[5] In these two examples, the language highlighted is limited in the issuance clause, which would otherwise have been an unlimited license for all uses of the technology. Note that the language can define what is contained in the field and what is excluded. This approach of limiting the scope of use of the grant may be used without any other language specific to the application of the license agreement or in combination with a related language in the Definitions section described below. Field licensing is often used for the granting of open licenses or open licenses. This allows the licensee to benefit from new uses that could be found in the future for his intellectual property. Restrictions on use can also raise agreement issues when such agreements are used to award contracts or create agreements. Licensee diligence is one of the problems with licensing in the field. For example, when a company is responsible for developing products for less developed countries or developing a human therapy drug, it is easy for the licensor to evaluate the licensee`s performance. When an isolated scope of application from other domains creates the marketing of products in more than one domain due to resource restrictions for a single licensee responsible for more than one field. Many types of technologies are suitable for field licensing. In general, any technology that has or may have several different uses may justify this approach. It is easy to find examples in the fields of electrical engineering, computer science, chemistry and health. In the biochemical department of a university, for example, a new gene can be isolated and sequenced and its protein product expressed.
This appears to be a technology, but could easily lead to at least nine distinct commercial uses: note that this definition of patent law allows for the usual possibilities during lawsuits (splits, continuous, foreign equivalents); However, if a normal descendant, a partial sequence, can bring new material, the definition limits the inclusion of that case to claims relating to the subject matter of the original patent application. This provides some certainty that the uses of the invention will not be included in the license during the attempt to grant a patent, beyond the intended use. Invention (close) The creation of a new technical idea and the physical embodiment of the idea or the means to realize it. To be patentable, an invention must be new, must be useful, and would not have been obvious to those with ordinary skills in the art of invention. It should be noted that there are some disadvantages related to limiting the scope of application by the mere reference to a patentable patent application that is still being processed.. . . .