Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Japan - accelerated Patent examination

In a constructive step towards executing the idea of ‘accelerated examination’ for patent applications [as mentioned in a previous post], Japan, has leapfrogged in setting a benchmark. The Japan Patent Office which receives 420,000 applications annually, indeed has an uphill task of processing these applications in a timely and justified manner.



In a collaborative effort of usurping the negative attributes of a slow patent obtaining process, the Japanese Government has enacted the Expeditious Patent Examination Law in 2004. Since 2004, the Japanese Patent Office (JPO) has begun groundwork to achieve a waiting time for examination process to be the world’s shortest at 11 months in 2013, and towards realizing the ultimate goal of a zero period of waiting.



To deal with the massive amount of applications, the Japanese Patent Office expects to meet a target of hiring 500 examiners over a 5-year period to provide the pillars of support to the on-going process of accelerated examination. As a precedent of sorts, the JPO has granted the world’s fastest patent after a mere 17-day screening process. The patent deals with a process of detecting toxic metals in water, granted to Keio University.



PatentInc* Viewpoint:

Armed with the belief that a faster examination process will not only expedite the cascaded effects of translating patent applications into rightful patents, but also be the pivoting cause for more and more people/enterprises/RnD centres to acknowledge the patent protection route, the JPO has indeed begun to pave a way for building a faster, formidable patent docket.



[* PatentInc. – a proprietary outfit in the field of Intellectual Property, India]


Friday, October 10, 2008

Technology awards 2008 - upping the bar


Buoyancy in the fiercely competitive market is a formidable quality.


Defining the state-of-the-art, then, in the same fiercely competitive market becomes a laudable quality. It is for want of this recognition that 700 entries for innovation awards were made to the Journal, out of which, were the following category winners (of 2008) [as seen in the link below]:

http://www.dowjones.com/innovation/

This includes the home bred (Indian) Tata Consultancy Services in the ‘Wireless’ category for their invention relating to development of a communication system for providing crop advice to farmers as also the home bred (Indian) Tata Motors in the ‘Transportation’ category for manufacturing the world’s cheapest, fuel-efficient family car.

Increased innovations translate into increased dependence on technology, increasing our convenience factor, reducing the spatial and time domain factor. Quantum leaps vis-à-vis such inventions, hence, pave the way for a technologically-bred ‘super’ [sic] human (?)!



References:

[1] http://www.dowjones.com/innovation/