Inventions and patent rights Jonesboro GA

This article explains patent rights when a second party is involved in helping to construct the item. It discusses your rights and what you should know before hiring help.

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Brown George T Atty Jr
(770) 478-4269
2750 Jodeco Dr
Jonesboro, GA
Fincher Denmark & Williams Attornys At Law
(770) 471-9948
2262 Mount Zion Rd
Jonesboro, GA
Ferguson Monroe Atty
(770) 478-3025
106 S Main St
Jonesboro, GA
Leopold Chris PC Atty
(770) 472-6200
124 N McDonough St
Jonesboro, GA
Perry Douglas Attorney
(770) 477-7540
1299 Battlecreek Rd
Jonesboro, GA
Brown and Romeo
(770) 478-3200
194 S Main St
Jonesboro, GA
Holloway Melinda S Atty
(770) 603-1673
767 North Ave
Jonesboro, GA
King Michael B Atty
(770) 478-3555
116 S Main St
Jonesboro, GA
Brown David B Atty
(770) 478-8944
108 S Main St
Jonesboro, GA
Gill William Lamarris Atty
(770) 472-1121
Jonesboro, GA

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QUESTION:

I have an idea to patent a product that I think will sell; however, this product has electronic circuitry, which I'm not capable of producing because of my lack of electronics knowledge. Can I patent an idea and pay someone like an electronic engineer or a manufacturer to produce it and still be the patent owner?

ANSWER:

Yes. You can be the patent owner if the invention for which you seek the patent is your idea.

If the circuitry is obvious and not an integral part of your invention, then you'd be the sole inventor. This would also entitle you to be the sole patent owner unless you produced the invention as part of your employment or you assign the patent to the company that manufactures the invention, which is an extremely common practice.

However, if the circuitry is essential to your invention and there is "inventiveness" in the circuitry itself, then the engineer who designs and builds the circuitry might be considered a co-inventor and thus a co-patent owner. This is true unless, again, the invention was produced as part of your employment or assigned to another company.

I recommend that you double-check the specifics of your intentions with a patent attorney, since the dividing line between a creative engineer and an inventor can be a fine one.

Also, before showing or discussing your invention with anyone -- regardless of whether it's an engineer or a business prospect -- have that person sign a nondisclosure agreement. Without a nondisclosure agreement or some other confidential relationship, anyone to whom you disclose the idea can use and sell your invention until you get your patent -- a process that often takes two to three years.


Author: Nolo Press

Copyright 2008 Nolo
For more information visit Nolo Press

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