
The US Constitution gives Congress
the power to "promote the progress
of science and useful arts, by securing
for limited times to authors and
inventors the exclusive right to
their respective writings and discoveries."
The USPTO was established to administer
patent, trademark and copyright
law. In other words, the Office
decides what can be patented, and
to whom and for how long these rights
are granted. The purpose of granting
patents is to protect the inventor
for a specified length of time (usually
20 years), thus allowing patent
holders to profit from their innovations
before they can legally be copied
by others. Patent law says that
a patent may be issued for a "new
and useful" manufactured article,
a design, a manufacturing process,
machine, or even an improvement
on one of these.
|