Exhausted combination doctrine

id: exhausted-combination-doctrine-271-1250273
title: Exhausted combination doctrine
text: The exhausted combination doctrine, also referred to as the doctrine of the Lincoln Engineering case, was the doctrine of U.S. patent law that when an inventor invents a new, unobvious device and seeks to patent not merely the new device but also the combination of the new device with a known, conventional device with which the new device cooperates in the conventional and predictable way in which devices of those types have previously cooperated, the combination is unpatentable as an "exhausted
brand slug: wiki
category slug: encyclopedia
description:
original url: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exhausted_combination_doctrine
date created:
date modified: 2024-03-23T09:24:29Z
main entity: {"identifier":"Q5420186","url":"https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q5420186"}
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fields total: 13
integrity: 13

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