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Details
Title
Patent Law's Purposeful Ambiguity
Author
Nard, Craig Allen
Item Type
Journal article
Description
27 pages
Summary
The ambiguity of language is an unremarkable, yet persistent force within our legal system. In the context of patent law, ambiguity presents a particularly acute dilemma; namely, while describing technological innovations is a salient feature of the patent system, affecting the validity and scope of one’s property right, the blunt nature of language makes this task particularly difficult. This paper argues to address this vexing fixture, patent doctrine purposely embraces ambiguity as a linguistic accommodation that provides measured flexibility for actors to claim and describe their innovations. It should not be surprising, therefore, that some of patent law’s most venerable doctrines, such as the requirements for enablement and definiteness reflect this form of ambiguity — two doctrines directly tethered to the disclosure function of patent law.
Supplement Note
Published in : European Intellectual Property Review
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Published
[Knoxville, Tennessee] : [University of Tennessee], 2019.
Language
English
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