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No official patent act followed until about 30 years later when Upper and Lower Canada enacted patent acts in the 1820s. [2] The provinces of Canada held responsibility for patents within their boundaries The British North America Act established that patents were a federal responsibility. The first federal Patent Act was created in 1869. This ...
Canadian patent law is the legal system regulating the granting of patents for inventions within Canada, and the enforcement of these rights in Canada.. A 'patent' is a government grant that gives the inventor—as well as their heirs, executors, and assignees—the exclusive right within Canada to make, use, and/or sell the claimed invention during the term of the patent, subject to adjudication.
Inventions must also be non-obvious as provided in section 28.3. [2] Inventions must also fall into one of the five categories of patentable subject matter found in the definition of "invention" above. The Patent Act has an additional prohibition in section 27(8) that "No patent shall be granted for any mere scientific principle or abstract ...
Canadian inventions and discoveries are objects, processes, or techniques—invented, innovated, or discovered—that owe their existence either partially or entirely to a person born in Canada, a citizen of Canada, or a company or organization based in Canada. Some of these inventions were funded by National Research Council Canada (NRCC ...
Inventions for Industry: A history of Canadian Patents and Development Limited and the commercialization of university research in Canada. Scientia Canadensis: Journal of the History of Canadian Science, Technology, and Medicine, 36(2), 1-36.
Patents may not generally be obtained for scientific principles, abstract theorems, ideas, methods of conducting business, computer programs, and medical treatments. Some exceptions have been made. Patents are protected in Canada by the Patent Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. P-4). [5]
Patents were granted without examination since inventor's right was considered as a natural one. Patent costs were very high (from 500 to 1500 francs). Importation patents protected new devices coming from foreign countries. The patent law was revised in 1844 – patent cost was lowered and importation patents were abolished.
The publication of the invention is mandatory to get a patent. Keeping the same invention as a trade secret rather than disclosing it in a patent publication, for some inventions, could prove valuable well beyond the limited time of any patent term but at the risk of unpermitted disclosure or congenial invention by a third party.