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provisional patent application

By Venjuris

Does Your Patent Need a CIP?

When it comes to your patent application, you may have seen the terms “CIP,” “Continuation,” and “Divisional,” but what do they mean? How are they

Filed Under: Intellectual Property, Patent Law Tagged With: arizona intellectual property lawyer, Arizona patent attorney, Arizona patent law firm, Arizona patent lawyer, CIP, continuation, continuation in part, divisional application, early publication, how to patent, Joseph Meaney, non-provisional patent application, non-publication, patent allowance, patent allowed, patent claims, patent drawings, patent examiner, patent issue, patent Office Action, patent publication, patent specifications, Phoenix intellectual property lawyer, Phoenix patent attorney, phoenix patent law firm, Phoenix patent lawyer, provisional patent application, Ruth Carter, USPTO patent application, Venjuris

By Venjuris

The Road to Patent Registration – Part II

The road to patent registration can be long and confusing – especially for a first-time inventor. In Part I, we reviewed the first five steps: Step

Filed Under: Intellectual Property, Patent Law Tagged With: arizona intellectual property lawyer, Arizona patent attorney, Arizona patent law firm, early publication, how to patent, Joseph Meaney, non-provisional patent application, non-publication, patent claims, patent examiner, patent Office Action, patent publication, Phoenix intellectual property lawyer, Phoenix patent attorney, phoenix patent law firm, Phoenix patent lawyer, provisional patent application, Ruth Carter, USPTO patent application, Venjuris

By Venjuris

Provisional Patent Buys You a Year … Well, Not Really

When you have an invention, and you are not ready to file a complete non-provisional patent application with the United States Patent and Trademark

Filed Under: Intellectual Property, Patent Law Tagged With: affordable patent attorney, affordable patent lawyer, affordable Phoenix patent lawyer, Arizona patent attorney, Arizona patent law firm, Arizona patent lawyer, Carey Anthony, filing a patent, how to patent, intellectual property, patent a device, patent an invention, patent drawings, Phoenix patent attorney, phoenix patent law firm, Phoenix patent lawyer, prior art, priority date, provisional patent application, Ruth Carter, Venjuris

By Venjuris

The Road to Patent Registration – Part I

The road to patent registration can be long and confusing – especially for a first-time inventor. Below is Part I of a broad overview of the major

Filed Under: Entrepreneur, Intellectual Property, Patent Law Tagged With: arizona intellectual property lawyer, Arizona patent attorney, Arizona patent law firm, early publication, how to patent, Joseph Meaney, non-provisional patent application, non-publication, patent claims, patent examiner, patent Office Action, patent publication, Phoenix intellectual property lawyer, Phoenix patent attorney, phoenix patent law firm, Phoenix patent lawyer, provisional patent application, Ruth Carter, USPTO patent application, Venjuris

By Venjuris

Are Patent Applications Secret?

What do you do if you have the next great idea but you are not sure if it is patentable? If you file a patent application, won’t it be available for

Filed Under: Intellectual Property, Patent Law Tagged With: arizona intellectual property lawyer, Arizona patent attorney, Arizona patent law firm, how to patent, inventor confidentiality, inventor information, inventor privacy, Joseph Meaney, non-provisional patent application, patent confidentiality, patent information, patent privacy, patent public record, patent secret, Phoenix intellectual property lawyer, Phoenix patent attorney, phoenix patent law firm, Phoenix patent lawyer, provisional patent application, Ruth Carter, trade secret, USPTO patent application, Venjuris

By Venjuris

Provisional Patents Explained

You have probably heard the term “provisional patent.” This term, however, is a bit of a misnomer.  The United States Patent and Trademark Office

Filed Under: Intellectual Property, Patent Law Tagged With: Joseph Meaney, non-provisional, non-provisional patent application, Phoenix patent attorney, phoenix patent law firm, Phoenix patent lawyer, provisional patent, provisional patent application, provisional vs regular patent, regular patent, regular patent application, USPTO, Venjuris, why should I file a provisional patent application

By Venjuris

Do I Need a Patent?

You’ve invented Thing 1, Or a method for Thing 2. So what, you then wonder, Is an inventor to do? Yes -- file a patent! And once it

Filed Under: Intellectual Property, Patent Law Tagged With: affordable patent lawyer, Arizona intellectual property attorney, do I need a patent, file for a patent, how much does a patent cost, how to get a patent, patent poem, phoenix patent law firm, Phoenix patent lawyer, provisional patent application, Venjuris, Wendy Akbar

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Venjuris

Venjuris practices business and intellectual property law and serves clients in Phoenix, Arizona, and the surrounding cities of Scottsdale, Tempe, Chandler, Gilbert, Glendale, Peoria, Avondale, Mesa, Paradise Valley, Sun City, Flagstaff, and Sedona, and in Maricopa County, Pima County, and Coconino County, Arizona (AZ). As a national practice, we have attorneys who are licensed in California (CA), Connecticut (CT), Virginia (VA), and New York (NY), and we provides services in numerous other states in the United States. Our international practice spans countries including Turkey, Ecuador, the United Kingdom, Switzerland, and a number of countries in Asia.

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