| Article Index |
|---|
| Intellectual Property |
| Protection |
| Patents |
| Obtaining Patent Protection |
| Design Protection |
| Copyright |
| Trade Marks |
If your business involves any form of intellectual property, you need to review whether any of it is, or should be, protected.
1.1 There are four main kinds of intellectual property which can be protected.
1.2 If the intellectual property is already protected by someone else, you will not be able to protect it.
1.3 The rights for new intellectual property generally belong to whoever created it.
1.4 If you have the rights to any intellectual property, you must decide whether it is worth protecting.
A patent search (see 3.3) will reveal existing patents and applications that might affect your invention. You may then be able to modify your product to distinguish it
A trade mark search (see 6.1) will avoid conflict with names (etc) which are already protected.
A 'Right Start' application (see 6.3) can reveal problems with a trade mark application before you pay the full fee.
Questioning the creators of products, marketing plans and so on about their sources may reveal possible problems.
For example, if they have used copyright material or others' trade secrets.
Win £375 worth of advertising for your business.
Enter our competition by either: