Via patenting your idea, provided it is patentable.
Your invention must NOT be publicly known more than One Year prior to your filing date
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(1) However, any printed publication, written by anyone, and from anywhere in the world, in any language, is considered valid prior art if it was published either before your earliest provable date of invention, or over one year before you file your patent application.
(2) The term “printed publication” thus includes patents, books, magazines (including trade and professional journals), Russian Inventor’s Certificates, and publicly available technical papers and abstracts. Even photocopied theses, provided they were made publicly available by putting them in a college library, will constitute prior art. While the statute speaks of “printed” publications, I’m sure that information on computer information utilities or networks would be considered a printed publication, provided it was publicly available.
(3) Therefore, if you fail to file within one year of such sale, offer for sale, public or commercial disclosure or use, the law bars you from obtaining a valid patent on the invention, even if you conceived and built and tested it before the sale or publication.
(4) Put another way, your own invention would now be prior art against any patent application you file.
Science Visibility of research work, How should showcase our PhD research?
Mar 19 2013, 11:57 AM
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