johanfprins wrote:I am only willing to say that I am interested in electronic applications: Chips not generating heat and faster than anything available today. I am not willing to speculate on any other applications even though I do have others in mind.
So at this point I want to thank you for offering help. The truth is that I do not even know who and what you are and have full trust in my patent lawyers.
Well, I wish you well in your endeavours but, for what it is worth, it sounds like you are being too limiting in your trust of others.
To be simple about it, your reply suggests to me that you do not have a specific application in mind. You can either patent the manufacturing process for this superconducting substance or you can patent an application for it. If you have come up with some analysis which shows that a given material will be superconducting,
once made, that's great but it isn't patentable. If you have to work with a company to work out how to manufacture your material then you
should do that under an NDA. To progress it under a patent, or patent application, is a risk because the grant of that patent could be challenged for a host of reasons, but if you have an NDA, then even if your ideas are not fully formed your NDA is protection against someone taking unfair advantage of that information. If you publish a patent, then you can be sure someone will try to find a workaround, or seek to have the original grant annulled and you cut out of the picture altogether, and they will make sure that all of that exceeds your ability to cover the legal expenses.
Find the right company to work with, get an NDA in place, and then get them to file the patent, with you as inventor. And there is probably no need to ask for more than 5 or 10% because you'll have all the money you want out of that, and they'll be happy and want to be sure that everyone knows you invented it first because that will then strengthen their own interests in the patent by dismissing anyone else's claim on it.
But it sounds like you need help either to manufacture the material, or to put it to use in some application, and therefore you don't have anything yet to patent, until someone helps you fulfill one of those two outcomes.
To the extent our conversation has gone, I get the impression this is the outcome that is frustrating you and are blaming the examiners for short sightedness. If it is so then that would be unfair. It is not a matter of "petty rules", you can't just 'claim' a superconducting material. You have to claim method(s) of manufacture, and/or claim specific application(s).
I can only presume you know this, or that it has been explained to you by your patent lawyers, but there is perhaps no harm in a reminder on that when you are driving at fundamentally new technology.
But, obviously, I do not know the detail so I will leave you with those comments and hope that they might help you a little. Your patent lawyers do not have a principal objective to get you a solid patent. They have the objective about making money from handling your patent. That is the stark truth of it. Today there were only two people who were actually personally interested in getting your idea patented; you, because it is yours, and me, because I took a personal interest in trying to see if I could help out. Tomorrow there will be only one person interested in getting your idea patented. This is the hard reality of patenting something. It is a commercial enterprise and you are therefore in competition with other ideas and opportunities. I recommend you try to find a business who has the means to make your idea a reality and whom you can put your trust into. That way, there will then be lots more people who will have an interest in making your IPR a reality. In any case, I wish you good luck... because you
shall need it.