Search fee for ISA/RU to increase December 6

The search fee paid by US filers of PCT applications for the Russian searching authority will increase on December 6, 2017 from $482 to $698.  You can see the details here.

This changes slightly the ranking by cost of the various searching authorities available to filers in RO/US.  Here is how the search fees will rank after the fee change of December 6:

  • EP – $2238
  • US – $2080
  • AU – $1688
  • SG – $1552
  • JP – $1372
  • KR – $1114
  • US – $1040 (small entity)
  • IL – $963
  • RU – $698
  • US – $520 (micro entity)

The result of this fee change is that, for the first time in a very long time, the Russian patent office will not be the least expensive searching authority for PCT filers in RO/US.  ISA/US will be the least expensive (but only for a filer that qualifies for micro entity status).

Filers in RO/US tend to pick ISA/EP, ISA/US, or ISA/KR.  It is relatively rare that a US filer will pick ISA/RU (or ISA/AU, ISA/IL, ISA/JP, or ISA/SG).  Nonetheless, for the US filer who is planning to file a PCT application in which ISA/RU is selected, there will be an opportunity to save a little money.  The filer could file on December 5 rather than December 6, and the savings would be $216.

Ethics CLE webinar for intellectual property

I’ll be offering a webinar about intellectual property ethics.  It is accredited for ethics credit CLE in California and Colorado.  You can read about it here.  Attendees will receive a Certificate of Attendance which might get you CLE credit in other states if you are lucky.

Those who are subscribed to this blog may use coupon code “blog17” between now and November 6 to get a $20 discount on this program.

For the next week, an extra hour available for WIPO filings

Filers in the Patent Cooperation Treaty, Madrid Protocol, and Hague Agreement systems (utility patents, trademarks, and industrial designs) know that it is important to keep always in mind when midnight will arrive in Geneva, where WIPO is located.

For a PCT filer, this matters because to get a same-day filing date, a PCT application being filed in RO/IB will (usually) need to be filed by 4 PM Mountain Time.  The same is true for filing an Article 19 amendment.  The same is true if you are using ePCT to file a Demand and Article 34 amendment.

For a Madrid filer, this matters among other things for the payment of decade renewal fees.

For a Hague filer, this matters for the the filing of an international design application at the IB.

The point of today’s post is that starting yesterday, and for the next week, you get an extra hour to get a same-day filing date.  The reason is that Europe and the US carry out their daylight saving time transitions on different days that are a week apart.

This means that you could file as late as 5 PM Mountain Time (instead of the usual 4 PM) and still get a same-day filing date.

Things will return to normal a week from now, on November 5, 2016.

How long it takes USPTO to issue a Certificate of Registration?

How long does it take the Trademark Office at the USPTO to issue a Certificate of Registration?  That is to say, once an opposition period has concluded with nobody having filed opposition, how much time goes by before the USPTO actually grants the registration?  Is it sometimes slower?  Sometimes faster?  The amount of delay turns out to be extremely predictable.

 

 

Continue reading “How long it takes USPTO to issue a Certificate of Registration?”

A chance to save a little money on search fees

As I mentioned in an earlier blog article, the fee that ISA/SG charges per invention to carry out a PCT search will increase on November 1, 2017.  The fee charged in US dollars will increase from $1552 to $1645.

This offers an opportunity to save a little money, if a US filer is planning to file a PCT application in the near future and is planning to pick the Singapore patent office as the international searching authority.  Just get the application filed prior to November 1.

Did Accelerated Examination go away?

It will be recalled that on January 12, 2017 the USPTO published a Federal Register notice proposing to discontinue the Accelerated Examination program.  I blogged about the Federal Register notice here in February of 2017.  Members of the public filed comments in response to the Federal Register notice, as I discussed here in April of 2017.  It is now October of 2017 and one might wonder, what happened to USPTO’s proposal to discontinue AE?   Continue reading “Did Accelerated Examination go away?”

Can you put your EPF file on a thumb drive?

We all know that two-factor authentication is a Good Thing.  Having said that, we have all known from the moment (thirteen years ago) when USPTO rolled out its awkward Entrust java applet approach for access to PAIR and EFS-Web, that it was a Bad Thing.  Yes it provides two-factor authentication.  But it provides the two-factor authentication in a very poorly designed way.  Every year or so I have blogged (over and over and over again) about the need for USPTO to scrap that Entrust java applet approach in favor of any of a number of much more user-friendly types of two-factor authentication.

Having said all of this, the plain fact is that for thirteen years now, USPTO has stubbornly stuck with this poorly designed Entrust java applet approach for PAIR and EFS-Web that it adopted in 2004.  The approach is tied to an all-important “EPF file” which is the second of the two factors (in addition to a password).  If you don’t have your EPF file with you at the computer where you are trying to log in, or if you misplace the EPF file, or if it expires (which almost always happens without warning) then it is impossible to log in to PAIR or EFS-Web.

Which prompted a member of the PAIR listserv to ask this question:

Is there any reason I can’t store the EPF file on a USB thumb drive? That way I can put it on a physical keychain, use it at any computer, and if it is renewed (whenever that is), I am always using the most recent certificate?

The answer, as I will discuss, is sort of “yes” but with drawbacks.   Continue reading “Can you put your EPF file on a thumb drive?”

Next steps for USPTO and PDX (China and Korea)

It will be recalled (see blog article) that on October 1, the USPTO shut down its PDX relationship with the Japanese Patent Office and migrated the certified-copy traffic from PDX to DAS.

This was a welcome development for practitioners because as compared with PDX, the DAS system offers many benefits:

  • it is more secure (protected by authorization codes)
  • It permits the practitioner to test ahead of the time of actual need, to make sure that the electronic document will be available when needed
  • in the event of a problem with transmittal of an electronic certified copy, it permits the practitioner to troubleshoot and pinpoint the source of any difficulty

As I mentioned in that blog article, the natural next step would be for USPTO to do the same for its PDX relationships with the Chinese patent office (SIPO) and the Korean patent office (KIPO).  The natural next step would be for USPTO to migrate its electronic-certified-copy relationships involving China and Korea from PDX to DAS.  This would offer the many benefits of DAS to practitioners handling cases connected with China and Korea.

From the technical point of view such a migration ought to be easy and painless.  It would only be a matter of turning off the PDX mechanism and the document flow should easily proceed within the existing DAS connections.

Maybe USPTO was holding back a bit on such a migration to see how the Japan migration went.  If that was USPTO’s reason for holding back on the China and Korea migrations, then USPTO might as well proceed.   Continue reading “Next steps for USPTO and PDX (China and Korea)”