Wednesday, April 30, 2008

PTO's Checklist for Business Method Patents

If you file a patent that has the misfortune of being treated as a "business method patent" by the PTO - meaning that it is in Class 705 - then there is a special checklist that the PTO will use during prosecution. Check out the Business Methods Allowance Checklist - one of several valuable resources on the PTO's page on business methods.

Business Methods Allowance Checklist


  • Useful, concrete, and tangible result.

  • Not a judicial exception per se.

  • Not just data per se.

  • Not simply automating a known or obvious process on a computer or on the internet.

  • Not a computer program per se.

  • Not merely non-functional data on a storage device, i.e., music on a cd.

  • If functional signal is being claimed, must be statically embedded in a computer-readable medium.

  • The feature that appears to distinguish over the prior art does not merely appear in a recitation of intended use, the name or title of a feature or in non-functional descriptive material.

  • Searches for analogous art related to the distinguishing feature were conducted.

  • The meanings attributed to the words of the claim are the plain, ordinary, meanings unless criteria for a special definition have been met.

*You must be able to answer yes to all of these statements.

Monday, April 14, 2008

Preliminary Interviews with Patent Examiners?

In light of the new obviousness challenges with the Supreme Court's KSR decision, patent seekers may wish to take proactive steps to help the patent examiner understand the story of the invention and its nonobviousness of the prior art. In some cases, it may even make sense to request a preliminary interview with the examiner -- before the first office action has been issued -- in order to expedite examination and address the inevitable obviousness issues.

Some have asked if such interviews are even possible. It used to be that they weren't, but on Sept. 26, 2005, the law was amended to make it possible.

Authority for a preliminary interview at the discretion of the Examiner is found in 37 C.F.R. 1.33(a)(2):
An interview for the discussion of the patentability of a pending application will not occur before the first Office action, unless the application is a continuing or substitute application or the examiner determines that such an interview would advance prosecution of the application.
So yes, it is possible.

But how can you do this before the first office action, when you don't even know who the examiner is? No problem! You can simply call the PTO and ask who the examiner is. I just did this recently for a patent I filed last year and was given the name and phone number of the examiner after providing the serial number of the application.

Now the examiner may not be willing to grant a preliminary interview - depends on the case and the person. And if they do grant a preliminary interview, they may request some additional info from you such as a general statement on the prior art, a list of up to three references of "closest" prior art, and an explanation of your novelty over these references. That possibility was raised by the PTO in a "PTO Day" presentation in 2005. See the bottom of page 8 in www.ipattorneyfirm.com/forms/PTOdayArticleNAPP.pdf for a summary of a PTO presentation where they stated that they may ask for additional info in a preliminary interview.

Will a preliminary interview really help? From my personal experience, I know that face-to-face interviews in general are a powerful tool in helping to expedite examination, though it will take some time to see how much traction preliminary interviews afford. I think that if the examiner is willing, it could save you many months of prosecution time and perhaps even an extra continuation fee. If you can afford to wait, fine. But if time is of the essence, think about a preliminary interview to help deal with KSR and otherwise expedite examination.