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Guides > Editorial Standards
Copyright and Trademark Issues RE: Materials from USPTO Website
Also see Terms of Use
Maintain Separation When using works provided by the USPTO, you must do so in a manner which does not imply any affiliation with or endorsement by the USPTO for your enterprise, site or publication.

Proper Citation

It is considered a good practice, both academically and editorially, to properly credit the source of any materials not authored by you. You may credit any materials obtained from the USPTO to the

  • United States Patent and Trademark Office and/or
  • http://www.uspto.gov or
  • http://www.uspto.gov/specific webpage address

Use of USPTO Seal

Please contact the Director of the Office of Public Affairs at 703-305-8341 for specific guidance regarding the publication or use of the official USPTO seal or logo.

Copyrights

 

Copyrights are administered by the Copyright Office, a division of the Library of Congress. Copyright law (17 U.S.C. § 105) states that all materials created by the United States government are in the public domain. However, there are restrictions on use.

Anyone incorporating a work of the U.S. Government into a copyrighted work should be aware of 17 U.S.C. § 403. This section requires a copyright notice to contain a statement identifying what portions of the work consist of a work of the U.S.Government. Failure to do so could result in loss of copyright protection for the entire work.

WARNING: Not all materials on our website were created by the U.S. Government. Some have been published by permission of the creators, and that permission is not generally transferrable. Please contact us regarding copyright status before publishing or reselling any documents having outside authorship or any images contained on the webpages for this site.

Patents

 

Patents are published into the public domain as part of the terms of granting the patent to the inventor. As such, they are not subject to copyright restrictions. The inventors' right to exclude others from making, using, offering for sale, or selling the invention throughout the United States or importing the invention into the United States for a limited time is not compromised by the publication of the description of the invention. In other words, the fact that a patent's description is in the public domain does not give you permission to manufacture or use the invention without permission from the inventor during the active life of the patent.

See MPEP§600 - 608.01(v) (scroll down the page) regarding the right to include a copyright or mask workdefinition notice in patents.

CAUTION: There are instances where trademarks may be embedded in patents as part of the drawing, particularly for design patents. You should consult an attorney regarding potential trademark issues for marks embedded in patents. The USPTO will not assist in determining if a potential trademark issue exists for a patent.

Trademarks Trademark images are published by the USPTO for public information dissemination purposes in accordance with the law. If you wish to use a trademark obtained from our records, you must do so in accordance with the individual licensing policies of the marks' owners. The USPTO will not assist in contacting trademark owners or arranging and managing licensing agreements.
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