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United States Patent Classification

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The United States Patent Classification is an official patent classification system in use and maintained by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO). It was mostly replaced by the Cooperative Patent Classification (CPC) on January 1, 2013.[1] Plant and design patents are still classified solely within USPC at the USPTO. As of December 2018, patents at the USPTO are still routed to their appropriate business and art units by their USPC, even though it is no longer assigned directly to the patents themselves.[citation needed]

Overview

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There are over 400 classes in the U.S. Patent Classification System, each having a title descriptive of its subject matter and identified by a class number. Each class is subdivided into a number of subclasses, each subclass bearing a descriptive title and identified by a subclass number. The subclass number may be an integral number, or may contain a decimal portion and/or alpha characters. A complete identification of a subclass requires both the class and subclass number and any alpha or decimal designations; e.g., 417/161.1A identifies Class 417, Subclass 161.1A.[2]

The Manual of Classification, also referred to as the "MOC", contains ordered arrangements of the class and subclass titles, referred to as class schedules. These titles are necessarily brief, although intended to be as suggestive as possible of subject matter included. Therefore, it is best not to depend exclusively upon titles to delineate the subject matter encompassed by a class or subclass; reference to respective definitions and notes is essential. If a search is to be expeditious, accurate, and complete, the Manual of Classification should be used only as a key to the class or subclass definition and appended notes.

The Manual of Classification has the following parts:

  1. A list of classes revised in the most recent revision to the Manual and the reason for the revision to each class.
  2. A list of the contents of the Manual showing the current page date for each class and the year in which the class was originally established.
  3. Overview of the classification system.
  4. A hierarchical arrangement of class titles organized into four main groups by related subject matter. This hierarchy is to be used to determine document placement only as a last resort, i.e., when none of the other classification criteria, such as comprehensiveness, etc., allow placement. This part also includes an exact hierarchical listing of the synthetic resin and chemical compound classes.
  5. A list, in numerical order, by art unit indicating the classification(s) assigned to each.
  6. A list of classifications in numerical order by class number giving the class title, the art unit to which the art is assigned, and the examiner search room in which the art can be found.
  7. A list of classes in alphabetical order by class title with associated class numbers.
  8. The class schedule for PLANTS.
  9. Class schedules for utility patent classes arranged in numerical sequence by class number.
  10. The class schedules for the Design classes.

History and revisions

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Some USPC classifications date back to at least as early as 1899.[3] The Manual of Classification is usually published in full as the Basic Manual of this system every 2 years.[citation needed] Basic Manuals reflect current classifications as of December of even-numbered years. Revisions to the Basic Manual occur at 6-month intervals. Pages of the Manual revisions are inserted as replacements to update the previous versions.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Patent Classification".
  2. ^ United States Patent and Trademark Office (December 2010). "Overview of the U.S. Patent Classification System (USPC)" (PDF). United States Patent and Trademark Office. p. 16. Retrieved 12 August 2011.
  3. ^ "Classes G9B - 49".

Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from Manual of Patent Examining Procedure, Chapter 902. United States Government.

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