Non-obviousness in United States patent law

id: non-obviousness-in-united-states-patent-law-264-10278069
title: Non-obviousness in United States patent law
text: In US patent law, non-obviousness is one of the requirements that an invention must meet to qualify for patentability, codified as a part of Patent Act of 1952 as 35 U.S.C. ยง103. An invention is not obvious if a "person having ordinary skill in the art" (PHOSITA) would not know how to solve the problem at which the invention is directed by using exactly the same mechanism. Since the PHOSITA standard turned to be too ambiguous in practice, the U.S. Supreme Court provided later two more useful app
brand slug: wiki
category slug: encyclopedia
description: One of the patentability requirement under US law
original url: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-obviousness_in_United_States_patent_law
date created:
date modified: 2023-12-13T07:02:37Z
main entity: {"identifier":"Q110914003","url":"https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q110914003"}
image:
fields total: 13
integrity: 14

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