European Patent Office - ορισμός. Τι είναι το European Patent Office
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  • ετυμολογία

Τι (ποιος) είναι European Patent Office - ορισμός


European Patent Office         
The EPO (German: Europaeisches Patentamt; French: Office Europeen de Brevets) promotes easier, cheaper, and more reliable patent protection by establishing a single procedure for granting patents on the basis of a single European patent law. Standards are available in English from the World Intellectual Property Organization. The Office was established in October, 1973; its headquarters are in Munich, Germany. EPO membership is not open to the U.S., but close relations are maintained through the Commerce Department's Patent and Trademark Office.
Unitary patent         
EUROPEAN PATENT VALID WITH LARGE PART OF THE EUROPEAN UNION
Community Patent Regulation; EU Community Patent Regulation; European Community Patent Regulation; Community Patent regulation; EU Community Patent regulation; European Community Patent regulation; Community patent regulation; European community patent convention; Community Patent Convention; European Community Patent Convention; Convention for the European Patent for the Common Market; European Community Patent; EC Patent; EU Community Patent; EU Community Patents; COMPAT; Community Patent; EC-wide patent; Unitary EC-wide patent; EC wide patent; 1989 Agreement Relating to Community Patents; European Union Patent Jurisdiction; EU Patent Jurisdiction; Community patent; Community-wide patent; EU Patents; EU patent system; Pan-EU patent system; European Union Patent; EU Patent; EU Unitary Patent; EU patent; European unitary patent; European Patent with unitary effect; Unitary EU patent; Unitary patent system; European Unitary Patent System; Unitary Patent system in Europe; European patent with unitary effect; European Union patent; Unitary Patent; Unitary patent in the European Union; European patents with unitary effect; Unitary Patents; Unitary patents; EU Unitary patent; EPUE; Unitary patent regulations
The European patent with unitary effect, also known as the unitary patent, is a European patent which will benefit from unitary effect in the participating member states of the European Union. Unitary effect may be requested by the proprietor within one month of grant of a European patent, replacing validation of the European patent in the individual countries concerned.
Grant procedure before the European Patent Office         
  • Graph of European patent applications filed and granted between 1998 and 2007. The average time from filing to grant in 2007 was 43.7 months (3.6 years).
The grant procedure before the European Patent Office (EPO) is an ex parte, administrative procedure, which includes the filing of a European patent application, the examination of formalities, the establishment of a search report, the publication of the application, its substantive examination, and the grant of a patent, or the refusal of the application, in accordance with the legal provisions of the European Patent Convention (EPC). The grant procedure is carried out by the EPO under the supervision of the Administrative Council of the European Patent Organisation.

Βικιπαίδεια

European Patent Office
Παραδείγματα από το σώμα κειμένου για European Patent Office
1. The European Patent Office alone has granted over 30,000 patents in this area.
2. It is easy to describe a computer programme in a "technical" way, the boards of appeal of the European Patent Office said.
3. Brussels‘ intention was to simply codify the existing practice of national patent offices and the European Patent Office in Munich, which has been particularly generous in granting patents for software–related inventions.
4. You are still going to have the European Patent Office and the UK Patent Office issuing patents on pure software, but it is not likely that they would stand up in court," he added.
5. The proposed European Union directive on the "patentability of computer–implemented inventions" (2002/0047/COD) was originally envisaged as a way of harmonising patent law in member states and set out the role of the European Patent Office.