Raveninghorde said:
I have an electronics product idea but if it is any good it is out of
my league. So I want to see if there is already a US patent covering
it and if not I want to get a US patent.
Google "patent search" There used to be online patent repositories.
Call the library. Ask them. BIG libraries sometimes have access for
patent searches.
I see various news reports of Nokia suing Apple, someone suing
Blackberry, Intel, AMD etc. What's your point?
If my idea is original
It LIKELY is not.
and if it is viable
It likely is not.
would I be able to defend
Not a snowball's chance in hell.
A patent is a license to sue.
Imagine yourself up against a hundred microsoft or nokia
or ....lawyers. Even if you've been violated, you'll be bankrupt
a decade before you ever get to court.
Ok, so you got everything right and are granted a patent.
Now What? Can you afford to engineer, manufacture, distribute,
service a product using your patent?
You can license it.
You can sell it outright.
I've been away from it for a decade, but there used to be a thing
called a "provisional patent". It was a short-form patent disclosure
that cost $75 to file and gave you some limited protection for a year
while you tried to market your idea and let the buyer complete the
patent...or decided to complete the process yourself. There are a bunch
of ways to shoot yourself in the foot and forfeit protection.
There was a local inventors club. A couple of dozen people with ideas
and some attorneys to help you.
This was a genuine club of helpful, experienced inventors.
Not go be confused with "as seen on TV" fee based invention services.
Near as I could tell, the only guy who ever made any money did it on
a plastic extrusion that was sliced up to make a pencil holder that
clips on a sun visor. Was a giveaway marketing item for insurance
companies etc. He made 2-cents each, but the volume was high.
Not sure if he tried to patent it, but it succeeded because
the market is vast
it's cheap
the big guys aren't interested
I don't have any statistics, but I estimate that the probability
of a small guy making a killing on a patent is similar the chance
of winning the lottery if you invested as much in tickets as
you're gonna invest the patent.
The more complicated the idea and the more lucrative the market,
the less chance you have to be successful. THE BIG FISH WILL EAT YOU.