Annual Technical Report 2004 on Patent Information Activities submitted by Austria (SCIT/ATR/PI/2004/AT)
Where URLs are requested below, it is preferred that either URLs which are likely to remain stable over time (three years or more) are provided, or home (main) page URLs are provided with a short explanation of how to access the corresponding information.
The term "patent" covers utility models and Supplementary Protection Certificates (SPCs). Offices which issue design patents should report their design patent information activities in their Annual Technical Reports on Industrial Design Information Activities.
I. Evolution of patent activities
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The numbers of applications, grants and registrations in 2004 in Austria are presented together with the number in 2003 (=100%).
National patent, applications
2.373 in 2003
2.514 in 2004 +5,94%
Granted national patents
1.359 in 2003
0.961 in 2004 - 29,29%
Granted European patents with AT as designated state
26.646 in 2003
28.223 in 2004 + 5,91%
Utility model, applications
1.050 in 2003
1.067 in 2004 + 1,62%
Utility model, registrations
711 in 2003
731 in 2004 + 2,81%
Supplementary protection certificate, application
33 in 2003
32 in 2004 - 3,03%
Supplementary protection certificate, registration
30 in 2003
25 in 2004 - 16,67%
Trends or areas experiencing rapid changes with respect to the previous year
Corresponding to the structure of the Austrian industry the majority of applications were filed in the fields of
14% fixed construction
11% human necessities
11% physics
10% process engineering
10% transportation
These leading industrial sectors correspond with the leading sectors of the preceeding years, only the sequence within these sectors changes from year to year.
II. Matters concerning the generation, reproduction, distribution and use of primary and secondary sources of patent information
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Filed patent and utility model applications and published documents are classified according to the last IPC edition (7th edition). For search purposes the IPC and ECLA systems are used. Reclassification of patent documents is not carried out.
Internal training courses on the use of the IPC and ECLA systems were held for the technical examiners in 2004.
Preparatory work on the implementation of the new reformed IPC system has been undertaken.
IV. Search file establishment and upkeep
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The classified search files of the technical examiners cover all documents of the PCT minimum documentation.
Since 2003 the APO uses the full version of EPOQUE via Patnet.
Documentation from other offices maintained and/or considered part of the available search file
The Austrian Patent Office receives patent documents from: Armenia, Australia, Belarus, Belgium, Bulgaria, Denmark, Germany, Finland, France, Georgia, Italy, Japan, Serbia and Montenegro, Canada, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Moldova, Mexico, New Zealand, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Romania, Russia, Sweden, Switzerland, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Tajikistan, Czech Republic, Ukraine, Hungary, Uzbekistan, United States of America, United Kingdom, Vietnam and from the four international organisations ARIPO, EPO, OAPI and WIPO. These documents can be searched in the library of the Austrian Patent Office, too.
V. Activities in the field of computerized and other mechanized search systems
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The actual legacy systems are running on a SIEMENS mainframe (SR2000), providing administration of bibliographic data, of patent, trademarks and utility models as well as industrial designs in the whole application process.
Online registry information is provided via internet.
It is planned to migrate the existing legacy-systems to common software soprano (toolbox-concept of EPO), further introduction of further automatisation-tools of EPO (ePhoenix and online-filing) until the end of 2006.
External databases
Access to EPOQUE-NET (SEA 1.03), epoline, QUESTEL, STN, Internet- databases (ELSEVIER, IEEE... )
Internet Access is available to all examiners at their desk top.
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The paperless administration system for search and examination requests, including PCT international applications, was extended to the processing of patent and utility applications and became operational in May 2002. The SQL-based system allows the input of all reports in the area of patents and utility models directly on the terminal with transfer to a host and processing of the fair copy.
Statistical tools are employed to ensure quality and time-limits.
Equipment used (hardware, including the types of terminal and network used, and software), carriers used
Hardware: Pentium III 800 MHz for all examiners via Ethernet-Lan, leased lines to Internet and EPO (Vienna, The Hague); Host Siemens Bs2000.
Software: Windows Operating System (Win2000, WinXP), B-DOOR/FirstPage+, MS Internet Explorer, STN-Express, Questel Imagination, In house document-management systems for establishing search & examination-reports.
VI. Administration of the industrial property office library and services available to the public (relating to facilities, e.g., for lodging applications, for assisting clients on searching procedures, for obtaining official publications and registry extracts)
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The library is a public library. 40 million patent documents, 98.000 volumes of non-patent-literature and 90.000 privileges (forerunners of patent documents) are the basis of the collection.
The catalogue of the stock of the documentation is online accessible for in-house purposes and for the public. As the Austrian Patent Office changed its premises in May 2003, the library disposes now of complete new storage rooms, a connection to the fire brigade and safety doors. There are two reading rooms, alternatively used as seminar rooms.
Both these rooms are fully equipped with beamers for presentations and workstations. A special EDP-training room with additional 7 workstations helps to manage training courses for the staff of the office and the public.
Collecting, acquisitions, preparation
The Austrian Patent Office receives the patent documentation according to free-of-charge-exchange agreements between offices. Non-patent-literature is ordered by the members of the house according to their special tasks.
Collection management, preservation
A list of the complete patent documentation is published on Internet.
Non-patent-literature is put into the in-house system (according to librarian rules).
A bookbinder is responsible for bookbinding journals.
Interlibrary lending, resource sharing, networks of patent libraries in the country
The library of the Austrian Patent Office is not a lending library. Interlibrary lending is done to a small extent for other patent offices and governmental institutions.
The PATLIB network in Austria consists of 8 libraries.
Information services available to the public (including computerized services and search files contained in libraries remote from your Office and patent information posted by your Office on the World Wide Web)
Online database access concerning all Austrian patents and utility models in force is given directly at the information centre. Information is also provided by telephone or as answers to written requests.
From journals containing general information about patents and patent information (WPI, etc.) single articles are treated as a complete monograph and put into the online-catalogue. These articles can be found under the author or/and the catchword.
The Homepage of the Austrian Patent Office is accessible in German and English.
The address is: www.patentamt.at . Under the heading “News” new developments in the office, announcements for seminars and training-courses are published.
VII. Matters concerning mutual exchange of patent documentation and information
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Since the 1980’s the Austrian Patent Office has been organizing training courses and seminars to an increasing extent both in the office and externally in Austria’s provinces in order to facilitate an efficient use of industrial property rights in the practical business and to inform future decision makers about the instruments of intellectual property.
External seminars are frequently organized together with partners, like the Institute for Promotion of Trade and Industry (WIFI), technology transfer centers, universities, other authorities, inventor’s federation or the bar association. The cooperation with partners frequently improves the contacts with the target groups using the existing communication structure. Seminars take place also in cooperation with other patent offices.
In order to expand these demanded training course activities additionally two seminar series were started in the Austrian Patent Office in 2001, which are organized by the Austrian Patent Office/Service and Information Sector. As a result of the interest, these seminar series were continued in 2003 and 2004. One of said seminar series concerns an overview of the industrial property rights. The second seminar series deals with special topics, e.g., software protection, biotechnology, etc., and is arranged under consultation of external experts in the respective area.
Furthermore, a discussion event on a practice-oriented exchange of experience between specialized technical examiners and representatives of the applicants with the goal of improved legal security and faster procedural sequences were organized in the year 2004. Current patent and utility model questions were discussed in the meeting.
A further important information platform, in particular for professionals, who are potential clients of the patent office, but did not yet contact the office due to a lack of basic information, are domestic and international trade fairs. The Austrian Patent Office was represented in the year 2004 in seven fairs.
Summarising the activity in this field:
27 seminars for Universities, with 805 participants
5 seminars for high schools, with 151 participants
17 seminars for SMEs, with 924 participants
7 participations on exhibitions and fairs
IX. Other relevant matters
For further information about activities of the office in 2004, one may also refer to the “Annual Report of the Austrian Patent Office 2004”, published in German and English on the Homepage of the office.
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1. | Classification is allotting one or more classification symbols (e.g., IPC symbols) to a patent application, either before or during search and examination, which symbols are then published with the patent application.
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2. | Preclassification is allotting an initial broad classification symbol (e.g., IPC class or subclass, or administrative unit) to a patent application, using human or automated means for internal administrative purposes (e.g., routing an application to the appropriate examiner). Usually preclassification is applied by the administration of an office.
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3. | Reclassification is the reconsideration and usually the replacement of one or more previously allotted classification symbols to a patent document, following a revision and the entry into force of a new version of the Classification system (e.g., the IPC). The new symbols are available on patent databases.
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