canonfodder
Printer Guru
Not really so, that you can, "blatantly copy a patented product for personal use", but that is a very common myth. Cases of pursuit against one individual making one item really are rather rare, but a case will be brought against an individual with a single item offense if very large dollar value is involved.mikling said:The other thing to also remember is that you can blatantly copy a patented product for personal use. Even electronic circuits. That is perfectly OK. However, the sale of the item for commercial gain is however not allowed. Thus any idea copied on the forum is OK for anyone to use as long as it is for personal use.
Patents issued by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office confer upon the patent holder "the right to exclude others from making, using or selling the invention throughout the United States and its territories and possessions".
That means even the making of one copy. There is no provision or even mention in the law that excuses small quantity or personal use. Note that the patent owner does not specifically have the right to make the item covered. He only has a "right to exclude.....". The right to make might be incumbered by other patents covering some portion(s) of his item, therefore excluding him from making what appears to be his own.
See the website http://www.bitlaw.com/patent/rights.html for a simple, accurate, discussion of this subject.
On the whole, patent law is both simple and complex at the same time, and there are many myths and too much hearsay about the law. It is a challenge to accurately read and completely comprehend the claims of a patent. Patent attorneys are paid well to do that. The simplest claim is the broadest claim, as it covers any item which contains its minimal components or processes, no matter how more complex the would be competitor might be.