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Recording Date of Concept and Reducing to Practice Author of the tutorial : TheLoneInventor 1 Recording The Date of Concept 1 Recording The Date of Concept There are many ways that have been pondered at large with the hope that a quick, easy, and effective proof of date or concept can be universally enforced and used, however none devised have yet to provide complete certainty in the courts.The Inventors First Duty: To Protect the intellectual property right that is associated with the said property, and be able to weild it on the behalf of the inventor, to which the creation is responsible. This is not to say that the inventor needs to profit on the invention, only that it should be up to the inventor what is done with the intellectual property. If the inventor chooses to sell and profit, very well, and if he decides to give it away, very well, but the rights of the product should rest squarely on the shoulders of thier founders. How Does One Do This? 1.) The 'proven' method thus far (by popular belief as it seems, this is a most often suggested method) has been to record, sign and date a witnessed copy of an invention disclosure within a notebook, or blank book. Although I don't know how well courts uphold such documents. 2.) I have been told to mail a copy to yourself, and the postal mark will verify the date, although I do know that this has been thrown out in courts before. 3.) The US Patent and Trademark office suggests the legal means are as follows:
Notwithstanding documentation, disclosures and patents, there is a nagging little factor refereed to as "reduction to Practice" |