For patent filing and prosecution strategies to support global business realities, patent practitioners must negotiate a complex landscape of geographical and cultural differences. Questel’s Benoit Chevalier explains how artificial intelligence (AI) tools for IP preparation and prosecution can deliver guidance and support.
As much as globalization has boosted the desire for a unified, interoperable, and harmonious ‘global’ approach to patent filing and prosecution, there remain profound cultural differences between the different patent jurisdictions worldwide. From the US to Japan via the EU, patents remain territorial by nature, much like the legal systems that regulate them.
From drafting robust patents to managing patent prosecution formalities, patent practitioners must employ great skill to navigate this protean landscape. Fortunately, new AI-assisted patent preparation and prosecution tools can offer them much-needed support.
The potential for AI in the IP sector has been discussed for some time, but it’s only in the last few years that we have seen the technology come into its own. From patent drafting generative AI tools, such as qatent, to AI-assisted patent prosecution workflow tools, such as Qthena, the technology now has the requisite expertise to research, draft, validate, and adapt its output to each legal jurisdiction.
This includes harnessing the power of natural language processing (NLP) and deep learning to inform the content and approach to the nuances of each jurisdiction. For example, by informing how patent claims should be drafted according to the case law or examination practices in each region, as well as how to process the vast volume of documents, reports, and systems that patent practitioners interact with every day.
While we do not believe that AI can—or should—replace human expertise, we do believe that it can assist practitioners in navigating global patent complexity more effectively, while also streamlining their patent search, drafting, and prosecution workflows.
We estimate our patent drafting software (qatent) saves clients a mammoth 40% of their drafting time by producing a first draft in minutes, whether users upload a simple claim tree or a more detailed invention disclosure.
Patent practitioners are in control throughout the process with each section employing its own designated AI model to generate editable titles, summaries, problem statements, and the initial technical problem, as well as potential variations.
As importantly, the collaborative tool uses specific patent templates for each jurisdiction—including autocomplete, renumbering, diagram generation, and recommendation/suggestion features that consider relevant case and law and PTO examination guidelines—to deliver a compliant and robust patent application at the end of the process for submission to the relevant patent office.
Along with information about relevant case law and examination guidelines (EPO and USPTO), our patent drafting software features a wide range of legal resources, insights, and data, helping users identify potential antecedent problems in the claims and anticipate requests by examiners for amendments. The full kit of useful tools includes the ability to check instantly for unclaimed matters, check antecedent basis issues, improve numerals management and indexing, and generate interactive generalizations—and we have even more features in the pipeline!
We have integrated the Qthena Patent Prosecution Workflow Automation tool into our solutions for clients because we understand the time, effort, and oversight that patent teams can lose when jumping between tools and files. This is low-hanging fruit for a technology as advanced as AI, given its ability to reconcile data, documents, and systems “under the hood” to ease the user’s experience and enable them to focus instead on the task at hand.
However, it’s not simply that Qthena centralizes all the information users might need into a single interface—or that it automatically organizes, reconciles, and OCRs relevant data and documents, from invention disclosures to prior art, including non-patent literature. Crucially, it also employs large language models (LLMs) to analyze multiple documents simultaneously: office action, prior art, product presentation, and patent application. With this assistant, instructed to generate responses in line with the current jurisdiction, a patent attorney can spot lack of clarity, challenge examiner arguments, work on amendments, and define strategy in record time. The Qthena models have been meticulously trained to generate inventive step arguments perfectly aligned with EPO practices. Our solution extends its capabilities to accommodate standards of other patent offices, including the USPTO, ensuring global applicability.
Many corporations and law firms are actively investigating how to use AI-assisted tools to reduce attorney hours and improve quality. They desire access to the latest technologies, but without sacrificing security, confidentiality, or control.
At Questel, we take the implementation of AI very seriously. Based on our overarching principles of transparency, accuracy, and security, we are committed to leading the charge in transforming the IP landscape by investing in AI tools that amplify human expertise, rather than overshadow or undermine it.
In our view, AI has vast potential to resolve the cumbersome nature of certain IP processes, including those related to the different laws, case laws, and customs in patent jurisdictions worldwide. By harnessing AI to identify, organize, and analyze the vast amount of data available, we believe we can assist patent practitioners to work more effectively, by providing insights, analysis, and support that augment (rather than replace) their critical role.
Our AI-assisted patent preparation and prosecution tools are deployed with this in mind. Effectively, they serve as trusted, personal patent associates for clients, providing drafts, reports, and further data confidentially and securely based on straightforward commands.
Find out more about the capabilities of AI-assisted patent preparation and prosecution tools at IP Service World by attending the AI presentation by Questel’s Daniel Ovayda on 25 November at 10.20.
Questel is a true end-to-end intellectual property solutions provider serving 20,000 organizations in more than 30 countries for the optimal management of their IP assets portfolio. Whether for patent, trademark, domain name, or design, Questel provides its customers with the software, tech-enabled services, and consulting services necessary to give them a strategic advantage. We use state-of-the-art technology such as artificial intelligence, big data, or blockchain, powered by an unparalleled network of international experts, to optimize the maintenance of any IP asset while streamlining the internal processes of our corporate and law firm clientele.
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