Patent: concept, types, terms and characteristics

A patent is an exclusive right on an industrializable invention or creation, granted by an official public agency.

A patent can confer exclusivity on products, tools, procedures and processes, provided that the project is presented, that is, a documentation that explains the invention and proves its executability. This project is therefore not to be confused with a prototype.

Through the patent, the author of the invention prohibits third parties, without his consent, from producing, using, put up for sale, sell or import the patented product or product resulting from a patented process.

In Brazil, the agency responsible for issuing patents is the National Institute of Industrial Property - INPI. The patent is only valid in the national territory. In addition, the document confers a title of temporary property, considering that it has a fixed term, which varies according to the type of patent.

The owner of a patent is obliged to exploit the patented object. If you don't, the patent can be compulsorily licensed, allowing other producers to make use of it.

The rules related to patents are provided for in Law No. 9,279/96 (Industrial Property Law).

What are the requirements to obtain a patent?

To obtain a patent, the object must meet four requirements:

News: the object of the patent must be new in the scientific community. It is not possible to patent something that already exists.

Inventive Activity: the inventive step consists of the author's degree of contribution to the existence of that new product or process. Thus, it is expected that the existence of the object of the patent would not be possible without the author's idea.

Industrial application: the object of the patent must be capable of industrial application, that is, in manufacturing.

No impediment: the object of the patent cannot be framed in any of the impeding causes of Law No. 9,279/96. Among them are:

  • what is contrary to morals, good customs and security, order and public health;
  • substances, materials, mixtures, elements or products of any kind, as well as the modification of their properties physicochemical and the respective processes of obtaining or modifying, when resulting from the transformation of the nucleus atomic;
  • all or part of living beings, except transgenic microorganisms that meet the three requirements of patentability: novelty, inventive step and industrial application - provided for by law and which are not mere discovery.

Who can apply for the patent?

The patent can be applied for by the author (individual or legal entity), by heirs or successors of the author, the assignee or another person indicated in an employment contract or provision of service.

When the object of the patent is held by two or more people, any one of them can apply on behalf of all.

When two identical patents are applied for, the individual who applied first to the National Institute of Industrial Property – INPI will be entitled, regardless of the date of invention or creation.

Types of patents and their validity periods

According to Law No. 9,279/96, the types of patents existing in Brazil are:

Invention Patent (PI)

Products or processes that meet the requirements of inventive step, novelty and industrial application. Its validity is 20 years from the filing date (submission to the National Institute of Industrial Property – INPI).

Examples: band-aid, safety pin, electric iron, etc.

Utility Model Patent (MU)

Object of practical use, or part of one, capable of industrial application, which presents a new shape or disposition, involving an inventive act, that results in functional improvement in its use or in its manufacturing. Its validity is 15 years from the date of deposit.

Examples: left-handed shears, tree pruning shears, etc.

There is also a title called Invention Addition Certificate (C),which aims the improvement or development introduced in something already invented, therefore, it does not need to have an inventive step. The certificate will be part of the patent and with the same end date as the latter, so it is not considered a type of patent, since it works as an accessory document.

Is it possible to patent an idea?

It is not possible to patent ideas. For this reason, an understandable design of the product or process to be patented is required, capable of proving its feasibility. According to Law No. 9,279/96, the following are not considered inventions or utility models:

  • discoveries, scientific theories and mathematical methods;
  • purely abstract conceptions;
  • commercial, accounting, financial, educational, advertising, raffle and inspection schemes, plans, principles or methods;
  • literary, architectural, artistic and scientific works or any aesthetic creation;
  • computer programs themselves;
  • presentation of information;
  • game rules;
  • operative or surgical techniques and methods, as well as therapeutic or diagnostic methods, for application on the human or animal body;
  • the whole or part of natural living beings and biological materials found in nature, or even from it isolated, including the genome or germplasm of any natural living being and the biological processes natural.

How to apply for a patent?

Patent applications can be made in the following ways:

  • through the internet, on the website of the National Institute of Industrial Property - INPI;
  • at the agency's headquarters in Rio de Janeiro;
  • in INPI representative bodies in other capitals of Brazil;
  • by mail, with acknowledgment of receipt addressed to the Patent Office.

Applications can be made in their own name. There is no need to hire a lawyer or a specialized office.

The protection granted by the patent will only take effect with the approval of the application, not with its submission.

Differences between trademark and patent registration

In the business environment, the confusion between trademark and patent registration is common, although the institutes protect different objects.

While the patent aims to guarantee an exclusive property right over an invention or utility model, the trademark registration serves to guarantee the exclusive use of a trademark, that is, any distinctive sign (images, sounds, expressions, etc.) that identifies a manufacturer or service provider.

As with the patent, the registration of trademarks is also in force throughout the national territory and is also required by the National Institute of Industrial Property – INPI. Once obtained, the holder prevents competitors from using the trademark. This process has nothing to do with patents.

In short, the invention is patented and the trademark is registered.

See too:

  • Innovation
  • Concession
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