Prior art is a concept in patent law such that an invention, to be patentable, must not be obviously based on prior art.
Under the Patent Act, 35 U.S.C. § 103, federal law forbids issuance of a patent when "the differences between the subject matter sought to be patented and the prior art are such that the subject matter as a whole would have been obvious at the time the invention was made to a person having ordinary skill in the art to which said subject matter pertains."
The U.S. Supreme Court has emphasized that "the question is whether a patent claiming the combination of elements of prior art is obvious. When a work is available in one field of endeavor, design incentives and other market forces can prompt variations of it, either in the same field or a different one. If a person of ordinary skill can implement a predictable variation, § 103 likely bars its patentability. For the same reason, if a technique has been used to improve one device, and a person of ordinary skill in the art would recognize that it would improve similar devices in the same way, using the technique is obvious unless its actual application is beyond his or her skill. Sakraida and Anderson's-Black Rock are illustrative -- a court must ask whether the improvement is more than the predictable use of prior art elements according to their established functions." KSR Int'l Co. v. Teleflex Inc., 127 S. Ct. 1727, 1740 (2007).
The Court continued:
Id. at 1740-41.
Categories: [United States Supreme Court Cases] [Patent Law]