Internet patent search service launched

Microelectronics International

ISSN: 1356-5362

Article publication date: 1 April 1999

47

Keywords

Citation

(1999), "Internet patent search service launched", Microelectronics International, Vol. 16 No. 1. https://doi.org/10.1108/mi.1999.21816aab.008

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 1999, MCB UP Limited


Internet patent search service launched

Internet patent search service launched

Keywords Internet, Patents

A system to provide access via the Internet to distributed databases of patent specifications published by the patent offices of Europe has been launched on the Patent Office web site. Called Esp@ceNet, the system makes it possible for anyone with Internet access to search patent specifications published in the last two years. This free service provides a common interface to the published patent application databases of the UK Patent Office, the European Patent Office (EPO) and other European national patent offices, as well as access to the PCT database of published patent applications.

Esp@ceNet is of immediate and practical use to those wishing to get an early idea of the patentability of a product or process or the state of the art of a technological field. Esp@ceNet can also be used to identify inventors or the most actively inventive companies in a given field or to monitor the activities of known competitors.

In Esp@ceNet, patents can be searched by publication number, application number, priority number, publication date, applicant, inventor, IPC classification and title. Wildcards can be used to identify groups of patents. When a patent is identified, the user can pull up its bibIiographic data, and images of the full specification, including the description of the invention, the patent claims and the drawings.

Published patents contain a vast store of publicly available technical and commercial information. Companies ignore this resource at their risk; 80 per cent of the technical information published in patent specifications is not to be found anywhere else. The European Commission has estimated that up to £20 billion is wasted in Europe on research which repeats work already carried out and described in published patent specifications.

Esp@ceNet can be found on the Patent Office's Website at www.patent.gov.uk.

For more information contact Gary Townley, the Patent Office. Tel: +44 (0) 1633 814345 or Michael Binns, Prowse & Co., Tel: +44 (0) 1372 363386.

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