What is the PTO?
The PTO is the short
form usually used to refer to the United States Patent and Trademark Office, an
office of the U.S. Department of Commerce and the government body responsible
for granting and overseeing patents (as well as trademarks). Thus, patent applications are submitted to the PTO, and when a
patent is granted to an inventor, that grant is issued from the PTO.
Within the PTO
are various employees known as examining attorneys, or simply
examiners. These examiners review submitted patent applications,
determining whether a patent can be granted to the submitting inventor.
Often, this requires the examiner to work with the submitting inventor (or,
more often than not, the submitting inventor’s attorney) to address the
examiner’s concerns about the patent application and whether it meets the
formal requirements for obtaining a patent. This process
of obtaining a patent from the PTO is known as “patent prosecution.”
For more information
about the PTO, you can go to its surprisingly useful
website.
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