When
you want to protect your intellectual property , you have to
get a patent application from a government agency called the
United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO). Here's your
chance to learn something about the USPTO as well as getting
another piece of evidence to solve the mystery.

The
United States Patent and Trademark Office is a part of the
United States Department of Commerce established
in 1903 as one of 15 executive departments of the U.S. government. It
is headed by the Secretary of Commerce who is
a part of the President’s Cabinet, and is appointed
by the President and confirmed by the Senate. He/She acts
as an advisor to the President.
The
Commerce Secretary’s responsibility is to make sure
that American companies and factories do well so people have
jobs and are able to support their families. The Secretary makes
sure that the United States’ economic growth continues
to increase. Another responsibility is to encourage
trade with other countries while protecting businesses here
in America. Additionally, the
Secretary of Commerce provides advice to businesses and other
government agencies.
In
1913, Congress split the Department of Commerce and Labor
into two separate departments. Then in 1925, Congress switched
the United States Patent Office (USPO) from the Department
of Interior to the Department of Commerce. This made sense
since the USPO deals with protecting companies and individuals
and understands the importance of the advancement of new
technologies and products. The
name was later changed to the United States Patent and Trademark
Office in 2000.
The
USPTO has a special mission, which is to help support “industrial
and technological progress in the United States and strengthen
the national economy”. It accomplishes this by
making sure patent
and trademark protection is granted to inventors and corporations
for their inventions and then makes sure patent
laws are obeyed.
The
USPTO is presently based in Alexandria, Virginia. About 7,300
people work there with about 3,000 working as patent
inspectors and about 400 working as trademark attorneys. The
rest are support staff. However,
even with so many examiners, there are huge delays and more
examiners are needed. A Patent Examiner Training Academy
has been set up to address this problem.
Since
1991, this office has been fully funded by application
fees of $160 - $770 and maintenance fees that patent
holders must pay after 3.5, 7.5, and 11.5 years from
the date of the patent. As
of 2006, the USPTO has issued over seven million patents
with the first patent being issued in 1790 to Samuel
Hopkins for a device for “the making of Pot ash
and Pearl ash”. This very first patent was
signed by President George Washington!
Currently,
the head of the USPTO is Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual
Property Jon W. Dudas, a position to which he was nominated
by President George W. Bush in March 2004 and appointed in
July 30th, 2004. Director
Dudas advises the President and the Secretary of Commerce on
how to strengthen patent protection and prevent piracy. You
will read all about our trip to Washington D.C.to
interview Director Dudas later on.
Click here for
the chance to eliminate
another suspect.
|