What constitutes a public disclosure?
Seeking a patent does not preclude publication of research results, and, in most cases, does not delay publishing. To retain the potential for foreign patents, a U.S. patent application must be filed before any description of the invention is publicly disclosed.
The following are examples of public disclosure and when they are considered “published”:
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Publications in journals, books, etc.
The day the journal is mailed out from the printer.
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Abstracts for meetings
The day the book of abstracts is mailed from the printer.
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Handouts given out during a poster presentation or oral presentation
The day they are handed out.
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Dissertations and Theses
The day they are placed on the library shelves.
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Publications on the Internet
The day they are sent out/posted.
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Posters and oral presentations at meetings, including seminars that are open to the public
The day presented.
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Progress reports to industry sponsors
(When not covered by a confidentiality agreement)
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Federally funded grant abstracts
(When grants are funded, U.S. governement agencies may post all or parts of the title and abstract of the proposal on the Internet. Keep key concpets for a patent out of the title and abstract of all proposals)
What is not a public disclosure?
The following are not public disclosures:
- Presentations at departmental meetings (if not open to the public)
- Presentations at Interdepartmental meetings (if not open to the public)
- Grant proposals (but mark sections that are confidential)