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Can the absence of an expected property support nonobviousness in patent applications?

By russ.krajec@blueironip.com | September 10, 2024

Yes, the absence of an expected property can be evidence of nonobviousness in patent applications. According to MPEP 716.02(a): Absence of property which a claimed invention would have been expected to possess based on the teachings of the prior art is evidence of unobviousness. This principle is illustrated by the case of Ex parte Mead…

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