In most countries, the right of patent protection will be lost or jeopardised if a public disclosure was made prior to the filing of a patent application.
A public disclosure on the information about the invention is made when the information becomes readily available to the public and that information is “enabling” (i.e., describing a technology in such detail that someone else in the field would be able to make and use the invention).
Common modes of public disclosure includes publications, lectures, published abstracts and posters, conferences and symposia, theses and dissertations.
We, therefore, urge you to contact our office well in advance of an impending public disclosure. We will work with you to evaluate and protect your invention without affecting the timeline of a potential publication.