Protecting
Your Ideas
It's not easy to think about ideas as property, but for some
businesses it's vital. Most of us have had an idea for a new
product or service only to dismiss, postpone, or neglect it.
Sometimes we later find that others had the same idea, but took
it to market before we did. By that time, it is too late for
us to take advantage of the idea.
Ideas are relatively easy to come by, but inventions are
more difficult. It takes knowledge, time, money, and effort
to refine an idea into a workable invention, even on paper.
Turning an invention into an innovation - a new product accepted
by the marketplace - takes a lot of effort and a little luck.
There are substantial barriers in the path of those who pursue
innovation. Overcoming them requires careful planning and
plenty of input from others.
Hundreds of thousands of inventors and innovators file each
year for protection under U.S. patent, trademark and copyright
laws. However, it can be hard to decide which of the three
vehicles is most appropriate for the protection of a particular
invention. Although a single product or service may require
a patent, a trademark, and a copyright, each category protects
a distinct aspect of a creative work or expression.
Patents, copyrights and trademarks, as well as know-how or
trade secrets, are often collectively referred to as intellectual
property. Many firms have such property without even being
aware of it or of the need to take measures to protect it.
Many people's notions of intellectual property are unrealistic.
Some believe, for example, that simply having a patent on
a product will enable one to succeed in the marketplace. Consequently,
they may spend thousands of dollars to obtain the exclusive
rights to market something that no one wants or can afford
to buy. Others may decide that intellectual property protection
is not worth the trouble.
People who may not be interested in protecting their own
rights must still take precautions to avoid infringing on
the rights of others. This calls for more than the avoidance
of copying. Some copying is unavoidable; but one can easily
infringe on the rights of others without deliberately imitating
specific features of goods or services.
U.S.
Patent and Trademark Office - Patent Section
U.S.
Patent and Trademark Office - Trademark Section
U.S.
Copyright Office
Trademarks
Copyright
Trade
Secrets
Federal vs. State
Laws