top | item 22607080

(no title)

TheFiend7 | 6 years ago

I was confused when I initially went through the patent and got caught up on one specific part. If you bothered to even open the patent they're incredibly cryptic and IANAL.

Here is part of the claims section, starting around "pgs 47/48", and all of it looks like this.

"A two-way communication system for detecting an ana lyte in a bodily fluid from a subject, comprising:

a) a reader assembly comprising a programmable proces Sor that is operably linked to a communication assem bly:

b) an external device configured to transmit a protocol to the communication assembly; detection assembly for detecting said signal which is transmitted via said communication assembly to said external device.

2. The system of claim 1 wherein the reader assembly further comprises a controller having computer-executable commands for performing the reaction at a designated point of-care location.

3. The system of claim 1 wherein the external device fur ther comprises a means for receiving and aggregating a plu 45

c) a test device configured to be inserted into the reader assembly, said test device comprising:

i) a sample collection unit configured for collecting a sample of bodily fluid Suspected to contain an analyte;

ii) an assay assembly containing reactants that react with said sample of bodily fluid based on the protocol transmitted from said external device to yield a detect able signal indicative of the presence and/or concen tration of said analyte; and iii) an identifier that is configured to provide the identity of said test device and is also configured to trigger the transmission of said protocol that is selected"

So yeah, super generic.

discuss

order

admax88q|6 years ago

God I hate "patent speak."

One of the most egregious things about patents, is that if you _wanted_ to go implement something that was patented, the patent itself is a useless resource. So much for providing temporary monopoly in exchange for advancing the state of the art. Most patents do not disclose anything useful.

jbay808|6 years ago

The claims are useless for teaching, but for a well written patent the other sections document the actually useful information, explaining what's wrong with existing methods, and the preferred ways to implement theirs. The claims are there for lawyers to argue about what does or doesn't count as that invention.

salawat|6 years ago

There is no way that is enforcible unless they can produce an example implementation to defend it, or at least to my understanding of how it works. If there's an IP lawyer in the house, do please correct me, but I don't think you can use a patent to go after someone without actually producing anything. It's intended to be a monopoly to protect the inventor while they scale up after all.

Am I missing something here?

Edit: Yep, I am. Apparently there is no requirement for you to actually have to make the thing you're patenting.

This is ludicrous.