I am only 20 minutes in and glad I watched so far. Learning a lot of very important perspective here and how the patent will pertain to my own software requirements. Thank you!!
i guess im asking randomly but does any of you know a method to log back into an Instagram account?? I was dumb forgot the password. I would appreciate any assistance you can offer me!
@Apollo Eli thanks so much for your reply. I found the site on google and I'm trying it out atm. I see it takes quite some time so I will get back to you later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
The speaker got sidetracked in one of his last answers regarding prior art disclosure to the USPTO. When filing a nonprovisional application, the applicant must disclose any and all prior art of which he is aware. Failure to do so constitutes fraud on the Office and can invalidate a later-issued patent. Also, for Trademarks, generic terms can never acquire secondary meaning and become protectable. Rather, descriptive terms can acquire secondary meaning and become protectable. Generic terms are never protectable.
So if you invent a search engine which does was google does, you can’t patent the concept of search, but it’s your own unique code including the code to crawl the web should you just settle for copyright? Or can you patent the actual source code?
What if someone has obtained a patent for something that makes use of open-source software, where in the industry it is being applied to, the software idea would N OT be un-obvious to someone inside that industry. Can you fight that patent or get it voided? For example, Virtual Reality implementing teaching strategies that are already industry standard ways of teaching, but now VR is simply being used as the delivery instead of real mockup learning environments
Do I breach patent law when I use free software like GIMP (Photoshop alternative) as an end-user? Let's say I want to make a commercial advertising banner with it. Could somebody make me legal problems?
No, GIMP is open source. Patent law does not apply for end users. You breach patent law if you create and sell something that is patented. For using software you should look for the software license. GIMP is free to use for personal and commercial usage. You won't get into any trouble. For free stuff check if license allows use for commercial use.
I am only 20 minutes in and glad I watched so far. Learning a lot of very important perspective here and how the patent will pertain to my own software requirements. Thank you!!
Someone get him a glass of water!
This was a really educative segment. Thank you
i guess im asking randomly but does any of you know a method to log back into an Instagram account??
I was dumb forgot the password. I would appreciate any assistance you can offer me!
@Dylan Ryan instablaster =)
@Apollo Eli thanks so much for your reply. I found the site on google and I'm trying it out atm.
I see it takes quite some time so I will get back to you later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
@Apollo Eli it did the trick and I actually got access to my account again. Im so happy:D
Thank you so much, you really help me out :D
@Dylan Ryan glad I could help xD
This is a detail information about software patents. It was very useful for building a software Patents,Thank you
Let us know if you like us to address any issues in 2018.
The speaker got sidetracked in one of his last answers regarding prior art disclosure to the USPTO. When filing a nonprovisional application, the applicant must disclose any and all prior art of which he is aware. Failure to do so constitutes fraud on the Office and can invalidate a later-issued patent.
Also, for Trademarks, generic terms can never acquire secondary meaning and become protectable. Rather, descriptive terms can acquire secondary meaning and become protectable. Generic terms are never protectable.
Gary Bloom
🙏 Thank You 🙏 Thank You 🙏 Thank You 🙏
Thanks for the details about software patents! very useful!
So if you invent a search engine which does was google does, you can’t patent the concept of search, but it’s your own unique code including the code to crawl the web should you just settle for copyright? Or can you patent the actual source code?
What if someone has obtained a patent for something that makes use of open-source software, where in the industry it is being applied to, the software idea would N OT be un-obvious to someone inside that industry. Can you fight that patent or get it voided? For example, Virtual Reality implementing teaching strategies that are already industry standard ways of teaching, but now VR is simply being used as the delivery instead of real mockup learning environments
Do I breach patent law when I use free software like GIMP (Photoshop alternative) as an end-user? Let's say I want to make a commercial advertising banner with it. Could somebody make me legal problems?
No, GIMP is open source. Patent law does not apply for end users. You breach patent law if you create and sell something that is patented.
For using software you should look for the software license. GIMP is free to use for personal and commercial usage. You won't get into any trouble. For free stuff check if license allows use for commercial use.
WOW , Hank from Breaking Bad In real Life! cool !
pls stop clearing ur throat