day to get your numbers in for the Tote Boards

On January 1, 2020 I invited everyone (blog post) to get your numbers in for the 2019 Tote Boards.  This includes:

  • the Eighth Annual US Design Patent Top Filers Tote Board
  • the Fifth Annual US Trademark Registration Top Filers Tote Board
  • the Fifth Annual US Utility Patent Top Filers Tote Board
  • the Third Annual US Plant Patent Top Filers Tote Board

These Tote Boards will rank the top patent and trademark firms for carrying out filings in 2019 in these categories.  The 2019 Tote Boards will join the previous fifteen Tote Boards which go back as far as 2012.

Today, January 31, is the last day to get your numbers in.

How many responses do we have so far?

  • As for the 2019 Trademark Tote Board, we have more than seventy firms responding, that have between them obtained more than eight thousand trademark registrations in 2019
  • As for the 2019 Utility Patent Tote Board, we have more than sixty firms responding, that have between them obtained more than forty thousand utility patents in 2019
  • As for the 2019 Design Patent Tote Board, we have more than sixty firms responding, that have between them obtained more than seven thousand design patents in 2019

Every year, some firm misses out by failing to get its numbers in by the closing date.  Don’t be that firm!  Get your numbers in before closing day which is today, January 31.  Click here for the:

  • response form for the 2019 (eighth annual) US design patent top filers tote board
  • response form for the 2019 (fifth annual) US trademark registration top filers tote board
  • response form for the 2019 (fifth annual) US utility patent top filers tote board
  • response form for the 2019 (third annual) US plant patent top filers tote board

 

USPTO hosts PAIR forum, doesn’t invite PAIR users

click to enlarge

(Update on March 1, 2020:  A month has passed and I have still heard nothing back from Mr. Holcombe’s office in response to my telephone and email inquiries.)

Today I learned that yesterday the USPTO’s Chief Information Office, Mr. Henry Holcombe, hosted a forum on the topic of Private PAIR.  I don’t know how Mr. Holcombe chose his guest list.  But what astonishes me is that no invitation was extended to the PAIR listserv.

The PAIR listserv is a community of over four hundred patent practitioners who make daily use of the PAIR system. My guess is that many or most of the “coalition members” who got invited to this forum are companies that make money by scraping data from USPTO systems, not by paying money to the USPTO.  In contrast, the members of the PAIR listserv are paying customers of the USPTO, who collectively pay tens of millions of dollars to the USPTO annually.

Mr. Holcombe’s stated goal of addressing recent concerns, gathering input, and sharing some details about his path forward would have been well served by reaching out to the PAIR listserv.

I contacted Mr. Holcombe’s office about this but have not gotten any response.

USPTO proposes to fix its Foreign Filing License rules

For more than three years now, there has been an urgent need for USPTO to fix a problem with its FFL rules, 37 CFR § 5.11 et seq.  See my blog article USPTO needs to update its Foreign Filing License rule (October 29, 2016).  After three years of being repeatedly reminded of this, USPTO has done the right thing and has published a proposed revision to its FFL rules.  You can read about it here:

Facilitating the Use of WIPO’s ePCT System To Prepare International Applications for Filing With the United States Receiving Office, 85 FR 5362, January 30, 2020.

Comments are due by March 30.  Twenty-one patent practitioners filed this comment