What Are Patents, Trademarks, Servicemarks, and Copyrights?
Some people confuse patents, copyrights, and trademarks.
Although there may be some similarities among these kinds of
intellectual property protection, they are different and serve
different purposes.
What Is a Patent?
A patent for an invention is the grant of a property right to
the inventor, issued by the United States Patent and Trademark
Office. Generally, the term of a new patent is 20 years from the
date on which the application for the patent was filed in the
United States or, in special cases, from the date an earlier
related application was filed, subject to the payment of
maintenance fees. U.S. patent grants are effective only within
the United States, U.S. territories, and U.S. possessions. Under
certain circumstances, patent term extensions or adjustments may
be available.
The right conferred by the patent grant is, in the language of
the statute and of the grant itself, the right to exclude
others from making, using, offering for sale, or selling
the invention in the United States or importing the
invention into the United States. What is granted is not the
right to make, use, offer for sale, sell or import, but the right
to exclude others from making, using, offering for sale, selling
or importing the invention. Once a patent is issued, the patentee
must enforce the patent without aid of the USPTO.
There are three types of patents:
Utility patents may be granted to anyone who invents or
discovers any new and useful process, machine, article of
manufacture, or compositions of matters, or any new useful
improvement thereof;
Design patents may be granted to anyone who invents a new,
original, and ornamental design for an article of manufacture;
and
Plant patents may be granted to anyone who invents or
discovers and asexually reproduces any distinct and new variety
of plants.
What Is a Trademark or Servicemark?
A trademark is a word, name, symbol, or device that is used in
trade with goods to indicate the source of the goods and to
distinguish them from the goods of others. A servicemark is the
same as a trademark except that it identifies and distinguishes
the source of a service rather than a product. The terms
trademark and mark are commonly used to
refer to both trademarks and servicemarks.
Trademark rights may be used to prevent others from using a
confusingly similar mark, but not to prevent others from making
the same goods or from selling the same goods or services under a
clearly different mark. Trademarks which are used in interstate
or foreign commerce may be registered with the USPTO. The
registration procedure for trademarks and general information
concerning trademarks is described in a separate pamphlet
entitled Basic Facts about Trademarks.
What Is a Copyright?
Copyright is a form of protection provided to the authors of
original works of authorship including literary,
dramatic, musical, artistic, and certain other intellectual
works, both published and unpublished. The 1976 Copyright Act
generally gives the owner of copyright the exclusive right to
reproduce the copyrighted work, to prepare derivative works, to
distribute copies or phonorecords of the copyrighted work, to
perform the copyrighted work publicly, or to display the
copyrighted work publicly.
The copyright protects the form of expression rather than the
subject matter of the writing. For example, a description of a
machine could be copyrighted, but this would only prevent others
from copying the description; it would not prevent others from
writing a description of their own or from making and using the
machine. Copyrights are registered by the Copyright Office of the
Library of Congress.