Friday, January 18, 2019

Can you patent your recipes? The lowdown on food patents

Once and for all, can food recipes be patented? Here are basic information about the matter.
Patents may be granted for any “new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new and useful improvement thereof,” the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) noted, citing Title 35 of the United States Code, Section 101. Food recipes typically have three parts, namely an ingredient list, instructions on how to use and cook them, and the final product resulting from those two components.
Image source: Pixabay.com   


 A recipe may be patented if it successfully meets a number of criteria. It should be novel—it cannot be a food item that’s already familiar to the public or an apparent combination of preexisting food items. It should be “non-obvious,” where the inventor must show that the food wouldn’t have been a trivial, routine advance beyond other previously known foods. Know that this can be quite a complicated area of patent law.

Image source: Pixabay.com   
The inventor, too, must adequately disclose the food, providing a comprehensive revelation of how to make and use it. The recipe must be readily reproducible by someone armed with ordinary skill in the industry.

Now, what if you can’t patent or trademark? Well, there’s such a thing called a “trade secret,” which can protect an original recipe but isn’t legally binding. It simply means that you have an internal system for keeping things secret. This doesn’t have a legal recourse when things go awry, so make sure to have a trustworthy staff and a process that prevents a violation of the trade secret.

Michael E. Melton has benefited from a distinguished career as an intellectual property attorney. He is currently a partner at Norris & Melton, P.L.L.C., in Washington, D.C. Atty. Melton has also been a lawyer and consultant at IP Counsel Consultants since 2002, where he provides advice to clients on the licensing, acquisition, and management of intellectual property assets and expert witness testimony. Read more articles covered by his practice on this page.

Friday, January 11, 2019

Some basic guidelines on trademark protection

A trademark is a slogan, symbol, logo, word, design, or a combination of these elements that identifies and distinguishes a company or an organization. Trademark laws protect an element from being copied or infringed or used generically without the company’s permission. Here are some basic guidelines on trademark protection that every organization needs to know.
Sources: iptechblog.com

Avoid commonly used symbols and trademarks. If you are on the process of distinguishing your trademark, do ample research about commonly used symbols in the industry where you belong to. You can either hire a team of creative that specializes in branding and identity.

Source: jewpatntlaw.com
File a trademark application before commercial use. You can’t use your trademark until you have filed an application at the USPTO (United States Patent and Trademark Office). You can choose to file on an intent-to-use basis, as long as you use the trademark in commerce in connection with your services or goods. Once you have proven this, the USPTO will grant you your Certificate of Registration.

Seek legal advice when your trademark has been infringed. It is best to hire an intellectual property lawyer or attorney to represent your case once you see that your trademark has been used. Gather the evidence of infringement to make your case stronger, and follow necessary steps that your lawyer will tell you.


Michael E. Melton is the Founder and President of MEM Enterprises Group, which owns, operates, and manages Taco Bell and Five Guys Burgers restaurants and commercial real estate. He began his professional career as a Patent Adviser to the U.S. Department of the Navy. Mr. Melton clerked for civil rights attorney Arthur A. Benson, II, and assisted the NAACP Legal Defense Fund on the Kansas City, Missouri school desegregation case during his years in law school. For more articles like this, visit this page.