EMBARGOED UNTIL: 00:01 Wednesday 1 June 2011
An innovative new tool designed to help improve the patent
application process was launched today by the Minister for
Intellectual Property, Baroness Wilcox. Peer to Patent is a review
website which allows experts from the scientific and technology
community to view and comment on patent applications.
During the six month pilot up to 200 applications in the
computing field will be gradually uploaded for review on the
website. These will include a range of inventions from computer
mice to complex processor operations.
Today, the first group of applications have been uploaded to the
Peer to Patent website (www.peertopatent.org.uk)
and are now open for review by registered users for three months.
Following this, the system will create a summary of the comments
which will be sent to a Patent Examiner at the Intellectual
Property Office (IPO). Examiners will then consider these as part
of the patent review process.
Speaking about the launch in the UK today, Baroness Wilcox said:
“Patent applications granted after using the Peer to Patent
website review will be potentially stronger, giving businesses
better protection to grow their innovative ideas. This will give
the IPO access to a wider body of knowledge when deciding whether
a patent should be granted.
“The pilot will give experts the opportunity to comment on patent
applications and share their vital expertise before patents are
granted. It will also mean that inventions already known in the
wider community will be filtered out more readily.
“Peer to Patent is a step forward in supporting growth by
reinforcing the patent bedrock on which innovative businesses thrive.”
President of the Chartered Institute of Patent Attorneys (CIPA)
Alasdair Poore said:
"The quality of patent applications is so important.
Interested observers are the ones who have the expert knowledge,
so Peer to Patent gives them the chance to make a real
contribution. We welcome this pilot as a way of exploring how
third party opinions can really improve the quality of patents. I
hope users, observers and applicants will engage positively and
constructively in the pilot to show that it can work, and help to
build a stronger UK patent system.”
The UK pilot goes live today (1 June) and follows on from
successful Peer to Patent websites that have already been run in
the USA and Australia. The project was developed by the New York
Law School (NYLS) from the work of Professor Beth Noveck. The
pilot will end on 31 December 2011.
Notes to Editors
The Intellectual Property Office is within the Department for
Business, Innovation, and Skills, and is responsible for the
national framework of Intellectual Property rights, comprising
patents, designs, trade marks and copyright.Its role is to help
manage an IP system that encourages innovation and creativity,
balances the needs of consumers and users, promotes strong and
competitive markets and is the foundation of the knowledge based
economy.It operates in a national and an international environment
and its work is governed by national and international law,
including various international treaties relating to IP to which
the United Kingdom is a party.For further information, please
contact Intellectual Property Office Press Officer Dan Palmer on
020 7215 5303 or e-mail communications.
Contacts:
BIS Press Office
NDS.BIS@coi.gsi.gov.uk
Dan Palmer
Phone: 020 7215 5303
dan.palmer@bis.gsi.gov.uk