Originally posted by Jazz P Bass
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I can tell you, it's all about the writing on top of the invention. My first pass got rejected out right. I studied the book harder, rewrote the claims.......WITHOUT CHANGING ANY COMPONENT, WIRING OR ANYTHING of the design!!! They accepted in out right and passed!!!! It's not only the idea, it's how good you write according to their specific requirements. Nothing change since the get go, just difference in writing the claims!!!!
If you really have something, you want to broaden the scope to cover all cases so people cannot find loophole that easily to steal your idea to make money. Look at the noise cancellation patent of Leo Fender and Gimpel of Musicman. They never once mentioned "Guitar' in their claims. We use "electric stringed instruments" to cover all cases. But if you don't have an idea, you want to patent in a very limited scope.....Guitar........"overdrive". Those are very specific terms that limit the scope of the patent coverage, but at the same time make you unique. I think he want to have a patent to get the fame, not even to prevent others from copying it.
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