Technopreneurship Write Ups No. 6 Group Members
Technopreneurship Write Ups No. 6 Group Members
Technopreneurship Write Ups No. 6 Group Members
Group Members:
Intellectual property is an invention or an idea that gives a person the exclusive rights to a
computers or your office, intellectual property is a collection of ideas and concepts. There are
many types of intellectual properties like inventions, discoveries, artwork, and writings.
Intellectual property can help the growth of our economy, one simple invention can
produce many jobs, one simple invention can result in a big corporation that will earn money, taxes
for government, provide jobs for hundreds and of course it does serve humanity. If the invention is
either a drug or pharmaceutical that can solve many illnesses, or the invention is an app or mobile
technology then it will help people to communicate with each other, these are one of the few
There are 3 examples of an Intellectual Property, these are patent, copyright and
trademarks.
Patents protect processes, methods and inventions that are "novel," "non-obvious" and "useful."
If granted, a patent gives you a 20-year monopoly on selling, using, making or importing an
invention into the United States. The requirements for a patent are complex, but here they are in
a nutshell:
Your work must be novel. This means it must not be known or used by others in this
or for sale in this country more than one year prior to the application for patent.
Your work must be non-obvious. This means it must not be obvious to a person having
ordinary skill in the pertinent art as it existed when the invention was made.
Your work must be useful. This means that it must have current, significant, beneficial
these. According to the Patent Office: "The word 'process' is defined by law as a process,
act or method, and primarily includes industrial or technical processes. The term
'machine' used in the statute needs no explanation. The term 'manufacture' refers to
articles that are made, and includes all manufactured articles. The term 'composition of
matter' relates to chemical compositions and may include mixtures of ingredients as well
as new chemical compounds. These classes of subject matter taken together include
practically everything which is made by man and the processes for making the products."
Patent protection requires full public disclosure of the work in detail and therefore precludes
Copyright Protection
A copyright will protect the following categories of works:
literary works
sound recordings
architectural works
Copyright protection gives the copyright holder the exclusive right to copy the work, modify it
(that is, create "derivative works"), and distribute, perform and display the work publicly.
Trademarks
A trademark is like a brand name. It is any word(s) or symbol(s) that represent a product to
identify and distinguish it from other products in the marketplace. A trademark word example
2. By filing an "intent to use" application if the mark has not yet been used.
3. In certain circumstances in which a foreign application exists, you can rely on that.
The (TM) mark may be used immediately next to your mark. The ® registration symbol may
only be used when the mark is registered with the PTO. It is unlawful to use this symbol with
What qualities make for a strong trademark? The cardinal rule is that a mark must be
distinctive. The more distinctive it is, the easier your trademark will be to enforce. This is why so
Trademark rights last indefinitely if the company continues to use the mark to identify its
goods or services. When the mark is no longer being used, the registration is terminated. The
initial term of federal trademark registration is 10 years, with 10-year renewal terms.
Changes in the global economic environment have influenced the development of business
models where Intellectual Property is a central element establishing value and potential growth.
protect that value, have become a key element of the success and viability of a modern firm.
businesses and individuals would not reap the full benefits of their inventions and would focus
less on research and development. Similarly, artists would not be fully compensated for their