@@@ABC to Patent, Design and Trademark

As the well-known success story of Nichia Corporation, the patentee of blue color light emitting diodes, shows, small-and-medium-sized businesses cannot gain a competitive position over large corporations in the market nor join the ranks of those large ones without holding exclusive rights, such as patent rights. We will introduce you briefly to what a patent, a design and a trademark, which are the seeds to help the companies grow up, are.
1. Patent
A gfloating laundry water cleanerh is a well-known patented commodity invented by a housewife in Japan. It has a top-opened and bottom-closed conic net suspended by a float and is used for collecting dust in a swirling laundry water flow during washing clothes. The cleaner was such a big hit that families throughout Japan used it in their laundry machines until fully-automatic machines became popular. If you come up with a new product that no one knows and no publication shows, you can obtain a patent like the housewife. Once you have obtained a patent, you can sell your invented product without being imitated by others. You can gain such a strong position in a market competition as to make your business grow up. You can also gain a profit by licensing your patent right to a large corporation even if you cannot manufacture your patented product by yourself. If you, running a small-and-medium-sized business, would like to wrestle on an even gSumoh ring with a large corporation in a scene of a market competition or a negotiation for collaboration, you have to be armed with a patent right. You have to file a patent application to the Japanese Patent Office (JPO) to obtain a patent. Specifically, you have to show your invention in writings and drawings in detail, and submit them to the JPO. Filing of a patent application does not mean the grant of a patent but a starting point to the grant. You further have to request the JPO to examine your patent application within 3 years from the filing date. Once you request the examination, an examiner from the JPO examines your patent application. The examiner searches a large number of prior art documents, and examines whether your invention is new and unobvious in light of prior-art found. If your invention passes the examination successfully, you are granted a patent right. You can maintain your patent right until 20 years after the filing date with paying annual fees. Please note, if you come up with a new idea, you have to keep it secret from the outside of your company until you file a patent application on the idea. If you have sold your inventive product before you file the application, you cannot obtain a patent on the idea any longer. This is because a patent is an exclusive right granted to someone who has provided our society with a new valuable idea that no one knows as a reward to encourage further inventions.


  2.   Design
If you manufacture a product in a beautiful shape or add an ornament to it, then you can enhance consumerfs motivation to buy yours. If you come up with a new design of a product appearance that no one knows and no publication shows, you can obtain a design registration. Once you have obtained a design registration, you can sell your designed product without being imitated by others. You can gain such a strong position in a market competition as to make your business grow up. You can also gain a profit by licensing your design right, like a patent right, to a large corporation even if you cannot manufacture your registered product by yourself. You have to file a design application (precisely, an application for design registration) to the JPO to obtain a design registration. Specifically, you have to show your design in writings and drawings, and submit them to the JPO. Once you file a design application, an examiner from the JPO examines your design application. You do not need to request the examination of a design application, contrary to that of a patent application. The examiner searches a large number of prior art documents, and examines whether your design is new and unobvious in light of prior- art found. If your design passes the examination successfully, you are granted a design right. You can maintain your design right for 15 years from the registration date with paying annual fees, contrary to a patent right. Please note, if you come up with a new design, you have to keep it secret from the outside of your company until you file a design application on the design. Even after you have sold your designed product, you, however, can file a design application within half a year by submitting the proof of the sale, contrary to a patent application. This is because it is a habitual practice in the business field to conclude the design of a product after testing the sale.


  3.   Trademark
If you are one of the manufacturers of some product, you have to make consumers distinguish yours from otherfs one. For this purpose, you probably apply your company name or product name on the product or the package of it. For example, you might give a new name "Whirly Floaty" or "Floaty Cleanie" if you were a manufacturer of the above- stated cleaner. Such a name or a sign used to enable consumers to distinguish your and otherfs products is called "trademark." If you continue using the same trademark for the same product, users who have been satisfied with the product come to buy the same one again with trust using the trademark as a guide. A reputation comes to diffuse around the users together with the trademark. Your trademark, by continuously being used, accumulate a goowill of your company or product. Your trademark becomes a "face" of your company or product like a movie star's face, which is nothing but an irreplaceable property. Once you have obtained a trademark registration, you can use your registered trademark without being imitated by others. You can snowball your property safely without being robbed by others. On contrary, if you have not obtained a trademark registration, others may obtain the registration for the same or similar mark, and as a result, cause you unable to use your trademark any more. You come to loose all your accumulated property and credibility in a moment. You have to file a trademark application (precisely, an application for trademark registration) to the JPO to obtain a trademark registration. Specifically, you have to show your trademark and goods or services that the mark is used for in writings, and submit them to the JPO. Once you file a trademark application, an examiner from the JPO examines your trademark application without a request for the examination similarly to a design application. The examiner searches a large number of registered trademarks, and examines whether your trademark is similar to others. If your trademark passes the examination successfully, you are granted a trademark right. You can maintain your trademark right for 10 years from the registration date. You can renew the duration of your trademark right every 10 years with paying a fee, so that you can even maintain your trademark right permanently, contrary to a patent nor design right. (Updated in November 2006)
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