Path: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!dreaderd!not-for-mail
Message-ID: <internet/[email protected]>
Supersedes: <internet/[email protected]>
Expires: 31 May 2004 11:22:46 GMT
X-Last-Updated: 2000/03/04
Organization: none
From: [email protected] (David Novak)
Newsgroups: comp.patents,comp.answers,news.answers
Subject: Patent Research FAQ v.2.2
Approved: [email protected]
Followup-To: poster
Summary: Patent Research: guidance, advice & links.
Originator: [email protected]
Date: 17 Apr 2004 11:28:22 GMT
Lines: 458
NNTP-Posting-Host: penguin-lust.mit.edu
X-Trace: 1082201302 senator-bedfellow.mit.edu 576 18.181.0.29
Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu comp.patents:1552 comp.answers:56881 news.answers:269978

Archive-name: internet/patent-research-faq
Posting-Frequency: monthly
Last-modified: Mar 02 2000
URL: http://spireproject.com
Copyright: (c) 2000 David Novak
Maintainer: David Novak <[email protected]>

        Patent Research FAQ

   Welcome. This FAQ introduces the tools and concepts used in patent
   research. We are covering the process of locating comparable patents -
   not the legal process of patent protection.

   This FAQ resides at SpireProject.com/patfaq.txt
   SpireProject.co.uk/patfaq.txt  and  http://cn.net.au/patfaq.txt

   This FAQ is just a small part of a much larger effort to help you with
   information research. The Spire Project is available as 3 website,
   mirrors, zip-file, and 3 other faqs. I have included here a text version
   ofour patent research (http://cn.net.au/patents.htm).

   Enjoy,
   David Novak - [email protected]
   The Spire Project : SpireProject.com, SpireProject.co.uk, Cn.net.au

        Patent Research


   A patent discloses certain facts about a commercially important
   invention in exchange for certain rights to exploit the invention. This
   is a little simplistic, but explains why patents are factual, unique
   from other research resources, and a little vague in certain specifics.
   (See a sample a sample US patent[1], Australian patent[2], and this
   brief description[3].)

   This article first addresses the most useful free databases, then
   describes national patent agency resources, commercial patent databases,
   then other commercial services. At the end of this article, we describe
   patent classification and patent search strategy.

   [1]

    Internet



Free Patent Databases

   These databases are freely available online:

   [4] The US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO[89])  provides a US Patent
   Bibliographic database at patents.uspto.gov[4] with full use of fields,
   date and abstract text searching. Choose between their boolean
   search[5], advanced (field) search[6] or by US patent number[7]. They
   also maintain a fulltext [US] Aids Patent Database and other resources.

   [43] The IBM's Patent Server is a public service providing a different
   patent database[43] of US Patent abstracts. The IBM service is similar
   but different from the USPTO service - certainly not less powerful.

   [8] The Canadian Intellectual Property Office (CIPO[9]) maintains the
   Canadian Patent Bibliographic Database[8] which extends from '89 to the
   present. Abstracts are not provided. Descriptive info is here[8].

   [9] The Japanese Patent Office (www.jpo-miti.go.jp[9]) has a searchable
   database of Japanese patent abstracts[10], which includes the patent
   number, title, inventor, company, and abstract of the patent.



   There are more free patent databases - but each is limited and not as
   research-worthy. Consider also the Internet Patent Search System[11].
   Gregory Aharonian (remember [email protected]?) currently delivers
   US Patent titles retrieved by class/subclass. He also delivers Patent
   abstract retrieval using patent numbers (but currently from 1981 to
   1989). As you now know, patent.uspto.gov also delivers abstract
   retrieval, but I like the more minimal title lists here.

    Library


   Patent libraries are an important and cost-effective patent resource.


Australia

   IP Australia (www.ipaustralia.gov.au[4]) (formerly the Australian
   Industrial Property Organisation (AIPO)) has a patent library in each
   state capital[13]. Each library provides free access to the APAS
   database (Australian Patent Abstract Search) and includes a complete
   microfiche copy of all Australian patents and the Australian Official
   Journal of Patents, Trademarks & Designs (the official Australian patent
   gazette).

   Most offices also hold US Patents on microfiche!, so the free US patent
   databases will also interest you. Staff will help you use the APAS
   database, arranged for free text searching by International Patent
   Classification.

   [13] A particularly useful service by IP Australia is the delivery of
   copies of many foreign patents for AU$15. You will need the patent
   number, country and title for this.




United States

   The US Patent and Trade Mark Organization (USPTO[89]) has the Patent and
   Trademark Depository Library Program (PTDL's[21]) - which places the
   CASSIS database (The USPTO patent abstract database on CD-rom) and US
   patents around the US. Here is a list of sites[20].

   US Full text Images are not visible on most web browsers. The images are
   in 300 dpi TIFF format. To view, get a free TIFF browser plugin for your
   browser.
   a) Try CPC light[12] or AlternaTIFF[13]
   b) Consult this list[14] at the USPTO.

   Further, the USPTO provides US Patent Bibliographic & fulltext (with
   images) databases online[4] with full use of fields, date and abstract
   text searching. Choose between their boolean search[5], advanced (field)
   search[6] or by US patent number[7]. The IBM's Patent Server provides a
   different patent database[43] of US Patent abstracts.

   [7]  If you have the US patent #, retrieve the abstract from the
   USPTO[4]:

   [15] US patent libraries also hold the Official Gazette of the U.S.
   Patent and Trademark Office, The official US patent gazette.
   Importantly, the gazette is fully online[15], and searchable from
   1995-98.



United Kingdom

   The [UK] Patent Office (www.patent.gov.uk[16]) provides for the Patents
   Information Network (PIN[23]) which hosts patent information in the UK.
   This page includes a clickable map[23]. The British Library is one
   listed source of UK patents (further information online[17]) and
   delivers some patent services.




Canada

   The Canadian Intellectual Property Office (CIPO) (cipo.gc.ca[9])
   produces the Canadian Patent Index (CPI). They also publish The Patent
   Office Record, Canada's official patent gazette.

   [8] CIPO maintains a free Canadian Patent Fulltext Database[8]. This
   database is on par with the US Patent Database, with perhaps even better
   searching technology. Fielded & boolean searches are possible and
   abstracts, claims & pdf files are retrieved. Read this database
   overview[18] then use their advanced search[19].




Other Countries

   There are many more national & international patent organizations.
   Intitut National de la Propriete Industrielle[49] [France]
   World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO)[20]
   European Patent Office[21]

   If you need to find other sites, consider reviewing this list by  IP
   Australia[22], the USPTO[23], and David Wareing[24].

   [25] CSIRO keeps a list of addresses for European Patent Libraries[25]




    Commercial


   One of the most invaluable resources in serious patent research is
   access to several of the very large commercial patent databases.


Commercial Patent Databases

   Lexis-Nexis (www.lexis-nexis.com[51]) retails several patent databases.
   Thanks to Patscan (University of British Columbia), we also a guide to
   searching patents on Lexis-Nexis[26].

   The Dialog Corporation (www.dialog.com[44]) retails a collection of
   patent databases including:
   Derwent World Patents Index[27] [Files 351,352,280]
   INPADOC[28]
   CLAIMS/U.S. PATENTS[29] [Files 340,341,942]
   EUROPEAN PATENTS FULLTEXT[30] [FILE 348]
   and others

   Cassis Database no details at this moment.

   A little more information can be found with the Patent Guide to using
   CASSIS[31], at the University of Michigan.

   Derwent Scientific and Patent Information (www.derwent.co.uk) is a
   prominent publisher of Patent and scientific information including
   commercial databases.

   Questel-Orbit (www.questel.orbit.com[54]) also retails patent databases,
   but we have not explored this venue yet.

   CAS/STN (www.cas.org[17]) retails a collection of patent databases
   including:
   Chemical Patents Plus[32] for U.S. Chemical patents



   In addition to the database retailers and producers, there is a lively
   industry of patent services.

   Patent Libraries : One source of patent assistance is, of course, the
   distributed patent libraries in each country. In addition to assistance
   with lodging patent documents, each library provides free access to
   bibliographical databases, and in the case of Australia, full text US
   and Australian patents on microfiche. IP Australia will also, for AU$15,
   retrieve most full patents from other countries (given a patent number,
   country & title).

   PATSCAN (www.library.ubc.ca/patscan[33]) within the University of
   British Columbia, provides patent search and retrieval services through
   databases like MicroPatent, the European Patent Office and others.

   QPAT (www.qpat.com[34]) offers full text patent searching for paying
   subscribers and free front page information of all U.S. patents issued
   since 1974 for people who register.

   MicroPatent (www.micropat.com[29]) offers limited recent patent
   searching and downloading of patent images for a fee. They have a
   registration system for the free service.

    Conclusion


 3 Second Summary:
Free internet patent databases exist for US, Canada, Japan & Australia.
A better search strategy makes use of patent classifications.
Patents are legalistic, with delays & delayed coverage in other countries.

   Until recently, the legal profession has had a complete monopoly on
   patent work. As you can see, this need no longer be the case. Casual
   researchers will find the free patent databases easy to use, and more
   experienced researchers should not be dissuaded from searching the
   commercial databases or patent libraries themselves. The very large
   commercial databases, like Inpadoc, are particularly easy to use.

   Of course, there are occasions when patent searches are critical, and
   experts should be sought. Certainly legal assistance is required if you
   are preparing to lodge your own patent, but patent data as a source of
   information is another matter.

    Strategy



   Patent Classification All patents are given a special number.
   Unfortunately, each country has a distinct numbering scheme: US patents
   are assigned a consecutive patent number (currently 5 million+).
   Australian patents have an alphanumeral which includes the year.
   Canadian patents are numbered.

   Above these numbering systems, we have the International Patent
   Classification (IPC), by the World Intellectual Property Organization
   (WIPO[20]). Most every country uses the IPC to classify patents, save
   the US. US Patent Classification is similar in many ways.

   International Patent Classification

   Thanks to the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), the
   International Patent Classification (IPC) works as a universal
   classification for patents. Started in 1975 and periodically updated, we
   currently use IPC 6th Edition (1994). Work on IPC 7th Edition is well
   advanced.

   Section, Class & Group. The International Patent Classification looks
   like this:
   At the heart of the IPC is the unique coding of every invention by its
   specific form or function. The system is highly specific and logical,
   and includes numerous cross-references to other codes of similar form or
   function. Think of this as the Dewey Decimal System for patents.

   The first letter is the section - one of eight broad categories labeled
   A through G. A represents  Human Necessities. B covers Transport.

   Each section is divided into Classes. Each class includes two numbers.
   In addition, each class is  divided into subclasses, the letters which
   follow the first number.

   Each subclass is then divided into groups and subgroups. The number
   before the slash is the group, the number after the slash is the
   subgroup. Subgroups only have two digits, with further  numbers
   considered as resting behind a decimal point: 3/46 then 3/464, then
   3/47.

   Thus A 47 J 27/09 includes the safety device on your rice cooker and B
   63 G 11/00 covers your various aircraft carriers.

   The IPC system is fully described in these published directories: The
   Official Catchword Index by World Intellectual Property Organization.
   International Patent Classification : Guide, Survey of Classes & Summary
   of Main Groups
   International Patent Classification : Section G  - Physics
   International Patent Classification : Guide

   Thanks to the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), these
   full documents are online (see this page[35]). We now have direct access
   to the International Patent Classification (6th Edition):
   Official Catchword Index[36], Guide to the IPC[37], and the complete
   Class and Section books[38].

   Note: The International Patent Classification includes plenty of
   internal references - indicating this group is similar to another group;
   motorized boats take precedence over boat function. These internal
   references are important to effectively searching databases. There is
   more to the IPC, and we strongly recommend you read the Introductory
   Manual to the International Patent Classification (IPC)[39] found on the
   WIPO website.

   US. Patent Classification

   US Patents are classified with 400+ main classes and thousands of
   subclasses. Sound similar to the International Patent Classification? It
   is. US patents are numbered sequentially.

   This means you can find US patents:   by full text searching through the
   USPTO database CASSIS (found at US patent libraries), by bibliographic &
   abstract text searching online through the USPTO or IBM Patent Library,
   by US Patent number,by US Patent Classification class & subclass - to
   list similar patents,by an effective combination search (see patent
   research strategy),by the searching recent notices in the Official
   Gazette... available online. The USPTO allows you to search or browse
   the US Manual of Classification[4] online. The Internet Patent Search
   System[40] lets you to browse US Patent titles by class/subclass.

   A little more information can be found with the Patent Guide to using
   CASSIS[31], at the University of Michigan.

   Patent Search Strategies  Here are the avenues open to you:

   1_ Full text searching and retrieval through a commercial database.
   2_ Free bibliographic & abstract searching online followed by selective
   patent perusal/ordering.
   3_ Paging manually through the relevant official gazette (the US gazette
   is searchable[15]).
   4_ Retrieval of the titles & abstracts within appropriate class/subclass
   then selective review and patent perusal/ordering.

   This last avenue is particularly resourceful and swift. Start by
   reaching for The Official Catchword Index [here[36]], a book by World
   Intellectual Property Organization. This will tell you the possible
   class/subclasses which will interest you. You could word-search a patent
   database and note all the class/subclasses found. Lastly, you can always
   reach for the three separate printed guides which lead you from section
   to subclass.

   The result should be a collection of class/subclasses which may interest
   you.

   With this information, you can now browse all the patents in the
   class/subclass. This process will help you locate all the patents which
   may interest you since patent classification is more reliable than free
   text search. (Note, both British and American spelling appears in patent
   databases.) This also allows you to quickly review the patents in other
   countries.

   If you are undertaking a novelty search - is a patent sufficiently
   unique from other existing patents - then you must review more than one
   country. There can be a significant delay before patent applications
   reach other countries without affecting the protection. Case in point:
   Australia only accounts for 7% of the world's patents.



   Further Search Strategy

   [39] Patent search strategy is further discussed in the Introductory
   Manual to the International Patent Classification (IPC)[39] found on the
   WIPO website.

   [41] You may also wish to reach Searching for patents[41] from the
   University of Michigan, and Patents[42] by Simon Fraser University
   Libraries.





    This article comes from The Spire Project.
    Advice welcome : email [email protected]
   [1] [2]  http://www.ipaustralia.gov.au/ip/examples/P_case2.htm
   [3]  http://www.ipaustralia.gov.au/patents/P_home.htm
   [4]  http://patents.uspto.gov
   [5]  http://patents.uspto.gov/access/search-bool.html
   [6]  http://patents.uspto.gov/access/search-adv.html
   [7]  http://patents.uspto.gov/access/search-num.html
   [8]  http://Patents1.ic.gc.ca/intro-e.html
   [9]  http://www.jpo-miti.go.jp
   [10]  http://www.jpo-miti.go.jp/homee.htm
   [11]  http://metalab.unc.edu/patents/intropat.html
   [12]  http://www.cartesianinc.com/Products/CPCLite
   [13]  http://www.mieweb.com/alternatiff
   [14]  http://www.uspto.gov/patft/images.htm
   [15]  http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/com/sol/og
   [16]  http://www.patent.gov.uk
   [17]  http://www.bl.uk/services/sris/patents.html
   [18]  http://patents1.ic.gc.ca/overview-e.html
   [19]  http://patents1.ic.gc.ca/srch_adv-e.html
   [20]  http://www.wipo.org
   [21]  http://www.european-patent-office.org
   [22]  http://www.ipaustralia.gov.au/library/L_resrc7.htm
   [23]  http://www.uspto.gov/web/menu/other.html
   [24]  http://www.aber.ac.uk/~dgw/patent.htm
   [25]  http://www.cis.csiro.au/cis/lib/patlibs.html
   [26]  http://www.library.ubc.ca/patscan/lexis.html
   [27]  http://library.dialog.com/bluesheets/html/bl0351.html#AB
   [28]  http://library.dialog.com/bluesheets/html/bl0345.html#AB
   [29]  http://library.dialog.com/bluesheets/html/bl0340.html#AB
   [30]  http://library.dialog.com/bluesheets/html/bl0348.html#AB
   [31]  http://www.ummu.umich.edu/library/PTO/newCASSIS.html
   [32]  http://casweb.cas.org/chempatplus
   [33]  http://www.library.ubc.ca/patscan
   [34]  http://www.qpat.com
   [35]  http://www.wipo.org/eng/clssfctn/ipc/intro.htm
   [36]  http://www.wipo.int/eng/clssfctn/ipc/ipc6en/nfcatch/index.htm
   [37]  http://www.wipo.int/eng/clssfctn/ipc/ipc6en/guide/ent00001.htm
   [38]  http://www.wipo.org/eng/clssfctn/ipc/ipc6en/index.htm
   [39]  http://www.wipo.org/eng/general/ipc/manual
   [40]  http://metalab.unc.edu/patents/intropat.html#Manual
   [41]  http://www.ummu.umich.edu/library/PTO/newpatsearch.html
   [42]  http://www.lib.sfu.ca/kiosk/nelles/patents.htm
   __________________________________________________

   Copyright (c) 1999 by David Novak, all rights reserved.
   This FAQ may be posted to any USENET newsgroup, on-line service,
   website, or BBS as long as it is posted unaltered in its entirety
   including this copyright statement. This FAQ may not be included in
   commercial collections or compilations without express permission from
   the author. Permission requests to [email protected]

   Legalities: Information supplied here is put forward in good faith and
   entirely without expressed or implied warranty or fitness for use. The
   contents of this faq is simply a collection of information gathered from
   many sources with little or no editorial or factual checking. Further,
   this information are the thoughts of the authors alone and may not
   represent the beliefs of Community Networking or any sponsoring
   organization. Should you find a mistake or claim copyright infringement,
   please contact David Novak of Community Networking.
   -----------------------------------
   David Novak - [email protected]