Question
I have an idea that basically is an extension to a current patent, but I want to take a few features out of it and add my own. What things do I need to look out for to avoid patent infringement? What their patented product is for is different than what mine is for. For example: ( Hypothetical) A patent is in place for a desk lamp. I want to take a lot of the same technology and process and make it a Scentsy electric wax warmer. What I want to do is very similar to that example, how did Scentsy get around it, enough differentiation?
Thank you,
Jeremy
Answers: 3 public & 0 private
Jeremy:
Experience teaches to ask the obvious. Did you already check to make sure the patent you are worried about is up to date in their maintenance fees? These are owed at 3.5, 7.5 and 11.5 years after issuance. A large percentage of patent holders don't pay these, making the patents free for public use (All speaking about US patents, but if your idea can't be used by 320 MM people, it's not worth much, honestly).
LuF
www.mxpatent.com
Infringement is basically a simple proposition - to infringe a patent, your product or system or method must include each and every feature that is in any one of the claims of the patented product, system, or method. So let's take a very simplistic example. Let's assume that you are the first one to ever invent a chair, so the main claim of your patent, the broadest claim, recites a seat, at least one leg, because the chair can comprise a pedestal (one leg) type chair, and a back connected to the seat. If you produce a product which has a seat, at least one leg, and a back, you infringe that patent because your product has every feature that is claimed in the claim of the patent. So let's say you decide to make an ottoman - an ottoman does not have a back, so you will not infringe the patent. So, as I said, if your product, system, or method has every feature claimed within at least one claim of the patented system, product, or method, you infringe - if your product, system, or method does not have every feature, or an obvious/similar component, you do not infringe.
Here's a further scenario - let's say you come up with an improved chair - let's say you decide to affix a cushion to the seat - that makes the chair more comfortable. So you obtain a patent claiming a seat, at least one leg, a back attached to the seat, and a cushion attached to the seat. You still cannot manufacture your own patented chair because your patented chair, while containing the cushion, also contains a seat, at least one leg, and a back - hence, you infringe the first patent. But the owner of the first patent, we'll call him Mr. A, becomes aware of your chair and appreciates the improvement and the fact that people will probably want your chair as opposed to his chair because your chair is more comfortable, but he cannot manufacture your chair because he will then infringe your patent. What to do? You both cross-license each other agreeing that you both can manufacture your chair without each one of you infringing the other patent. So, it's not necessarily that your intended product is for a different purpose or use, infringement depends upon the claimed structural features.
Attorney Weinreib is right.
The question you asked was whether your new gizmo would infringe a patent on the existing product. What you didn't ask is whether you would be entitled to your own patent on the gizmo. Please understand that the latter is a different question, and would have a different answer.
It's possible that your gizmo would be patentable despite the fact that it incorporates a lot of structure and functionality of the product. It would need to involve patent-eligible subject matter, and would need to be novel as compared with the totality of the "prior art," and moreover would need not to be obvious to a person having ordinary skill in that "art" from a combination of different items of prior art.
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