Legal Framework for Electronic Filing System-Web (EFS-Web), 55200-55211 [E9-25785]
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 206 / Tuesday, October 27, 2009 / Notices
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Patent and Trademark Office
[Docket No.: PTO–P–2008–0045]
Legal Framework for Electronic Filing
System—Web (EFS-Web)
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AGENCY: Patent and Trademark Office,
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice.
SUMMARY: This Legal Framework
provides guidance on the background
statutes, regulations and policies that
support the Electronic Filing System—
Web (EFS-Web) project. The document
is provided as a reference for applicants,
parties in reexamination proceedings,
attorneys, and agents, as well as their
employees using the system.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Joni
Y. Chang, Senior Legal Advisor, Office
of Patent Legal Administration, Office of
the Deputy Commissioner for Patent
Examination Policy; directly by phone
at 571–272–7720, or by mail addressed
to: Mail Stop Comments—Patents,
Commissioner for Patents, P.O. Box
1450, Alexandria, VA 22313–1450.
Inquiries regarding EFS-Web and
other USPTO information technology
(IT) systems may be directed to the
Patent Electronic Business Center
(Patent EBC), by telephone: 1–866–217–
9197 (toll-free) and 571–272–4100, or by
e-mail: ebc@uspto.gov.
Inquiries regarding IT policy for U.S.
national patent applications may be
directed to Mark Polutta (571–272–
7709), Senior Legal Advisor, Office of
Patent Legal Administration.
Inquiries regarding IT policy for
international patent applications may be
directed to Tamara Graysay (571–272–
6728), Special Program Examiner, Office
of Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT)
Legal Administration.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
notice substantively contains the same
information as the EFS-Web Legal
Framework posted on the USPTO Web
site (September 2008), with certain
exceptions. The following is a brief
summary of the major differences:
1. The sections have been reorganized
so that sections on similar topics are
combined or grouped together, and
clarifications and definitions of terms
related to electronic filings have been
added;
2. Section A (former sections II, III
and V) has been revised to provide
updated general information on EFSWeb;
3. Section B (former sections IV, VI,
XII, XX, and XXXI) has been revised to
provide a list of applications and
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documents that are permitted to be filed
via EFS-Web, information on how
applications filed via EFS-Web are
counted for the application size fee
purposes, and fee payments are
permitted to be filed via EFS-Web;
4. Section D (part of former sections
IV and XXIX) has been revised to
provide information on proper usages of
EFS-Web;
5. Section E (including subsection E1
and E2, former sections VII, X, and
XXVIII) has been revised to permit a
Public Key Infrastructure (PKI)
certificate holder to designate a single
employee of the holder’s organization,
or a single employee of a contractor,
who may use the holder’s certificate
under the holder’s direction and
control;
6. Section H (former section XXII) has
been revised to permit color and
grayscale drawings and photographs to
be submitted via EFS-Web in
provisional and nonprovisional utility
patent applications including reissue
applications and national stage
applications;
7. Subsection I5 is added to provide
that complex work units (such as
chemical structure drawings,
mathematical formulae, threedimensional protein crystalline
structure data and table data) may be
submitted as text files via EFS-Web
under the Complex Work Units Pilot
Program; and
8. Section J (former sections IX, XVII,
XVIII and XIX) has been revised to
permit PCT–EASY.zip compressed files
to be submitted via EFS-Web when
users are filing international
applications with the United States
Receiving Office, and to provide that
tables related to a sequence listing in an
international application must be
submitted in a PDF file rather than in a
text file.
Table of Contents
A. General Information on EFS-Web (Former
Sections II, III and V)
B. Legal and Document Policies (Former
Sections IV and VI)
B1. Types of Patent Applications and
Documents Permitted To Be Filed via
EFS-Web (Former Section XX)
B2. Types of Patent Applications and
Documents Not Permitted To Be Filed
via EFS-Web (Former Section XXXI)
B3. What is the official record of
documents submitted via EFS-Web?
(Former Section XII)
B4. How are applications filed via EFSWeb counted for application size fee
purposes?
B5. Can fee payments be submitted via
EFS-Web?
C. Electronic Acknowledgement Receipt and
Date of Receipt (Former Section VIII)
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C1. What is the date of receipt of a followon document received by the USPTO
through EFS-Web? (Former Section XXV)
C2. What is the date of receipt of an
application submitted via EFS-Web?
(Former Section XXIII)
C3. Can users file documents during nonbusiness hours via EFS-Web? (Former
Section XXVI)
C4. What if the applicant electronically
files an application via EFS-Web, and on
that same day, realizes that the applicant
has inadvertently omitted a document
from the application? (Former Section
XXIV)
C5. Are there any legal consequences of the
USPTO’s accepting electronic patent
applications on Saturday and Sunday?
(Former Section XXVII)
D. Proper Usage of EFS-Web (Former Section
IV)
D1. Filing Documents as PDF Files via
EFS-Web
D2. Entering Information on EFS-Web
Screens
D3. Under what conditions will the USPTO
allow refunds for fees paid via EFS-Web?
(Former Section XXIX)
E. Security and Authentication (Former
Section X)
E1. PKI Subscriber Agreement (Former
Section VII)
E2. Under what authority does an
authorized assistant of the digital
certificate holder submit signed
documents? (Former Section XXVIII)
F. Signature Policy (Former Section XXX)
G. May pre-grant (eighteen-month)
publication requests be submitted via
EFS-Web? (Former Section XXI)
H. May photographs and color drawings be
submitted via EFS-Web? (Former Section
XXII)
I. Text Files and File Limits
I1. May biotechnology sequence listings,
large tables, or computer program listing
appendices be submitted as text files via
EFS-Web? (Former Section XIII)
I2. How are text files counted for
application size fee purposes? (Former
Section XIV)
I3. What is the size limit for text files?
(Former Section XV)
I4. What is the limit on the number of
electronic files that may be included in
a single EFS-Web submission? (Former
Section XVI)
I5. May Complex Work Units be submitted
electronically via EFS-Web?
J. International Applications and Documents
for International Applications
J1. May international applications filed
under the PCT with the United States
Receiving Office be electronically
submitted via EFS-Web? (Former Section
XVII)
J2. Entry in the U.S. national stage under
35 U.S.C. 371 (Former Section IX)
J3. May EFS-Web be used to file
international applications containing a
nucleotide or amino acid sequence
listing and/or tables related thereto in
the United States Receiving Office?
(Former Section XVIII)
J4. Follow-on Submissions for
International Applications (Former
Section XIX)
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J5. Policy of Annex F of the PCT
Administrative Instructions (Former
Section XI)
A. General Information on EFS-Web
EFS-Web is the USPTO’s system for
electronic filing of patent
correspondence. EFS-Web is accessible
via the Internet on the USPTO Web site.
The system utilizes standard Web-based
screens and prompts to enable users to
submit patent documents in Portable
Document Format (PDF) directly to the
USPTO. Users may electronically
submit most patent applications,
reexamination requests, and other
patent-related documents securely using
EFS-Web. Users may also use EFS-Web
to submit payments of most patent fees
including patent application filing fees.
Users need not provide a duplicate copy
of any document filed through EFS-Web
unless the USPTO specifically requires
the filing of a duplicate in a particular
situation. Users may review and check
their electronic submissions including
their attached PDF files before
submitting the documents to the
USPTO. After submitting the documents
via EFS-Web, the system will display a
page that states that the USPTO has
received the user’s submission. The
users, generally within two hours, will
receive an Electronic Acknowledgement
Receipt of a successful submission
received by the USPTO. The processing
of fees may delay the issuance of the
Electronic Acknowledgement Receipt.
The Electronic Acknowledgement
Receipt is the electronic equivalent of a
postcard receipt. See Manual of Patent
Examining Procedure (MPEP) § 503.
Most documents submitted via EFS-Web
will be viewable via the Patent
Application Information Retrieval
(PAIR) system within an hour after the
USPTO receives the documents if the
users have associated their applications
with their customer numbers. Therefore,
users will be able to immediately check
the contents of their applications for
completeness and accuracy of their
electronic submissions.
A user may become a registered user
by obtaining a PKI digital certificate. See
section E of this notice for more
information on PKI digital certificates. A
registered user may file most patent
applications and follow-on documents
in a patent application, but a nonregistered user is not permitted to file
most follow-on documents in a patent
application. See section B of this notice
for more information.
EFS-Web is a PDF-based filing system.
Accordingly, all EFS-Web submissions
are required to be in PDF format unless
otherwise indicated in this notice. EFSWeb permits submission of: (1) The
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American Standard Code of Information
Interchange (ASCII) text files (.TXT) to
submit bio-sequence listings, computer
program listings, mega tables, and
Complex Work Units; and (2) PCT–
EASY.zip compressed files to submit
the Request form generated by PCT–
EASY in international applications with
the United States Receiving Office. See
sections I and J of this notice for more
information on ASCII text files and
electronic filing of international
applications, respectively. In addition,
the USPTO provides users with PDF
EFS-Web fillable forms, such as the
Provisional Application for Patent Cover
Sheet, the Information Disclosure
Statement, the Application Data Sheet,
Petition to Make Special Under
Accelerated Examination Program,
Petition to Accept Unintentionally
Delayed Payment of Maintenance Fee in
an Expired Patent, Request for
Continued Examination (RCE)
Transmittal, and Petition to Make
Special Based on Age. When users
submit information using an EFS-Web
fillable form, the information will
directly load into the USPTO databases
which will increase accuracy and
facilitate faster processing. Users may
use other USPTO-created PDF fillable
forms available on the USPTO Web site,
or user-created forms, and submit the
completed forms via EFS-Web. The
information entered on these forms,
however, will not be automatically
loaded into the USPTO databases.
The USPTO Web site provides
additional information on EFS-Web and
PAIR, such as instructions, guidelines,
frequently asked questions, and tutorials
(https://www.uspto.gov/ebc/
efs_help.html). Users may contact the
Patent Electronic Business Center
(Patent EBC) for assistance with EFSWeb and PAIR as well as for requesting
PKI digital certificates and customer
numbers.
B. Legal and Document Policies
To the extent that any USPTO
regulation is inconsistent with the
procedures for EFS-Web, the regulation
will be interpreted in a manner to
support EFS-Web. This notice sets forth
the USPTO’s policies concerning
documents submitted electronically
using EFS-Web, including patent
applications and requests for
reexamination, as well as follow-on
documents in patent applications and
reexamination proceedings.
B1. Types of Patent Applications and
Documents Permitted to be Filed via
EFS-Web: EFS-Web permits registered
users (who have a PKI digital certificate)
and non-registered users to file the
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following patent applications, requests
for reexamination, and documents:
1. Provisional patent applications
under 35 U.S.C. 111(b);
2. Nonprovisional utility patent
applications under 35 U.S.C. 111(a)
(including reissue utility patent
applications);
3. Nonprovisonal design patent
applications under 35 U.S.C. 171
(including reissue design patent
applications);
4. International applications under
PCT Article 11, designating the United
States, for filing in the United States
Receiving Office;
5. National stage applications under
35 U.S.C. 371;
6. Requests for ex parte reexamination
under 35 U.S.C. 302 for utility or design
patents;
7. Requests for inter partes
reexamination under 35 U.S.C. 311 for
utility or design patents;
8. Petitions to make special based on
age under 37 CFR 1.102(c); and
9. Petitions to accept an
unintentionally delayed payment of
maintenance fee under 37 CFR 1.378(c),
and payments of maintenance fees when
submitted with the petition.
10. Petition to make special under
accelerated examination program (must
be filed with a nonprovisional utility
patent application under 35 U.S.C.
111(a)).
Follow-on documents: Registered
users are permitted to file follow-on
documents in the patent applications
and reexamination proceedings listed
above via EFS-Web. Follow-on
documents are documents filed after the
initial submission of the application or
request for reexamination, which
include, but are not limited to, the
following: amendments, information
disclosure statements (IDS), replies to
Office actions and notices, evidence,
petitions, and other documents filed
after the filing of a patent application or
request for reexamination. In addition,
registered users may file copies of the
patent application (e.g., a copy of the
amended specification including the
claims, and drawings, for the purposes
of publication of the application) for the
following pre-grant (eighteen-month)
publication requests via EFS-Web:
amended publication under 37 CFR
1.215(c), redacted publication under 37
CFR 1.217, early publication under 37
CFR 1.219, and voluntary publication or
republication under 37 CFR 1.221(a).
See section G for more information on
filing these publication requests via
EFS-Web. Follow-on documents also
include any documents submitted on
the same day as the application, but
after the initial submission. In
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reexamination proceedings, both the
reexamination requester and the patent
owner may file documents via EFS-Web,
if they are registered users. Registered
users may also file a second or
subsequent submission for patent term
extension under 35 U.S.C. 156 in a
patent file via EFS-Web.
Non-registered users are not permitted
to file follow-on documents via EFSWeb, except those listed in items 8–10
above. Non-registered users may file
follow-on documents by mail (with a
certificate of mailing in accordance with
37 CFR 1.8), Express Mail from USPS in
accordance with 37 CFR 1.10, or hand
delivery.
B2. Types of Patent Applications and
Documents Not Permitted to be Filed via
EFS-Web: The following is a list of
submission types that are not permitted
to be filed using EFS-Web:
1. Plant patent applications under 35
U.S.C. 161 and documents associated
with plant patent applications.
2. Requests for Reexamination under
35 U.S.C. 302 and 311 for plant patents
and documents associated with
reexamination proceedings for plant
patents.
3. Third party submissions under 37
CFR 1.99.
4. Protests under 37 CFR 1.291.
5. Public use papers under 37 CFR
1.292.
6. Color drawings and color
photographs for international
applications that have not entered the
national stage.
7. Initial submissions for patent term
extension under 35 U.S.C. 156.
8. Correspondence concerning
registration practice as specified in 37
CFR 1.4(e). See also 37 CFR 1.6(d)(1).
9. Certified documents as specified in
37 CFR 1.4(f). See also 37 CFR 1.6(d)(2).
An example of such a submission is a
certified copy of a foreign patent
application filed pursuant to 35 U.S.C.
119 or a certified copy of an
international application filed pursuant
to 35 U.S.C. 365.
10. Correspondence to be filed in a
patent application subject to a secrecy
order under 37 CFR 5.1 through 5.5. See
also 37 CFR 1.6(d)(6).
11. Documents filed in contested
cases before the Board of Patent Appeals
and Interferences (BPAI), except as the
BPAI may expressly authorize. See also
37 CFR 1.6(d)(9).
12. Documents filed in contested
cases before the BPAI, which are
governed by 37 CFR 41.106(f). See also
37 CFR 1.6(d)(3) and 1.8(a)(2)(i)(C).
13. Correspondence filed in
connection with a disciplinary
proceeding under 37 CFR parts 10 and
11. See also 37 CFR 1.6(d)(3).
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14. Maintenance fees submitted under
37 CFR 1.366 that are not submitted
with a petition under 37 CFR 1.378(c)
(see item 9 in section B1 of this notice).
Patent owners may be paid
electronically using the Office of
Finance On-Line Shopping Page at
https://ramps.uspto.gov/eram/. See
MPEP § 2510 for information regarding
the proper methods for submitting
maintenance fees.
15. Assignment documents under 35
U.S.C. 261, which may be electronically
filed using the Electronic Patent
Assignment System (EPAS) or the
Electronic Trademark Assignment
System (ETAS). Information regarding
EPAS is available at: https://
epas.uspto.gov. Information regarding
ETAS is available at: https://
etas.uspto.gov.
16. Submissions that are not
associated with a patent application or
reexamination proceeding.
If any of the documents listed above
is submitted via EFS-Web, the
document will not be accorded a date of
receipt and it will not be considered
officially filed in the USPTO.
Furthermore, no benefit will be given to
a certificate of transmission under 37
CFR 1.8 on the document.
B3. What is the official record of
documents submitted via EFS-Web?
When the USPTO successfully receives
documents filed in accordance with the
EFS-Web requirements, the USPTO will
convert the PDF files submitted by users
into Tagged Image File Format (TIFF)
image files and then store the TIFF
image files in the Image File Wrapper
(IFW) as part of the official record,
except for color and grayscale drawings
which are stored in the Supplemental
Complex Repository for Examiners
(SCORE) as part of the official record. In
addition, certain submissions may be
filed as ASCII text files (e.g., sequence
listings or computer program listings),
which are stored in SCORE as part of
the official record. Accordingly, the
official record for the patent application
and reexamination proceeding
comprises:
(1) ASCII text documents as well as
color and grayscale drawings in PDF
format as stored in SCORE; and
(2) TIFF images of all other original
documents as stored in IFW as well as
the Electronic Acknowledgement
Receipt and the Electronic Patent
Application Fee Transmittal, both of
which contain information entered via
the EFS-Web graphical user interface
(GUI) data collection screens.
See also Legal Framework for the Use
of the Electronic Filing System, 1286
Off. Gaz. Pat. Office 113, 114 (Sept. 14,
2004). The original documents
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submitted via EFS-Web (e.g.,
applications and reexamination
proceeding documents) are stored
exactly as filed in an independent
location. See section I of this notice for
more information on ASCII text
documents and section H on color and
grayscale drawings. Submissions for
pre-grant (eighteen-month) publication
are forwarded to the Pre-Grant
Publication Division and are not stored
in IFW or SCORE as part of the official
record of the patent application. See
section G for more information on
publication requests.
B4. How are applications filed via
EFS-Web counted for application size
fee purposes? For patent applications
filed under 35 U.S.C. 111 (including
provisional applications, utility and
design nonprovisional applications, and
reissue applications), the paper size
equivalent of the specification
(including claims) and drawings of an
application submitted via EFS-Web will
be considered to be seventy-five percent
(75%) of the number of sheets of paper
present in the specification (including
claims) and drawings of the application
when entered into IFW after being
rendered by EFS-Web for purposes of
determining the application size fee
required by 37 CFR 1.16(s). See 37 CFR
1.52(f)(2) and MPEP § 607. The paper
size equivalency under 37 CFR 1.52(f)(2)
for EFS-Web filings does not apply to
national stage submissions. See MPEP
§ 1893.01(c).
Any sequence listing in compliance
with 37 CFR 1.821(c) or (e), and any
computer program listing in compliance
with 37 CFR 1.96, submitted via EFSWeb will be excluded when
determining the application size fee
required by 37 CFR 1.16(s) if the listing
is submitted in ASCII text as part of an
associated file of the application. See 37
CFR 1.52(f)(2) and sections I2 and J3 of
this notice. Sequence listing or
computer program listings submitted as
PDF files would not be excluded.
B5. Can fee payments be submitted
via EFS-Web? Yes, non-registered and
registered users may submit the filing
fees (e.g., the basic filing fee, search and
examination fee, and excess claims fee)
using the online fee payment in EFSWeb at the time of filing a patent
application or request for
reexamination. Only registered users
may submit payment of fees in a
previously filed application or
reexamination proceeding. EFS-Web
permits users to electronically submit
the payment of fees with a credit card,
USPTO deposit account, or electronic
fund transfer. Users may also provide
authorizations to charge fees to a
deposit account with the documents
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being submitted electronically via EFSWeb (e.g., a fee transmittal letter or
form). However, users should not
submit a credit card charge
authorization including the Credit Card
Payment Form (PTO–2038)
electronically via EFS-Web, because the
electronic submission automatically
will be loaded into the application file
in IFW, and the credit card information
may become part of the record of an
application file that is open to public
inspection.
When the online fee payment in EFSWeb is unavailable, a deposit account
authorization transmittal (e.g., PTO/SB/
17) may be included with the
documents being submitted via EFSWeb. A credit card authorization
transmittal (e.g., PTO–2038) may also be
submitted by facsimile transmission to
the USPTO Central Facsimile (571) 273–
8300, or sent via Express Mail from the
United States Postal Service (USPS) in
accordance with 37 CFR 1.10.
Applicants must include the application
number from the Electronic
Acknowledgement Receipt to ensure
that the fees are paid in the correct
application. Facsimile submission of the
basic national fee for national stage
under 35 U.S.C. 371 is not accepted.
Failure to timely pay the basic national
fee prior to the expiration of 30 months
from the priority date will result in
abandonment of the international
application. If applicant wishes to
submit the application filing fees on the
filing date of a patent application to
avoid the surcharge, the payment of the
filing fees must be submitted and
received by the USPTO before midnight
on the filing date of application. Failure
to pay the fees on the filing date of the
application will result in a surcharge.
When the online fee payment in EFSWeb is unavailable, the following types
of submissions cannot be filed via EFSWeb, since online fee payment must
accompany the submission:
(1) Petitions under 37 CFR 1.378(c) for
auto-processing by EFS-Web; and
(2) Pre-grant publication submissions
under 37 CFR 1.211 to 1.221 that require
a fee.
C. Electronic Acknowledgement Receipt
and Date of Receipt
The Electronic Acknowledgement
Receipt establishes the date of receipt by
the USPTO of documents submitted via
EFS-Web. The electronic documents are
itemized in the Electronic
Acknowledgement Receipt, which will
contain a full listing of the documents
submitted to the USPTO as described by
the user during the submission process,
including the count of pages and/or byte
sizes for each document. Thus, the
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Electronic Acknowledgement Receipt is
the electronic equivalent of the postcard
receipt described in MPEP section 503.
The official application filing date
will be noted on the Filing Receipt (37
CFR 1.54) after the submitted
application parts are reviewed for
compliance with 35 U.S.C. 111 (or for
compliance with 35 U.S.C. 371 for entry
into the U.S. national stage of an
international application). The filing
date is based on the dates indicated on
the Electronic Acknowledgement
Receipt assuming that, after review, the
documents submitted are found to be
entitled to an application filing date.
Likewise the official reexamination
filing date will be noted on the ‘‘Notice
of * * * Reexamination Request Filing
Date,’’ after Central Reexamination Unit
(CRU) review for filing date compliance,
and is based on the dates indicated on
the Electronic Acknowledgement
Receipt.
If the official version of any document
received by EFS-Web is lost, damaged or
rendered unreadable and if it cannot be
recovered from the stored files received
by electronic submission, then the user
will be promptly notified. Such events
are expected to be rare. In that situation,
the user may have to resubmit any lost
document and petition for the original
filing date. The user would be required
to present: (1) The Electronic
Acknowledgement Receipt; (2) a copy of
the missing files as submitted; and (3)
a signed petition accompanied by a
statement stating that the attached files
are the same as those originally
submitted and mentioned in the
Electronic Acknowledgement Receipt
for that application number (e.g., a
petition under 37 CFR 1.53(e) or 37 CFR
1.182 with the appropriate petition fee
under 37 CFR 1.17(f)).
The Electronic Acknowledgement
Receipt and statement will serve as
prima facie evidence that the
resubmitted documents are the same as
those submitted on the date of receipt,
except when the document description
used by the user does not match the
document. For example, if an applicant
originally filed a specification and a set
of claims and used the correct document
descriptions for a specification and a set
of claims, then the Electronic
Acknowledgement Receipt will serve as
prima facie evidence that the applicant
filed the specification and set of claims
on the original filing date. However, if
the applicant actually filed two sets of
claims, the Electronic
Acknowledgement Receipt will not
serve as prima facie evidence that the
applicant filed a specification and a set
of claims (even though the applicant
used the document descriptions for a
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specification and a set of claims). Note
the Electronic Acknowledgement
Receipt only indicates that the USPTO
received what was actually sent, as
opposed to what may have been
intended to be transmitted. Users
should exercise the same care in
preparing and preserving a copy of a
submission in electronic form as in
paper.
C1. What is the date of receipt of a
follow-on document received by the
USPTO through EFS-Web? Follow-on
documents filed in a patent application
or reexamination proceeding after the
initial filing of the application or
request for reexamination will be
accorded a receipt date, which is the
date the follow-on document is received
at the USPTO. See 37 CFR 1.6(a)(4).
A follow-on document required to be
filed in the USPTO within a set period
of time (e.g., a reply to an Office action)
will be considered as being timely filed
if the follow-on document is submitted
in compliance with the procedure set
forth in 37 CFR 1.8(a):
(1) The follow-on document is
submitted via EFS-Web prior to
expiration of the set period of time in
accordance with the requirements for
EFS-Web; and
(2) The document includes a
certificate of transmission stating the
date of transmission and signed by a
person that has reasonable basis to
expect that the document would be
transmitted on or before the date of
transmission. See 37 CFR 1.8(a)(1)(i)(C)
and (ii). However, the certificate of
transmission practice under 37 CFR 1.8
does not apply to the documents listed
in 37 CFR 1.8(a)(2) (e.g., a document
filed for the purpose of obtaining an
application filing date).
C2. What is the date of receipt of an
application submitted via EFS-Web? 35
U.S.C. 111(a)(4) states in part (emphasis
added):
The filing date of an application shall be
the date on which the specification and any
required drawing are received in the Patent
and Trademark Office.
Thus, the filing date of an application
is the date of receipt of the application
in the USPTO. Further, the USPTO is
located in the Eastern Standard Time
zone. Accordingly, the date of filing of
an application officially submitted
through EFS-Web will be the date in the
Eastern Standard Time zone when the
USPTO received the submission. As
such, the submission’s ‘‘date of receipt,’’
as shown on the Electronic
Acknowledgement Receipt, is the
Eastern Standard Time date that the
documents are fully, successfully, and
officially received at the USPTO, after
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the user clicks the SUBMIT button on
the Confirm and Submit screen. See 37
CFR 1.6(a)(4). This date is controlling
for filing date purposes of a newly filed
application. There is no ‘‘certificate of
transmission’’ practice for new
application filings (37 CFR 1.8). This
applies by analogy to reexamination
proceedings.
To be very specific, the EFS-Web
system records as the date of receipt of
documents the local date in Eastern
Standard Time on which the USPTO
receives the documents, after the user
clicks the SUBMIT button on the
Confirm and Submit screen for those
documents.
For example, if an applicant in
California officially files a patent
application with the USPTO through
EFS-Web by clicking on the SUBMIT
button at 1 p.m. Pacific Time in
California on May 1, that application
would be officially received by the
USPTO at 1 a.m. Eastern Standard Time
on May 2. Accordingly, the application
would receive a filing date of May 2.
However, the applicant could
alternatively file the application using
Express Mail from the USPS in
accordance with 37 CFR 1.10 in which
case the applicant would have until
midnight on May 1 in his or her local
time zone to file the application and
obtain a filing date of May 1.
C3. Can users file documents during
non-business hours via EFS-Web? Hours
of operation of EFS-Web will be clearly
provided in the EFS-Web instructions
when users log on to the system. The
USPTO will post information on any
scheduled down time due to system
maintenance in advance. Users may file
patent documents electronically during
the hours of operation of EFS-Web every
day of the week, including weekends
and holidays. If the submission is
successfully received (even on a
Saturday, Sunday or Federal holiday
within the District of Columbia), the
USPTO will assign that receipt date to
the submission.
If a transmission is attempted during
a down time, the USPTO cannot accept
it and will, if possible, transmit back a
notice that the USPTO is not accepting
submissions. No Electronic
Acknowledgement Receipt will be sent.
Instead a notice will advise the user to
use alternative filing methods, such as
Express Mail from the USPS in
accordance with 37 CFR 1.10 or hand
delivery of paper to the USPTO, to
establish the filing date. Note that
applications filed under 37 CFR 1.53,
and reexamination requests, cannot be
submitted by facsimile transmission (37
CFR 1.6(d)(3) and (5)), and that
certificate of mailing procedures do not
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apply to new applications and
reexamination requests (37 CFR
1.8(a)(2)(i)(A) and (D)). Users are
strongly advised to transmit their
electronic filings sufficiently early in
the day to allow time for alternative
paper filing when transmission cannot
be initiated or correctly completed.
C4. What if the applicant
electronically files an application via
EFS-Web, and on that same day,
realizes that the applicant has
inadvertently omitted a document from
the application? One advantage of filing
a patent application via EFS-Web is that
applicant (who is a registered user) may
view the submission in PAIR and file a
document directly into the application
on the same day as the filing date of the
application. In certain situations,
applicant may correct an error by filing
a missing item(s) on the same day as the
filing date of the application. Applicant,
however, may wish to file another new
application in other certain situations.
The following examples describe
implications raised when applicant
inadvertently omits an item when filing
an application electronically via EFSWeb:
1. Oath or Declaration—Applicant
may file an executed oath or declaration
on the same day as the filing date as the
application via EFS-Web. The oath or
declaration will not be considered late
and thus a surcharge for filing a late
oath or declaration will not be required.
2. Filing Fees—Applicant may file the
filing fees (e.g., the basic filing fee,
search and examination fees,
application size fee, or excess claims
fee) on the same day as the filing date
of the application via EFS-Web. The fees
will not be considered late and thus a
surcharge for filing the filing fees will
not be required.
3. Nonpublication request—Since 37
CFR 1.213(a)(1) requires any
nonpublication request to be filed with
the application, applicant cannot simply
file the nonpublication request to
correct the error. If applicant does not
wish to have the application publish,
applicant must file: (a) a new
application with a nonpublication
request; and (b) in the initial
application, a petition for express
abandonment to avoid publication
under 37 CFR 1.138(c) and fee under 37
CFR 1.17(h) in sufficient time to permit
the appropriate officials in the Pre-Grant
Publication Division to recognize the
abandonment and remove the
application from the publication
process.
4. Drawings—Applicant may file the
missing drawings as a preliminary
amendment on the same day as the
filing date of the application. The
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drawings will be considered as part of
the original disclosure of the
application. See 37 CFR 1.115(a)(2). If
the application was filed with the
‘‘wrong drawings,’’ a preliminary
amendment could be filed on the same
day as the filing date of the application
adding the correct drawings and
deleting the ‘‘wrong drawings.’’ An
amendment adding new drawings and
deleting the ‘‘wrong drawings,’’ filed on
a day after the filing date of the
application may raise new matter issues.
5. Claims—Applicant may file claims
as a preliminary amendment on the
same day that applicant filed the
application papers and such claims will
be considered as part of the original
disclosure of the application. Please
note that the application will not be
entitled to a filing date until applicant
files at least one claim in the
application.
6. Part of the specification—Applicant
may file the missing portion of the
written description as a preliminary
amendment on the filing date of the
application. Such amendment will be
considered as part of the original
disclosure.
If applicant files another new
application to correct an error in the
first application, applicant will have
filed two applications. Applicant may
continue to prosecute the first
application that has the error or
abandon the first application by filing a
declaration of express abandonment.
Please note that any fees paid in the first
application will not be refunded or
applied to the second application.
Applicant may request refund of the
search fee and any excess claims fees
(but not the basic filing fee, examination
fee, and application size fee) paid in the
first application if the application was
filed under 35 U.S.C. 111(a) on or after
December 8, 2004, and the applicant
files a petition for express abandonment
in accordance with 37 CFR 1.138(d).
C5. Are there any legal consequences
of the USPTO’s accepting electronic
patent applications on Saturday and
Sunday? Applicants may file patent
applications electronically during the
hours of operation of EFS-Web every
day of the week, including weekends
and holidays. EFS-Web will provide
applicants with the opportunity to
receive a filing date on any day of the
week, including Saturday, Sunday, and
Federal holidays. In addition, 35 U.S.C.
21(b) states:
When the day, or the last day, for taking
any action or paying any fee in the United
States Patent and Trademark Office falls on
Saturday, Sunday, or a Federal holiday
within the District of Columbia, the action
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may be taken, or fee paid, on the next
succeeding secular or business day.
Further, 35 U.S.C. 119((e)(3)) states:
If the day that is 12 months after the filing
date of a provisional application falls on a
Saturday, Sunday, or Federal holiday within
the District of Columbia, the period of
pendency of the provisional application shall
be extended to the next succeeding secular or
business day.
Thus, under United States law,
applicants will be permitted to take
action on the next business day when
the last day for taking action falls on a
weekend or Federal holiday, regardless
of the mode or form of filing.
However, Article 4 of the Paris
Convention addresses the priority
period and in Article 4(c)(3) it states:
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If the last day of the period is an official
holiday, or a day when the Office is not open
for the filing of applications in the country
where protection is claimed, the period shall
be extended until the first following working
day.
Further, as stated above, the USPTO is
capable of accepting electronic patent
application filings every day of the
week, including weekends and
holidays, through EFS-Web. Thus,
applicants are cautioned to consider
possible adverse consequences
regarding the determination in other
countries of priority periods under
Article 4(C)(3) of the Paris Convention
when filing international applications
with the United States Receiving Office.
Specifically, the ability to file
applications electronically on weekends
and holidays in the USPTO may result
in loss of priority rights in foreign
jurisdictions designated in international
applications filed with the United States
Receiving Office, if applicants elect, in
accordance with 35 U.S.C. 21(b) or
119(e)(3), to file an international
application on the next succeeding
business day in the event that the
twelve-month Paris Convention priority
period set out in Article 4(C)(1) falls on
a Saturday, Sunday, or Federal Holiday.
In such circumstances, other patent
offices may deny the priority claim on
the basis that the international
application was not timely filed if their
national law strictly incorporates the
provision of Paris Convention Article
4(c)(3) and considers the USPTO to be
open for the filing of applications on
weekends and holidays. For this reason,
applicants may prefer not to rely upon
the ‘‘next business day’’ provisions of 35
U.S.C. 21(b) and 119(e)(3) when filing
international applications with the
USPTO, and instead file the
international application before the
Paris Convention twelve-month priority
period has expired.
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D. Proper Usage of EFS-Web
Users should follow the instructions
and guidelines for EFS-Web provided
on the USPTO Web site. Before clicking
the SUBMIT button, the user should
check whether the correct documents
have been attached to the submission,
and whether the information related to
the submission has been entered
correctly. Once the user clicks the
SUBMIT button on the Confirm and
Submit screen, the submission will be
electronically sent to the USPTO. A
submission is officially filed at the
USPTO when the documents are
received by the USPTO (Eastern Time).
Use of EFS-Web in a manner
significantly in violation of the
instructions and guidelines for EFS-Web
provided on the USPTO Web site and in
this notice may result in non-entry of
the submission or failure to accord a
filing date in the event the USPTO does
not fully, successfully, and officially
receive all of the elements necessary to
obtain a filing date for an intended
submission. Furthermore, electronic
files submitted via EFS-Web must be
free of executables, worms, viruses, or
any other type of potentially malicious
content. Please note that 18 U.S.C. 1030
imposes a duty on users not to
intentionally cause damage to a federal
government system.
D1. Filing documents as PDF Files via
EFS-Web: EFS-Web accepts standard
PDF documents up to 25 megabytes for
each file, and 60 electronic files per
submission. See section I4 of this notice
for more information. PDF files created
from scanned documents and submitted
via EFS-Web must be created using a
scanning resolution no lower than 300
dpi. Lower resolution scans have
significantly delayed processing and
publication of applications, e.g.,
resubmission has been required for
documents failing to comply with the
legibility requirements. See 37 CFR
1.52(a)(1)(v) and (a)(5) regarding
document legibility requirements.
In addition, because the PDF format is
so feature-rich, certain PDF features are
currently not supported by the USPTO
systems. For example, PDF documents
with multiple layers must be flattened
prior to submission to ensure that the
complete document is received by the
USPTO and readable to the examiner or
other deciding officials. If a document
contains layers that are marked as
‘‘invisible’’, the invisible layers will be
lost when the document is processed by
the USPTO, and thus the official records
in IFW will not contain the information
on the invisible layers. Furthermore, if
a user uses the PDF comments or
annotations to enter the information on
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a form, only the blank form without the
PDF comments and annotations will be
processed. Therefore, the complete
document will not be officially filed at
the USPTO and the user cannot rely on
the Electronic Acknowledgement
Receipt as evidence that the completed
form was filed at the USPTO. Users are
encouraged to check the contents of
their submissions for completeness and
accuracy via PAIR.
Users must follow the PDF Guidelines
for EFS-Web and PDF Creation for EFSWeb (available on the USPTO Web site
at https://www.uspto.gov/ebc/portal/
tools.htm) to create and submit PDF files
via EFS-Web to ensure that all of the
information in the PDF files is
successfully received and processed by
the USPTO.
D2. Entering information on EFS-Web
Screens: EFS-Web collects information
from on-screen entries made by the user
through the EFS-Web graphical user
interface (GUI) data collection screens.
Through these data collection screens,
the user provides the USPTO with
information regarding the electronic
submission, such as the type of
application being filed, the application
number of the application in which a
follow-on document is being submitted,
or the type of document being
submitted. The USPTO systems (e.g.,
EFS-Web, IFW, etc.) will use the
information entered by the user on the
EFS-Web screens to automatically: (1)
Assign the application number, create
the application, and process the
application, if a new patent application
is being filed; (2) upload the follow-on
document into the application file
specified by the user; or (3) message the
deciding official based on the document
description selected by the user.
Therefore, providing incorrect
information regarding the submission
could lead to: (1) An incorrect type of
application file being created; (2) a
delay in processing the document; (3)
filing a document in an incorrect
application; or (4) the deciding official
not recognizing the document in
sufficient time to avoid publication, to
withdraw the application from issue, or
to avoid the abandonment of the
application.
1. Follow-on documents: When a user
submits a follow-on document (e.g., a
reply to an Office action or notice) via
EFS-Web, the user is required to enter
the correct application number and
confirmation number of the application
in which the follow-on document is
being filed. Providing the incorrect
application number and confirmation
number pair will result in filing the
follow-on document in the wrong
application. Therefore, it is important
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for the user to enter the correct
application number on the EFS-Web
screen when filing the follow-on
document.
After the submission of the follow-on
document is completed, the user should
log on to PAIR to review the application
file and check whether the follow-on
document has been filed in the correct
application. Checking the application
file via PAIR would also help the user
to discover other filing errors, such as
filing a wrong document or omitting a
portion of the document.
2. Filing a new patent application:
When a user is submitting a new patent
application via EFS-Web, the user is
required to select the application type
(e.g., design, utility, provisional or
nonprovisonal) being filed on the EFSWeb screen. Only document
descriptions and fee codes pertinent to
the selected application type will be
available for the submission. The system
will also automatically generate the
application number based on the user’s
selection. For example, if the user
indicates that the submission is a
provisional application by selecting the
EFS-Web radio button for a provisional
application, the application will be
assigned a provisional application
number, provisional application fees
will be collected or required, and the
application will be further processed as
a provisional application. Furthermore,
the application will not be assigned to
an examiner for examination and will
not be published because the
submission is processed as a provisional
application. Therefore, it is important
for the user to select the correct
application type on the EFS-Web screen,
and review the Electronic
Acknowledgement Receipt and the
application file using PAIR after the
submission is completed.
3. Document indexing: When a user
submits a patent application or a followon document in a patent application
using EFS-Web, the user must select
from the list of document descriptions
to specify the files being submitted via
EFS-Web. For instance, when the user is
filing a patent application, the
submission must be separated into
appropriate sections: specification,
claims, abstract, and drawing; and when
the user is filing an amendment, the
user must select the appropriate type of
amendment: amendment after non-final,
amendment after allowance,
preliminary amendment, and
amendment after final. Based on the
document description selected by the
user, a document code is assigned and
a message regarding the document
submitted to the USPTO will be
forwarded to the appropriate
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organization for processing, and to the
appropriate official for consideration.
Furthermore, the IFW and PAIR systems
use the document code for identifying
the document maintained in the
application file. Therefore, accurate
document indexing is important to
facilitate efficient processing and proper
consideration of the document by the
USPTO. For example: (a) If the user
indicated an after-final amendment as a
non-final amendment, the processing of
such amendment may be delayed and
the examiner may not have sufficient
time to consider the amendment before
the time period expires; (b) if the user
selects the ‘‘Pre-Grant Publication’’
radio button on the EFS-Web data
collection screen for submitting a
substitute specification filed in response
to a non-final Office action, the
submission will be forwarded to the
publication branch rather than
processed into IFW and forwarded to
the examiner for consideration; and (c)
if the user selects ‘‘drawings—only
black and white line drawings’’ for
submitting color drawings in a utility
application rather than ‘‘drawing—other
than black and white line drawings’’,
the color drawings would not be
processed as color drawings, and would
be maintained as black and white
drawings in IFW.
More information on document
indexing is available on the USPTO
Web site at https://www.uspto.gov/ebc/
portal/infodocuments.htm. It is
important for users to select the correct
document description, and check the
application file via PAIR after the
submission is completed.
D3. Under what conditions will the
USPTO allow refunds for fees paid via
EFS-Web? The USPTO will grant
refunds to users when, due to a
malfunction with the EFS-Web system,
the EFS-Web system has misled a user
into paying a fee in error. If it cannot be
determined that a malfunction occurred,
but rather it seems to be a user error, no
refund will be given. The users should
contact the Patent EBC if there are any
issues associated with their
submissions.
E. Security and Authentication
The USPTO requires PKI certificates
to meet federal government computer
system authentication guidelines as
defined by the National Institute of
Standards and Technology (NIST) and
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB). The required evaluation of EFSWeb and PAIR determined that level
three authentication was needed; this is
met by the USPTO’s PKI.
Only a PKI certificate holder (or the
designated employee under the
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certificate holder’s direction and
control) can submit follow-on
documents. This preserves
confidentiality, and is consistent with
power of attorney and correspondence
regulations. In order to obtain a PKI
certificate, the user must be a registered
practitioner (i.e., an attorney or agent) or
an inventor, and complete the
appropriate paperwork (e.g., review the
PKI subscriber agreement and complete
the certificate action form, available on
the USPTO Web site). Once the user has
a PKI certificate, the user can
authenticate himself or herself to the
USPTO through the EFS-Web sign-on.
This will generate a secure, encrypted
connection with the USPTO.
For users that do not have, or do not
wish to use, a PKI certificate to
authenticate to the USPTO, they may
still submit new application filings only
via a non-authenticated workflow. The
user would go to the EFS-Web page and
choose to submit without a PKI
certificate as a non-registered user,
which would generate a Transport Layer
Security (TLS) connection for the
session, thus allowing secure data
transmission to the USPTO. Nonregistered users have the same level of
protection for filing as a registered user,
but are limited to submission of initial
filings. This practice minimizes the risk
of improperly-filed third party
submissions and other documents. Nonregistered users may file follow-on
documents by mail (with a certificate of
mailing in accordance with 37 CFR 1.8),
Express Mail from USPS in accordance
with 37 CFR 1.10, or hand delivery.
Note: Users are advised that the USPTO
may revoke a user’s digital PKI certificate if
the user makes an improper submission
through EFS-Web. See section B and
paragraph 4 of the ‘‘United States Patent and
Trademark Office Public Key Infrastructure
Subscriber Agreement’’ located at [https://
www.uspto.gov/ebc/documents/
subscribersagreement.pdf].
E1. PKI Subscriber Agreement: A PKI
certificate holder may designate a single
employee of the holder’s organization,
or a single employee of a contractor,
who may use the holder’s USPTO
certificate under the holder’s direction
and control in compliance with the PKI
subscriber agreement. Accordingly, a
practitioner who is a PKI certificate
holder, or the designated employee
acting under the direction and control of
the practitioner, may file documents
signed by either the practitioner or
another practitioner via EFS-Web, in
compliance with the PKI subscriber
agreement. Filing of a document that is
unauthorized to be filed via EFS-Web
(e.g., a third party submission under 37
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CFR 1.99 or a protest under 37 CFR
1.291) is inconsistent with the
subscriber agreement and the rules and
policies of the USPTO. Thus, the
certificate holder, and designated
employee acting under the direction and
control of the certificate holder, must
make sure that document being
submitted is authorized to be filed via
EFS-Web, regardless of whether the
document is signed by the practitioner
exercising the direction and control or
by another practitioner.
EFS-Web also permits a legal assistant
or paralegal to submit an application or
a request for reexamination previously
reviewed by a registered practitioner
without the registered practitioner being
present. See section E2 for more
information.
E2. Under what authority does an
authorized assistant of the digital
certificate holder submit signed
documents? A PKI digital certificate
holder is permitted to designate a single
employee of the holder’s organization,
or a single employee of a contractor,
under the PKI subscriber agreement and
certificate action form. The designated
employee under the direction and
control of the digital certificate holder
may use the certificate holder’s
certificate to submit documents through
EFS-Web in compliance with the PKI
subscriber agreement and the rules and
policies of the USPTO.
The documents submitted through
EFS-Web must be signed in accordance
with 37 CFR 1.4, 1.33(b), and 11.18. If
the designated employee is an assistant
who is not an authorized party to sign
the documents, the designated
employee is not responsible for the
contents of the documents submitted.
Instead, the person who signs the
documents (e.g., the inventor or a
registered practitioner who is
representing the inventor) is responsible
for the contents. For example, the
documents may be electronically signed
or ink signed by the applicant or
attorney of record. The assistant who
serves the ministerial function of pickup
and delivery of documents may submit
the signed documents electronically via
EFS-Web under the direction and
control of the certificate holder. (Ink
signed documents can be electronically
scanned and then e-filed.) The assistant
may also view and retrieve documents
from Private PAIR under the direction
and control of the certificate holder in
compliance with the PKI subscriber
agreement.
In the submission process, the
assistant who is using the holder’s
certificates to submit the documents
through EFS-Web is required to specify
certain ‘‘locator information’’ so the
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documents can be associated with the
proper application file in the IFW
system. That locator information may
include the application’s title, first
named inventor, docket number,
application number, confirmation
number, correspondence address and
filing date, all if available. The type of
application (e.g., 35 U.S.C. 111(a),
national stage application under 35
U.S.C. 371, international application)
and information necessary for the
payment of fees are not considered to be
locator information. The ‘‘locator
information’’ is entered on submission
to assure that the documents are placed
in the proper file, and do not constitute
a signed submission of bibliographic
data on behalf of the applicant or
reexamination party. Errors made in the
‘‘locator information’’ may be corrected
by the USPTO on its own initiative, or
by the applicant or reexamination party,
similar to the way they are corrected in
paper processing.
It also should be noted that the
assistant could pay the fees associated
with the submission in the EFS-Web
process. This is comparable to the paper
practice in which law firms designate
individuals to pay fees.
F. Signature Policy
Signatures, other than handwritten
signatures meeting the standard of 37
CFR 1.4(d)(1), included in image
attachments submitted via EFS-Web are
governed by the S-signature
requirements of 37 CFR 1.4(d)(2) (See
also Changes To Support
Implementation of the United States
Patent and Trademark Office 21st
Century Strategic Plan, 69 FR 56481,
56486 (Sept. 21, 2004), 1287 Off. Gaz.
Pat. Office 67 (Oct. 12, 2004).
If the signer is submitting an
application through EFS-Web as PDF
files, he or she should apply either a
handwritten signature in compliance
with 37 CFR 1.4(d)(1) or an S-signature
in compliance with 37 CFR 1.4(d)(2)
before scanning the document or
converting it to a PDF file. Any followon documents, such as an amendment
filed in an application, must also be
signed in accordance with 37 CFR
1.33(b). Even though a new patent
application is entitled to a filing date if
it complies with all the statutory
requirements set forth in 35 U.S.C.
111(a) or (b), it is noted that when filing
a new application by EFS-Web, a signed
transmittal form or a signed application
data sheet (ADS) is recommended for
identification purposes, and any
nonpublication request and certification
that accompany the application must be
signed.
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A legible electronic image of a
handwritten signature inserted, or
copied and pasted by the person signing
the correspondence into an application
document may be considered to be an
acceptable signature. The legible image
of the handwritten signature of the
person signing the correspondence must
be inserted by the person. Additionally,
the signature must be surrounded by a
first single forward slash mark before
the electronic image and a second single
forward slash mark after the electronic
image. That is, the legible electronic
image of a handwritten signature must
be enclosed between two single forward
slashes and the signer’s name is
indicated below or adjacent the
signature as per 37 CFR 1.4(d)(2). The
slashes may be inserted into the
document prior to the insertion of the
signature.
The presentation to the USPTO
(whether by signing, filing, submitting,
or later advocating) of any document
constitutes a certification under 37 CFR
11.18(b) (or former 37 CFR 10.18(b)).
See 37 CFR 1.4(d)(4).
G. May pre-grant (eighteen-month)
publication requests be submitted via
EFS-Web?
Yes, EFS-Web enables users to
electronically submit pre-grant
publication requests for amended
publication, redacted publication, early
publication, voluntary publication, or
republication under 37 CFR 1.215,
1.217, 1.219, and 1.221(a) via EFS-Web.
When filing pre-grant publication
requests via EFS-Web, the form-fillable
application data sheet (PTO/SB/14) is
required to be used for fulfilling the
bibliographic data requirements. An
electronic submission for voluntary
publication, amended publication,
republication (37 CFR 1.221(a)) or
redacted publication must be submitted
as a ‘‘Pre-Grant Publication’’ by
selecting the ‘‘Pre-Grant Publication’’
radio button on the EFS-Web data
collection screen. It is not sufficient for
a user to submit a document via EFSWeb requesting amended publication,
redacted publication, early publication,
voluntary publication, or republication
without also selecting the ‘‘Pre-Grant
Publication’’ radio button on the EFSWeb data collection screen.
H. May photographs and color
drawings be submitted via EFS-Web?
The USPTO prefers black and white
line drawings as prescribed in 37 CFR
1.84(a)(1) when applicants are required
to submit drawings in patent
applications. As stated in 37 CFR
1.84(a)(2) and (b), photographs and
color drawings are not ordinarily
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permitted in utility and design patent
applications, but the USPTO will accept
photographs and color drawings in
utility or design patent applications, if
they are the only practicable medium
for illustrating the claimed subject
matter. The photographs and color
drawings submitted in utility or design
patent applications must be of sufficient
quality such that all details in the
photographs and drawings are
reproducible in black and white in the
printed patent.
Drawings submitted in international
applications are required to comply
with PCT Rule 11.13, which does not
permit color drawings. Furthermore,
there is no provision for photographs.
Nevertheless, black and white
photographs will be accepted where it is
impossible to present in a drawing what
is to be shown (e.g., crystalline
structures). Color photographs are not
permitted in international applications.
The USPTO may object to the
drawings and photographs, and require
corrections or deletions if they do not
comply with 37 CFR 1.84 or PCT Rule
11.13. Additionally, since color
drawings are not permitted in
international applications, color
drawings and color photographs filed in
a national stage application will be
treated as an amendment and will be
objected to if they introduce new matter.
Types of Photographs and Drawings
Permitted to be Filed via EFS-Web:
Black and white line drawings may be
submitted via EFS-Web in the types of
patent applications and proceedings
listed in section B1 of this notice.
However, photographs, color drawings,
grayscale drawings, and other drawings
that are not black and white line
drawings may be submitted via EFSWeb in only the following types of
applications and proceedings:
1. Nonprovisional design patent
applications, including reissue design
patent applications;
2. Provisional applications under 35
U.S.C. 111(b);
3. Nonprovisional utility patent
applications under 35 U.S.C. 111(a),
including reissue utility patent
applications; and
4. U.S. national stage applications
under 35 U.S.C. 371; and
5. Reexamination proceedings for
utility or design patents.
Only black and white photographs may
be submitted via EFS-Web in
international applications.
Document Description for Photograph
and Drawings: Users must select the
correct document description when
submitting photographs and drawings
via EFS-Web. Selecting an incorrect
document description may cause the
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photographs and drawings to be
processed in a quality that is not
sufficient for examination and
publication. Applicant must select:
1. ‘‘Drawings—only black and white
line drawings’’ (document code ‘‘DRW’’)
for the following:
a. Black and white line drawings in:
(i) Provisional applications under 35
U.S.C. 111(b); (ii) nonprovisional utility
patent applications under 35 U.S.C.
111(a), including reissue utility patent
applications; (iii) international
applications and national stage
applications under 35 U.S.C. 371; and
(iv) reexamination proceedings for
utility patents. These drawings will be
converted into TIFF images and stored
in IFW.
b. Black and white line drawings,
grayscale drawings, photographs, color
drawings, and other drawings that are
not black and white line drawings in
design patent applications, including
reissue design patent applications, and
reexamination proceedings for design
patents. These drawings will be stored
in SCORE, and a black and white copy
will be stored in IFW along with a
SCORE placeholder sheet.
2. ‘‘Drawings—other than black and
white line drawings’’ (document code
‘‘DRW.NONBW’’) for the following:
a. Photographs, color drawings,
grayscale drawings, and other drawings
that are not black and white line
drawings in: (i) provisional applications
under 35 U.S.C. 111(b); (ii)
nonprovisional utility patent
applications under 35 U.S.C. 111(a),
including reissue utility patent
applications; (iii) national stage
applications under 35 U.S.C. 371; and
(iv) reexamination proceedings for
utility patents. These drawings will be
stored in SCORE, and a black and white
copy will be stored in IFW along with
a SCORE placeholder sheet.
b. Black and white photographs, and
grayscale drawings, in international
applications. These drawings will be
stored in SCORE, and a black and white
copy will be stored in IFW along with
a SCORE placeholder sheet.
Other Requirements: For color
drawings, a petition filed under 37 CFR
1.84(a)(2) explaining why the color
drawings are necessary is required. See
MPEP § 608.02. The requirement for
three (3) sets of color drawings under 37
CFR 1.84(a)(2)(ii) is not applicable to
color drawings submitted via EFS-Web.
Therefore, only one set of such color
drawings is necessary when filing via
EFS-Web.
EFS-Web supports the use of black
and white, color, or grayscale images
within the PDF document. However,
grayscale or color images filed as
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‘‘drawings—other than black and white
line drawings’’ in a utility patent
application will be converted to black
and white images when stored into IFW.
The quality of black and white images
may be degraded.
To obtain sufficient quality so that all
details in the images are reproducible in
black and white in the eighteen-month
publication and the printed patent,
images should be scanned at a
minimum resolution of 300 DPI.
Furthermore, PAIR is only capable of
displaying portrait orientation. Users
should not submit landscape oriented
drawings via EFS-Web because PAIR
will automatically convert the image to
portrait, which may cause the images to
be distorted during viewing.
I. Text Files and File Limits
I1. May biotechnology sequence
listings, large tables, or computer
program listing appendices be
submitted as text files via EFS-Web?
Yes, all of these types of documents may
be submitted as ASCII text files with a
‘‘.txt’’ extension (e.g., ‘‘seqlist.txt’’) for
national applications (other than
international applications) and
reexamination proceedings. The
compact disc practice of 37 CFR 1.52(e)
and 1.821 et seq. remains as a filing
option. The filing of international
applications via EFS-Web is discussed
in section J of this notice.
Users may submit the following
document types, as specified in 37 CFR
1.52(e), as ASCII text files via EFS-Web
instead of on compact disc, provided
the specification contains a statement in
a separate paragraph that incorporates
by reference the material in the ASCII
text file identifying the name of the
ASCII text file, the date of creation, and
the size of the ASCII text file in bytes:
1. A computer program listing (see 37
CFR 1.96);
2. A sequence listing (submitted
under 37 CFR 1.821); or
3. Any individual table (see 37 CFR
1.58) if the table is more than 50 pages
in length, or if the total number of pages
of all of the tables in an application
exceeds 100 pages in length, wherein a
table page is a page printed on paper in
conformance with 37 CFR 1.52(b) and
1.58(c).
The requirements of 37 CFR
1.52(e)(3)–(6) for documents submitted
on compact disc are not applicable to
computer program listings, sequence
listings, and tables submitted as ASCII
text files via EFS-Web. However, each
text file must be in compliance with
ASCII and has a file name with a ‘‘.txt’’
extension. Further, the specification
must contain an incorporation-byreference of the material in the ASCII
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text file in a separate paragraph
identifying the name of the ASCII text
file, the date of creation, and the size of
the ASCII text file in bytes similar to the
requirements of 37 CFR 1.52(e)(5) for
compact discs.
It is recommended that a sequence
listing be submitted in an ASCII text file
via EFS-Web rather than in a PDF file.
If the sequence listing text file
submitted via EFS-Web complies with
the requirements of 37 CFR 1.824(a)(2)–
(6) and (b) (i.e., is a compliant sequence
listing ASCII text file), the text file will
serve as both the paper copy required by
37 CFR 1.821(c) and the computer
readable form (CRF) required by 37 CFR
1.821(e). Thus, the following are not
required and should not be submitted:
(1) A second copy of the sequence
listing in a PDF file; (2) a statement
under 37 CFR 1.821(f) (indicating that
the paper copy and CRF copy of the
sequence listing are identical); and (3) a
request the use of a compliant computer
readable ‘‘Sequence Listing’’ that is
already on file for another application
pursuant to 37 CFR 1.821(e). If such a
request is filed, the USPTO will not
carry out the request but will use the
sequence listing submitted in an ASCII
text file with the application via EFSWeb. Checker software that may be used
to check a sequence listing for
compliance with the requirements of 37
CFR 1.824 is available on the USPTO
web site at https://www.uspto.gov/web/
offices/pac/checker/.
If a user submits a sequence listing
(under 37 CFR 1.821(c) and (e)) as an
ASCII text file via EFS-Web in response
to a requirement under 37 CFR 1.821(g)
or (h), the sequence listing text file must
be accompanied by a statement that the
submission does not include any new
matter which goes beyond the
disclosure of the application as filed. In
addition, if a user submits an
amendment to, or a replacement of, a
sequence listing (under 37 CFR 1.821(c)
and (e)) as an ASCII text file via EFSWeb, the sequence listing text file must
be accompanied by: (1) A statement that
the submission does not include any
new matter, and (2) a statement that
indicates support for the amendment in
the application, as filed. See 37 CFR
1.825.
Submission of the sequence listing in
a PDF file is not recommended because
applicant would still be required to
provide the CRF required by 37 CFR
1.821(e) and the sequence listing in the
PDF file will not be excluded when
determining the application size fee.
The USPTO prefers the submission of a
sequence listing in an ASCII text file
because as stated above, the text file will
serve as both the paper copy required by
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37 CFR 1.821(c) and the CRF required
by 37 CFR 1.821(e). Any sequence
listing in PDF format is treated as the
paper copy required by 37 CFR 1.821(c).
If applicant submits a sequence listing
in a PDF file and a copy of the sequence
listing in an ASCII text file, a statement
that the sequence listing content of the
PDF copy and the ASCII text file copy
are identical is required. In situations
where applicant files the sequence
listing in PDF format and requests the
use of the CRF of another application
under 37 CFR 1.821(e), applicant must
submit a letter and request in
compliance with 37 CFR 1.821(e) and a
statement that the PDF copy filed in the
new application is identical to the CRF
filed in the other application.
I2. How are text files counted for
application size fee purposes? Any
sequence listing submitted as an ASCII
text file via EFS-Web that is otherwise
in compliance with 37 CFR 1.52(e) and
1.821(c) or (e), and any computer
program listing submitted as an ASCII
text file via EFS-Web that is otherwise
in compliance with 37 CFR 1.52(e) and
1.96, will be excluded when
determining the application size fee
required by 37 CFR 1.16(s) or 1.492(j) as
per 37 CFR 1.52(f)(1).
Regarding a table submitted as an
ASCII text file via EFS-Web that is part
of the specification or drawings, each
three kilobytes of content submitted will
be counted as a sheet of paper for
purposes of determining the application
size fee required by 37 CFR 1.16(s) or
1.492(j). Each table should be submitted
as a separate text file. Further, the file
name for each table should indicate
which table is contained therein.
I3. What is the size limit for text files?
One hundred (100) megabytes is the size
limit for sequence listing text files
submitted via EFS-Web. If a user wishes
to submit an electronic copy of a
sequence listing text file that exceeds
100 megabytes, it is recommended that
the user file the application without the
sequence listing using EFS-Web to
obtain the application number and
confirmation number, and then file the
sequence listing on compact disc in
accordance with 37 CFR 1.52(e) on the
same day by using Express Mail from
the USPS in accordance with 37 CFR
1.10, or hand delivery, in order to
secure the same filing date for all parts
of the application. Alternatively, a user
may submit the application on paper
and include the electronic copy of the
sequence listing text file on compact
disc in accordance with 37 CFR 1.52(e).
Sequence listing text files may not be
partitioned into multiple files for filing
via EFS-Web as the EFS-Web system is
not currently capable of handling such
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submissions. If the sequence listing is
filed on a compact disc, the sequence
listing must be a single document, but
the document may be split using
software designed to divide a file, that
is too large to fit on a single compact
disc, into multiple concatenated files. If
the user breaks up a sequence listing so
that it may be submitted on multiple
compact discs, the compact discs must
be labeled to indicate their order (e.g.,
‘‘1 of X’’, ‘‘2 of X’’).
For all other file types, 25 megabytes
is the size limit. If a user wishes to
submit an electronic copy of a computer
program listing or table that is larger
than 25 megabytes, it is recommended
that the electronic copy be submitted on
compact disc via Express Mail from the
USPS in accordance with 37 CFR 1.10
on the date of the corresponding EFSWeb filing in accordance with 37 CFR
1.52(e) if the user wishes the electronic
copy to be considered to be part of the
application as filed. Alternatively, the
user may submit the application in
paper and include the electronic copies
on compact disc in accordance with 37
CFR 1.52(e). Another alternative would
be for the user to break up a computer
program listing or table file that is larger
than 25 megabytes into multiple files
that are no larger than 25 megabytes
each and submit those smaller files via
EFS-Web. If the user chooses to break
up a large computer program listing or
table file so that it may be submitted
electronically, the file names must
indicate their order (e.g., ‘‘1 of X’’, ‘‘2 of
X’’).
I4. What is the limit on the number of
electronic files that may be included in
a single EFS-Web submission? Sixty (60)
electronic files is the file number limit
per submission, as EFS-Web is not
currently capable of accepting more
than 60 electronic files in any one
submission. Accordingly, if an
application file is comprised of more
than 60 electronic files, it is
recommended that the user submit 60 or
fewer files in an initial filing via EFSWeb at which time the application will
be assigned an application number.
Note that regarding the 60 electronic file
limit per submission, an applicant may
upload and validate in sets of up to 20
files each, with a limit of three sets of
20 files. If applicant chooses to divide
a file into multiple parts using the
multi-doc feature, each part is counted
as one file. Then the user may submit
any additional electronic files as followon documents later on the same day as
the initial filing. This will allow all of
the electronic files making up the
application to receive the same filing
date.
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I5. May Complex Work Units be
submitted electronically via EFS-Web?
Yes, under the Complex Work Unit Pilot
Program, complex work units (such as
chemical structure drawings,
mathematical formulae, threedimensional protein crystalline
structure data and table data) may be
submitted as ASCII text files via EFSWeb for national applications (other
than international applications) and
reexamination proceedings. Complex
work units cannot be submitted as
ASCII text files in international
applications. More information is
available on the USPTO Web site at
https://www.uspto.gov/web/patents/
cwupilot.html.
J. International Applications and
Documents for International
Applications
J1. May international applications
filed under the PCT with the United
States Receiving Office be electronically
submitted via EFS-Web? Yes, EFS-Web
enables users to electronically file
international applications under the
PCT with the United States Receiving
Office. Applicants are advised that EFSWeb may be used to file either: (1)
International applications in fully
electronic form; or (2) follow-on papers
to previously filed international
applications, regardless of the manner
in which the international application
was initially filed. The required page
size for international applications filed
via EFS-Web in PDF format is A4 (29.7
cm × 21 cm). See PCT Rule 11.5.
EFS-Web permits users to submit
PCT-EASY.zip files created by PCTSAFE when operated in the PCT-EASY
mode. A PCT-EASY.zip file will contain
the Request and fee calculation sheet in
PDF format. All other documents or
application parts (e.g., description,
claims, drawings and abstract) MUST be
separately prepared and attached as PDF
documents, except for sequence listings.
See section J3 of this notice for more
information on sequence listings. PCTSAFE permits users to create and
electronically sign using an S-signature
the PCT Request Form and the
Declaration of Inventorship for the
purposes of filing via EFS-Web with the
United States Receiving Office. PCTSAFE when operated in the PCT-EASY
mode creates a validated PCT Request
which will entitle the applicant to a
reduction of the international filing fee.
If applicant chooses not to use PCTSAFE to create the Request and fee
calculation sheet, the applicant may use
Form PCT/RO/101 (or equivalent) for
the Request and attach it as a PDF
document. More information regarding
filing international applications is
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available on the USTPO Web site
(https://www.uspto.gov/ebc/portal/efs/
dct_pct_file_new_tutorial.pdf).
The term ‘‘international application’’
as used in this notice refers to an
international application filed under the
PCT where papers have not been
submitted to enter the national stage
under 35 U.S.C. 371. The term ‘‘national
stage’’ as used in this notice refers to an
international application where papers
have been submitted to enter the
national stage under 35 U.S.C. 371.
J2. Entry in the U.S. national stage
under 35 U.S.C. 371: It is recommended
that applicants continue to use the
Transmittal Letter to the United States
Designated/Elected Office (DO/EO/US)
Concerning a Submission Under 35
U.S.C. 371 (Form PTO–1390) when
electronically filing documents for entry
into the U.S. national stage under 35
U.S.C. 371. The PTO–1390 Form
includes useful information that is not
otherwise collected by EFS-Web at this
time.
If a timely submission to enter the
national stage of an international
application is compliant with the
conditions of 35 U.S.C. 371 and other
applicable requirements, Form PCT/DO/
EO/903 indicating acceptance of the
application as a national stage
submission under 35 U.S.C. 371 will be
issued in addition to the Filing Receipt.
For more information on fees associated
with international applications entering
the national stage under 35 U.S.C. 371,
see MPEP § 1893.01(c).
J3. May EFS-Web be used to file
international applications containing a
nucleotide or amino acid sequence
listing and/or tables related thereto in
the United States Receiving Office?
a. Sequence Listing: Under PCT Rule
5.2(a), the sequence listing part must
always be presented as a separate part
of the description. When filing an
international application using EFSWeb, the sequence listing part of the
description should preferably be
submitted as a single ASCII text file
with a ‘‘.txt’’ extension (e.g.,
‘‘seqlist.txt’’). If the sequence listing part
is submitted as an ASCII text file,
applicant need not submit any
additional copies. The ASCII text file
will serve both as the sequence listing
part of the description under PCT Rule
5.2 and the electronic form under PCT
Rule 13ter.1(a). Furthermore, the
required statement in paragraph 4(v) of
Annex C that ‘‘the information recorded
in the electronic form furnished under
Rule 13ter is identical to the sequence
listing as contained in the international
application’’ is not required. The
sequence listing in an ASCII text file
will not be taken into account when
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calculating the application page count,
i.e., no excess page fees will be required
for the sequence listing in the text file.
Submission of the sequence listing
part in a PDF file is not recommended
because applicant would still be
required to supply a copy of the
sequence listing in an ASCII text file in
accordance with AI Annex C, ¶40.
When a sequence listing is filed in both
a PDF file and an ASCII text file, the
PDF copy of the sequence listing will be
considered to form part of the
application and the ASCII text file will
be used for search purposes and will be
transmitted to the International Bureau
with the record copy. The pages of the
PDF file that contain the sequence
listing will be taken into account when
calculating the application page count,
i.e., excess page fees may be required for
the PDF file.
b. Tables Related to a Sequence
Listing: Tables related to a sequence
listing must be an integral part of the
description of the international
application, and must not be included
in the sequence listing part. Such table
will be taken into account when
calculating the application page count,
and excess page fees may be required.
When applicant submits tables related
to a sequence listing in an international
application via EFS-Web, the tables
must be in a PDF file. If applicant
submits tables related to a sequence
listing in a text file, such tables will not
be accepted as part of the international
application. For more information, see
Sequence Listings and Tables Related
Thereto in International Applications
Filed in the United States Receiving
Office, 1344 Off. Gaz. Pat. Office 50
(July 7, 2009).
c. File Size and Quantity Limits: One
hundred (100) megabytes is the size
limit for sequence listing text files.
Sequence listing text files must not be
partitioned into multiple files for filing
via EFS-Web as the EFS-Web electronic
filing system is not currently capable of
handling such submissions. For all
other file types EFS-Web is currently
not capable of accepting files that are
larger than 25 megabytes. Additionally,
a single EFS-Web submission may
include no more than 60 electronic files.
Note that regarding the 60 electronic file
limit, an applicant may upload and
validate in sets of up to 20 files each,
with a limit of three sets of 20. If
applicant chooses to divide a file into
multiple parts using the multi-doc
feature, each part is counted as one file.
The need to submit unusually large
sequence listings and/or numerous
electronic files may prevent applicant
from making a complete international
application filing in a single EFS-Web
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submission. Applicant may use EFSWeb to file part of the international
application and to obtain the
international application number and
the confirmation number, and then file
the remainder of the international
application on the same day as one or
more follow-on submissions using EFSWeb, in order to secure the same filing
date for all parts of the international
application. However, applicant is not
permitted to file part of the international
application electronically via EFS-Web,
and then file the remainder of the
international application on paper to
secure a filing date of all parts of the
international application.
In the situation where applicant needs
to file a sequence listing that is over one
hundred megabytes, applicant may use
EFS-Web to file the international
application without the sequence listing
to obtain the international application
number and the confirmation number,
and then file the sequence listing on
compact discs on the same day by using
Express Mail from the USPS in
accordance with 37 CFR 1.10, or hand
delivery, in order to secure the same
filing date for all parts of the
international application. However,
USPS Express Mail and hand-carried
submissions may not contain PDF files
and must fully comply with the
guidelines for filing a sequence listing
on electronic media as set forth in MPEP
§ 1823.02, except that only one copy of
the sequence listing is required, and
applicant need not make any reference
to AI Part 8 or AI § 801. The sequence
listing must be a single document, but
the document may be split using
software designed to divide a file, that
is too large to fit on a single compact
disc, into multiple concatenated files. If
the user breaks up a sequence listing
into multiple concatenated files so that
it may be submitted on multiple
compact discs, the compact discs must
be labeled to indicate their order (e.g.,
‘‘1 of X’’, ‘‘2 of X’’).
d. Fee Determination for International
Applications Containing a Sequence
Listing: The calculation of the
international filing fee for an
international application, including a
sequence listing, filed via EFS-Web is
determined based on the type of
sequence listing file. A sequence listing
filed in an ASCII text file will not be
included in the page count of the
international application. A sequence
listing filed in a PDF file will be
included in the page count of the
international application. Therefore, the
page count for an EFS-Web filed
application containing both a PDF and
text format sequence listing will be
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determined by the number of pages of
the PDF sequence listing.
J4. Follow-on Submissions for
International Applications: As noted
above, a sequence listing in an ASCII
text file, as well as additional PDF files,
may be submitted in one or more
follow-on submissions, via EFS-Web.
Such follow-on submissions will form
part of the international application if
filed on the same date on which the
international application was filed. Note
that follow-on submissions of PDF files
(including, but not limited to, PDF
sequence listings) may change the
number of pages in the international
application and therefore may affect the
international filing fee.
EFS-Web may also be used to submit
a sequence listing in an ASCII text file
after the international filing date in
response to a requirement under 37 CFR
1.821(h) and PCT Rule 13ter. Such
sequence listing will not form part of
the international application as set forth
in PCT Rule 13ter.1(e).
J5. Policy of Annex F of the PCT
Administrative Instructions: EFS-Web
employs a Web-based approach to
document submission which is different
from the Annex F ‘‘wrapped, bundled
and signed package’’ approach. Thus
EFS-Web does not meet Annex F
requirements. See Annex F of the PCT
Administrative Instructions located at
[https://www.wipo.int/pct/en/texts/].
Dated: October 21, 2009.
David J. Kappos,
Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual
Property and Director of the United States
Patent and Trademark Office.
[FR Doc. E9–25785 Filed 10–26–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–16–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
[A–570–949]
Wire Decking from the People’s
Republic of China: Postponement of
Preliminary Determination of
Antidumping Duty Investigation
Import Administration,
International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce.
EFFECTIVE DATE: October 27, 2009.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Frances Veith or Trisha Tran, AD/CVD
Operations, Office 8, Import
Administration, International Trade
Administration, U.S. Department of
Commerce, 14th Street and Constitution
Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20230;
telephone: (202) 482–4295 or (202) 482–
4852, respectively.
AGENCY:
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
55211
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Postponement of Preliminary
Determination
On June 25, 2009, the Department of
Commerce (‘‘the Department’’) initiated
an antidumping duty investigation on
wire decking from the People’s Republic
of China.1 The notice of initiation stated
that, unless postponed, the Department
would issue its preliminary
determination no later than 140 days
after the date of issuance of the
initiation, in accordance with section
733(b)(1)(A) of the Tariff Act of 1930, as
amended (‘‘the Act’’). The preliminary
determination is currently due no later
than November 12, 2009.
On October 15, 2009, petitioners,
AWP Industries, Inc., ITC
Manufacturing, Inc., J&L Wire Cloth
LLC, Nashville Wire Products Mfg. Co.,
Inc., and Wireway Husky Corporation
(collectively, ‘‘Petitioners’’), made a
timely request, pursuant to 19 CFR
351.205(b)(2) and (e), for a 50-day
postponement of the preliminary
determination, in order to allow
additional time for the Department to
review respondents’ sections C and D
questionnaire submissions.2 Because
there are no compelling reasons to deny
the request, in accordance with section
733(c)(1)(A) of the Act, the Department
is postponing the deadline for the
preliminary determination by 50 days.
An extension of 50 days from the
current deadline of November 12, 2009,
would result in a new deadline of
January 1, 2010. However, since January
1, 2010, falls on a federal holiday, a
non–business day, the deadline for the
preliminary determination will now be
due no later than January 4, 2010, the
next business day. The deadline for the
final determination will continue to be
75 days after the date of the preliminary
determination, unless extended.
This notice is issued and published
pursuant to section 733(c)(2) of the Act
and 19 CFR 351.205(f)(1).
Dated: October 20, 2009.
Ronald K. Lorentzen,
Acting Assistant Secretary for Import
Administration.
[FR Doc. E9–25852 Filed 10–26–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–S
1 See Wire Decking From the People’s Republic of
China: Initiation of Antidumping Duty
Investigation, 74 FR 31691 (July 2, 2009).
2 See Petitioners letter regarding, ‘‘Wire Decking
from the People’s Republic of China - Request to
Postpone the Preliminary Antidumping Duty
Determination,’’ dated October 15, 2009.
E:\FR\FM\27OCN1.SGM
27OCN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 206 (Tuesday, October 27, 2009)]
[Notices]
[Pages 55200-55211]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-25785]
[[Page 55200]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Patent and Trademark Office
[Docket No.: PTO-P-2008-0045]
Legal Framework for Electronic Filing System--Web (EFS-Web)
AGENCY: Patent and Trademark Office, Commerce.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This Legal Framework provides guidance on the background
statutes, regulations and policies that support the Electronic Filing
System--Web (EFS-Web) project. The document is provided as a reference
for applicants, parties in reexamination proceedings, attorneys, and
agents, as well as their employees using the system.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Joni Y. Chang, Senior Legal Advisor,
Office of Patent Legal Administration, Office of the Deputy
Commissioner for Patent Examination Policy; directly by phone at 571-
272-7720, or by mail addressed to: Mail Stop Comments--Patents,
Commissioner for Patents, P.O. Box 1450, Alexandria, VA 22313-1450.
Inquiries regarding EFS-Web and other USPTO information technology
(IT) systems may be directed to the Patent Electronic Business Center
(Patent EBC), by telephone: 1-866-217-9197 (toll-free) and 571-272-
4100, or by e-mail: ebc@uspto.gov.
Inquiries regarding IT policy for U.S. national patent applications
may be directed to Mark Polutta (571-272-7709), Senior Legal Advisor,
Office of Patent Legal Administration.
Inquiries regarding IT policy for international patent applications
may be directed to Tamara Graysay (571-272-6728), Special Program
Examiner, Office of Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT) Legal
Administration.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This notice substantively contains the same
information as the EFS-Web Legal Framework posted on the USPTO Web site
(September 2008), with certain exceptions. The following is a brief
summary of the major differences:
1. The sections have been reorganized so that sections on similar
topics are combined or grouped together, and clarifications and
definitions of terms related to electronic filings have been added;
2. Section A (former sections II, III and V) has been revised to
provide updated general information on EFS-Web;
3. Section B (former sections IV, VI, XII, XX, and XXXI) has been
revised to provide a list of applications and documents that are
permitted to be filed via EFS-Web, information on how applications
filed via EFS-Web are counted for the application size fee purposes,
and fee payments are permitted to be filed via EFS-Web;
4. Section D (part of former sections IV and XXIX) has been revised
to provide information on proper usages of EFS-Web;
5. Section E (including subsection E1 and E2, former sections VII,
X, and XXVIII) has been revised to permit a Public Key Infrastructure
(PKI) certificate holder to designate a single employee of the holder's
organization, or a single employee of a contractor, who may use the
holder's certificate under the holder's direction and control;
6. Section H (former section XXII) has been revised to permit color
and grayscale drawings and photographs to be submitted via EFS-Web in
provisional and nonprovisional utility patent applications including
reissue applications and national stage applications;
7. Subsection I5 is added to provide that complex work units (such
as chemical structure drawings, mathematical formulae, three-
dimensional protein crystalline structure data and table data) may be
submitted as text files via EFS-Web under the Complex Work Units Pilot
Program; and
8. Section J (former sections IX, XVII, XVIII and XIX) has been
revised to permit PCT-EASY.zip compressed files to be submitted via
EFS-Web when users are filing international applications with the
United States Receiving Office, and to provide that tables related to a
sequence listing in an international application must be submitted in a
PDF file rather than in a text file.
Table of Contents
A. General Information on EFS-Web (Former Sections II, III and V)
B. Legal and Document Policies (Former Sections IV and VI)
B1. Types of Patent Applications and Documents Permitted To Be
Filed via EFS-Web (Former Section XX)
B2. Types of Patent Applications and Documents Not Permitted To
Be Filed via EFS-Web (Former Section XXXI)
B3. What is the official record of documents submitted via EFS-
Web? (Former Section XII)
B4. How are applications filed via EFS-Web counted for
application size fee purposes?
B5. Can fee payments be submitted via EFS-Web?
C. Electronic Acknowledgement Receipt and Date of Receipt (Former
Section VIII)
C1. What is the date of receipt of a follow-on document received
by the USPTO through EFS-Web? (Former Section XXV)
C2. What is the date of receipt of an application submitted via
EFS-Web? (Former Section XXIII)
C3. Can users file documents during non-business hours via EFS-
Web? (Former Section XXVI)
C4. What if the applicant electronically files an application
via EFS-Web, and on that same day, realizes that the applicant has
inadvertently omitted a document from the application? (Former
Section XXIV)
C5. Are there any legal consequences of the USPTO's accepting
electronic patent applications on Saturday and Sunday? (Former
Section XXVII)
D. Proper Usage of EFS-Web (Former Section IV)
D1. Filing Documents as PDF Files via EFS-Web
D2. Entering Information on EFS-Web Screens
D3. Under what conditions will the USPTO allow refunds for fees
paid via EFS-Web? (Former Section XXIX)
E. Security and Authentication (Former Section X)
E1. PKI Subscriber Agreement (Former Section VII)
E2. Under what authority does an authorized assistant of the
digital certificate holder submit signed documents? (Former Section
XXVIII)
F. Signature Policy (Former Section XXX)
G. May pre-grant (eighteen-month) publication requests be submitted
via EFS-Web? (Former Section XXI)
H. May photographs and color drawings be submitted via EFS-Web?
(Former Section XXII)
I. Text Files and File Limits
I1. May biotechnology sequence listings, large tables, or
computer program listing appendices be submitted as text files via
EFS-Web? (Former Section XIII)
I2. How are text files counted for application size fee
purposes? (Former Section XIV)
I3. What is the size limit for text files? (Former Section XV)
I4. What is the limit on the number of electronic files that may
be included in a single EFS-Web submission? (Former Section XVI)
I5. May Complex Work Units be submitted electronically via EFS-
Web?
J. International Applications and Documents for International
Applications
J1. May international applications filed under the PCT with the
United States Receiving Office be electronically submitted via EFS-
Web? (Former Section XVII)
J2. Entry in the U.S. national stage under 35 U.S.C. 371 (Former
Section IX)
J3. May EFS-Web be used to file international applications
containing a nucleotide or amino acid sequence listing and/or tables
related thereto in the United States Receiving Office? (Former
Section XVIII)
J4. Follow-on Submissions for International Applications (Former
Section XIX)
[[Page 55201]]
J5. Policy of Annex F of the PCT Administrative Instructions
(Former Section XI)
A. General Information on EFS-Web
EFS-Web is the USPTO's system for electronic filing of patent
correspondence. EFS-Web is accessible via the Internet on the USPTO Web
site. The system utilizes standard Web-based screens and prompts to
enable users to submit patent documents in Portable Document Format
(PDF) directly to the USPTO. Users may electronically submit most
patent applications, reexamination requests, and other patent-related
documents securely using EFS-Web. Users may also use EFS-Web to submit
payments of most patent fees including patent application filing fees.
Users need not provide a duplicate copy of any document filed through
EFS-Web unless the USPTO specifically requires the filing of a
duplicate in a particular situation. Users may review and check their
electronic submissions including their attached PDF files before
submitting the documents to the USPTO. After submitting the documents
via EFS-Web, the system will display a page that states that the USPTO
has received the user's submission. The users, generally within two
hours, will receive an Electronic Acknowledgement Receipt of a
successful submission received by the USPTO. The processing of fees may
delay the issuance of the Electronic Acknowledgement Receipt. The
Electronic Acknowledgement Receipt is the electronic equivalent of a
postcard receipt. See Manual of Patent Examining Procedure (MPEP) Sec.
503. Most documents submitted via EFS-Web will be viewable via the
Patent Application Information Retrieval (PAIR) system within an hour
after the USPTO receives the documents if the users have associated
their applications with their customer numbers. Therefore, users will
be able to immediately check the contents of their applications for
completeness and accuracy of their electronic submissions.
A user may become a registered user by obtaining a PKI digital
certificate. See section E of this notice for more information on PKI
digital certificates. A registered user may file most patent
applications and follow-on documents in a patent application, but a
non-registered user is not permitted to file most follow-on documents
in a patent application. See section B of this notice for more
information.
EFS-Web is a PDF-based filing system. Accordingly, all EFS-Web
submissions are required to be in PDF format unless otherwise indicated
in this notice. EFS-Web permits submission of: (1) The American
Standard Code of Information Interchange (ASCII) text files (.TXT) to
submit bio-sequence listings, computer program listings, mega tables,
and Complex Work Units; and (2) PCT-EASY.zip compressed files to submit
the Request form generated by PCT-EASY in international applications
with the United States Receiving Office. See sections I and J of this
notice for more information on ASCII text files and electronic filing
of international applications, respectively. In addition, the USPTO
provides users with PDF EFS-Web fillable forms, such as the Provisional
Application for Patent Cover Sheet, the Information Disclosure
Statement, the Application Data Sheet, Petition to Make Special Under
Accelerated Examination Program, Petition to Accept Unintentionally
Delayed Payment of Maintenance Fee in an Expired Patent, Request for
Continued Examination (RCE) Transmittal, and Petition to Make Special
Based on Age. When users submit information using an EFS-Web fillable
form, the information will directly load into the USPTO databases which
will increase accuracy and facilitate faster processing. Users may use
other USPTO-created PDF fillable forms available on the USPTO Web site,
or user-created forms, and submit the completed forms via EFS-Web. The
information entered on these forms, however, will not be automatically
loaded into the USPTO databases.
The USPTO Web site provides additional information on EFS-Web and
PAIR, such as instructions, guidelines, frequently asked questions, and
tutorials (https://www.uspto.gov/ebc/efs_help.html). Users may contact
the Patent Electronic Business Center (Patent EBC) for assistance with
EFS-Web and PAIR as well as for requesting PKI digital certificates and
customer numbers.
B. Legal and Document Policies
To the extent that any USPTO regulation is inconsistent with the
procedures for EFS-Web, the regulation will be interpreted in a manner
to support EFS-Web. This notice sets forth the USPTO's policies
concerning documents submitted electronically using EFS-Web, including
patent applications and requests for reexamination, as well as follow-
on documents in patent applications and reexamination proceedings.
B1. Types of Patent Applications and Documents Permitted to be
Filed via EFS-Web: EFS-Web permits registered users (who have a PKI
digital certificate) and non-registered users to file the following
patent applications, requests for reexamination, and documents:
1. Provisional patent applications under 35 U.S.C. 111(b);
2. Nonprovisional utility patent applications under 35 U.S.C.
111(a) (including reissue utility patent applications);
3. Nonprovisonal design patent applications under 35 U.S.C. 171
(including reissue design patent applications);
4. International applications under PCT Article 11, designating the
United States, for filing in the United States Receiving Office;
5. National stage applications under 35 U.S.C. 371;
6. Requests for ex parte reexamination under 35 U.S.C. 302 for
utility or design patents;
7. Requests for inter partes reexamination under 35 U.S.C. 311 for
utility or design patents;
8. Petitions to make special based on age under 37 CFR 1.102(c);
and
9. Petitions to accept an unintentionally delayed payment of
maintenance fee under 37 CFR 1.378(c), and payments of maintenance fees
when submitted with the petition.
10. Petition to make special under accelerated examination program
(must be filed with a nonprovisional utility patent application under
35 U.S.C. 111(a)).
Follow-on documents: Registered users are permitted to file follow-
on documents in the patent applications and reexamination proceedings
listed above via EFS-Web. Follow-on documents are documents filed after
the initial submission of the application or request for reexamination,
which include, but are not limited to, the following: amendments,
information disclosure statements (IDS), replies to Office actions and
notices, evidence, petitions, and other documents filed after the
filing of a patent application or request for reexamination. In
addition, registered users may file copies of the patent application
(e.g., a copy of the amended specification including the claims, and
drawings, for the purposes of publication of the application) for the
following pre-grant (eighteen-month) publication requests via EFS-Web:
amended publication under 37 CFR 1.215(c), redacted publication under
37 CFR 1.217, early publication under 37 CFR 1.219, and voluntary
publication or republication under 37 CFR 1.221(a). See section G for
more information on filing these publication requests via EFS-Web.
Follow-on documents also include any documents submitted on the same
day as the application, but after the initial submission. In
[[Page 55202]]
reexamination proceedings, both the reexamination requester and the
patent owner may file documents via EFS-Web, if they are registered
users. Registered users may also file a second or subsequent submission
for patent term extension under 35 U.S.C. 156 in a patent file via EFS-
Web.
Non-registered users are not permitted to file follow-on documents
via EFS-Web, except those listed in items 8-10 above. Non-registered
users may file follow-on documents by mail (with a certificate of
mailing in accordance with 37 CFR 1.8), Express Mail from USPS in
accordance with 37 CFR 1.10, or hand delivery.
B2. Types of Patent Applications and Documents Not Permitted to be
Filed via EFS-Web: The following is a list of submission types that are
not permitted to be filed using EFS-Web:
1. Plant patent applications under 35 U.S.C. 161 and documents
associated with plant patent applications.
2. Requests for Reexamination under 35 U.S.C. 302 and 311 for plant
patents and documents associated with reexamination proceedings for
plant patents.
3. Third party submissions under 37 CFR 1.99.
4. Protests under 37 CFR 1.291.
5. Public use papers under 37 CFR 1.292.
6. Color drawings and color photographs for international
applications that have not entered the national stage.
7. Initial submissions for patent term extension under 35 U.S.C.
156.
8. Correspondence concerning registration practice as specified in
37 CFR 1.4(e). See also 37 CFR 1.6(d)(1).
9. Certified documents as specified in 37 CFR 1.4(f). See also 37
CFR 1.6(d)(2). An example of such a submission is a certified copy of a
foreign patent application filed pursuant to 35 U.S.C. 119 or a
certified copy of an international application filed pursuant to 35
U.S.C. 365.
10. Correspondence to be filed in a patent application subject to a
secrecy order under 37 CFR 5.1 through 5.5. See also 37 CFR 1.6(d)(6).
11. Documents filed in contested cases before the Board of Patent
Appeals and Interferences (BPAI), except as the BPAI may expressly
authorize. See also 37 CFR 1.6(d)(9).
12. Documents filed in contested cases before the BPAI, which are
governed by 37 CFR 41.106(f). See also 37 CFR 1.6(d)(3) and
1.8(a)(2)(i)(C).
13. Correspondence filed in connection with a disciplinary
proceeding under 37 CFR parts 10 and 11. See also 37 CFR 1.6(d)(3).
14. Maintenance fees submitted under 37 CFR 1.366 that are not
submitted with a petition under 37 CFR 1.378(c) (see item 9 in section
B1 of this notice). Patent owners may be paid electronically using the
Office of Finance On-Line Shopping Page at https://ramps.uspto.gov/eram/. See MPEP Sec. 2510 for information regarding the proper methods
for submitting maintenance fees.
15. Assignment documents under 35 U.S.C. 261, which may be
electronically filed using the Electronic Patent Assignment System
(EPAS) or the Electronic Trademark Assignment System (ETAS).
Information regarding EPAS is available at: https://epas.uspto.gov.
Information regarding ETAS is available at: https://etas.uspto.gov.
16. Submissions that are not associated with a patent application
or reexamination proceeding.
If any of the documents listed above is submitted via EFS-Web, the
document will not be accorded a date of receipt and it will not be
considered officially filed in the USPTO. Furthermore, no benefit will
be given to a certificate of transmission under 37 CFR 1.8 on the
document.
B3. What is the official record of documents submitted via EFS-Web?
When the USPTO successfully receives documents filed in accordance with
the EFS-Web requirements, the USPTO will convert the PDF files
submitted by users into Tagged Image File Format (TIFF) image files and
then store the TIFF image files in the Image File Wrapper (IFW) as part
of the official record, except for color and grayscale drawings which
are stored in the Supplemental Complex Repository for Examiners (SCORE)
as part of the official record. In addition, certain submissions may be
filed as ASCII text files (e.g., sequence listings or computer program
listings), which are stored in SCORE as part of the official record.
Accordingly, the official record for the patent application and
reexamination proceeding comprises:
(1) ASCII text documents as well as color and grayscale drawings in
PDF format as stored in SCORE; and
(2) TIFF images of all other original documents as stored in IFW as
well as the Electronic Acknowledgement Receipt and the Electronic
Patent Application Fee Transmittal, both of which contain information
entered via the EFS-Web graphical user interface (GUI) data collection
screens.
See also Legal Framework for the Use of the Electronic Filing
System, 1286 Off. Gaz. Pat. Office 113, 114 (Sept. 14, 2004). The
original documents submitted via EFS-Web (e.g., applications and
reexamination proceeding documents) are stored exactly as filed in an
independent location. See section I of this notice for more information
on ASCII text documents and section H on color and grayscale drawings.
Submissions for pre-grant (eighteen-month) publication are forwarded to
the Pre-Grant Publication Division and are not stored in IFW or SCORE
as part of the official record of the patent application. See section G
for more information on publication requests.
B4. How are applications filed via EFS-Web counted for application
size fee purposes? For patent applications filed under 35 U.S.C. 111
(including provisional applications, utility and design nonprovisional
applications, and reissue applications), the paper size equivalent of
the specification (including claims) and drawings of an application
submitted via EFS-Web will be considered to be seventy-five percent
(75%) of the number of sheets of paper present in the specification
(including claims) and drawings of the application when entered into
IFW after being rendered by EFS-Web for purposes of determining the
application size fee required by 37 CFR 1.16(s). See 37 CFR 1.52(f)(2)
and MPEP Sec. 607. The paper size equivalency under 37 CFR 1.52(f)(2)
for EFS-Web filings does not apply to national stage submissions. See
MPEP Sec. 1893.01(c).
Any sequence listing in compliance with 37 CFR 1.821(c) or (e), and
any computer program listing in compliance with 37 CFR 1.96, submitted
via EFS-Web will be excluded when determining the application size fee
required by 37 CFR 1.16(s) if the listing is submitted in ASCII text as
part of an associated file of the application. See 37 CFR 1.52(f)(2)
and sections I2 and J3 of this notice. Sequence listing or computer
program listings submitted as PDF files would not be excluded.
B5. Can fee payments be submitted via EFS-Web? Yes, non-registered
and registered users may submit the filing fees (e.g., the basic filing
fee, search and examination fee, and excess claims fee) using the
online fee payment in EFS-Web at the time of filing a patent
application or request for reexamination. Only registered users may
submit payment of fees in a previously filed application or
reexamination proceeding. EFS-Web permits users to electronically
submit the payment of fees with a credit card, USPTO deposit account,
or electronic fund transfer. Users may also provide authorizations to
charge fees to a deposit account with the documents
[[Page 55203]]
being submitted electronically via EFS-Web (e.g., a fee transmittal
letter or form). However, users should not submit a credit card charge
authorization including the Credit Card Payment Form (PTO-2038)
electronically via EFS-Web, because the electronic submission
automatically will be loaded into the application file in IFW, and the
credit card information may become part of the record of an application
file that is open to public inspection.
When the online fee payment in EFS-Web is unavailable, a deposit
account authorization transmittal (e.g., PTO/SB/17) may be included
with the documents being submitted via EFS-Web. A credit card
authorization transmittal (e.g., PTO-2038) may also be submitted by
facsimile transmission to the USPTO Central Facsimile (571) 273-8300,
or sent via Express Mail from the United States Postal Service (USPS)
in accordance with 37 CFR 1.10. Applicants must include the application
number from the Electronic Acknowledgement Receipt to ensure that the
fees are paid in the correct application. Facsimile submission of the
basic national fee for national stage under 35 U.S.C. 371 is not
accepted. Failure to timely pay the basic national fee prior to the
expiration of 30 months from the priority date will result in
abandonment of the international application. If applicant wishes to
submit the application filing fees on the filing date of a patent
application to avoid the surcharge, the payment of the filing fees must
be submitted and received by the USPTO before midnight on the filing
date of application. Failure to pay the fees on the filing date of the
application will result in a surcharge.
When the online fee payment in EFS-Web is unavailable, the
following types of submissions cannot be filed via EFS-Web, since
online fee payment must accompany the submission:
(1) Petitions under 37 CFR 1.378(c) for auto-processing by EFS-Web;
and
(2) Pre-grant publication submissions under 37 CFR 1.211 to 1.221
that require a fee.
C. Electronic Acknowledgement Receipt and Date of Receipt
The Electronic Acknowledgement Receipt establishes the date of
receipt by the USPTO of documents submitted via EFS-Web. The electronic
documents are itemized in the Electronic Acknowledgement Receipt, which
will contain a full listing of the documents submitted to the USPTO as
described by the user during the submission process, including the
count of pages and/or byte sizes for each document. Thus, the
Electronic Acknowledgement Receipt is the electronic equivalent of the
postcard receipt described in MPEP section 503.
The official application filing date will be noted on the Filing
Receipt (37 CFR 1.54) after the submitted application parts are
reviewed for compliance with 35 U.S.C. 111 (or for compliance with 35
U.S.C. 371 for entry into the U.S. national stage of an international
application). The filing date is based on the dates indicated on the
Electronic Acknowledgement Receipt assuming that, after review, the
documents submitted are found to be entitled to an application filing
date. Likewise the official reexamination filing date will be noted on
the ``Notice of * * * Reexamination Request Filing Date,'' after
Central Reexamination Unit (CRU) review for filing date compliance, and
is based on the dates indicated on the Electronic Acknowledgement
Receipt.
If the official version of any document received by EFS-Web is
lost, damaged or rendered unreadable and if it cannot be recovered from
the stored files received by electronic submission, then the user will
be promptly notified. Such events are expected to be rare. In that
situation, the user may have to resubmit any lost document and petition
for the original filing date. The user would be required to present:
(1) The Electronic Acknowledgement Receipt; (2) a copy of the missing
files as submitted; and (3) a signed petition accompanied by a
statement stating that the attached files are the same as those
originally submitted and mentioned in the Electronic Acknowledgement
Receipt for that application number (e.g., a petition under 37 CFR
1.53(e) or 37 CFR 1.182 with the appropriate petition fee under 37 CFR
1.17(f)).
The Electronic Acknowledgement Receipt and statement will serve as
prima facie evidence that the resubmitted documents are the same as
those submitted on the date of receipt, except when the document
description used by the user does not match the document. For example,
if an applicant originally filed a specification and a set of claims
and used the correct document descriptions for a specification and a
set of claims, then the Electronic Acknowledgement Receipt will serve
as prima facie evidence that the applicant filed the specification and
set of claims on the original filing date. However, if the applicant
actually filed two sets of claims, the Electronic Acknowledgement
Receipt will not serve as prima facie evidence that the applicant filed
a specification and a set of claims (even though the applicant used the
document descriptions for a specification and a set of claims). Note
the Electronic Acknowledgement Receipt only indicates that the USPTO
received what was actually sent, as opposed to what may have been
intended to be transmitted. Users should exercise the same care in
preparing and preserving a copy of a submission in electronic form as
in paper.
C1. What is the date of receipt of a follow-on document received by
the USPTO through EFS-Web? Follow-on documents filed in a patent
application or reexamination proceeding after the initial filing of the
application or request for reexamination will be accorded a receipt
date, which is the date the follow-on document is received at the
USPTO. See 37 CFR 1.6(a)(4).
A follow-on document required to be filed in the USPTO within a set
period of time (e.g., a reply to an Office action) will be considered
as being timely filed if the follow-on document is submitted in
compliance with the procedure set forth in 37 CFR 1.8(a):
(1) The follow-on document is submitted via EFS-Web prior to
expiration of the set period of time in accordance with the
requirements for EFS-Web; and
(2) The document includes a certificate of transmission stating the
date of transmission and signed by a person that has reasonable basis
to expect that the document would be transmitted on or before the date
of transmission. See 37 CFR 1.8(a)(1)(i)(C) and (ii). However, the
certificate of transmission practice under 37 CFR 1.8 does not apply to
the documents listed in 37 CFR 1.8(a)(2) (e.g., a document filed for
the purpose of obtaining an application filing date).
C2. What is the date of receipt of an application submitted via
EFS-Web? 35 U.S.C. 111(a)(4) states in part (emphasis added):
The filing date of an application shall be the date on which the
specification and any required drawing are received in the Patent
and Trademark Office.
Thus, the filing date of an application is the date of receipt of
the application in the USPTO. Further, the USPTO is located in the
Eastern Standard Time zone. Accordingly, the date of filing of an
application officially submitted through EFS-Web will be the date in
the Eastern Standard Time zone when the USPTO received the submission.
As such, the submission's ``date of receipt,'' as shown on the
Electronic Acknowledgement Receipt, is the Eastern Standard Time date
that the documents are fully, successfully, and officially received at
the USPTO, after
[[Page 55204]]
the user clicks the SUBMIT button on the Confirm and Submit screen. See
37 CFR 1.6(a)(4). This date is controlling for filing date purposes of
a newly filed application. There is no ``certificate of transmission''
practice for new application filings (37 CFR 1.8). This applies by
analogy to reexamination proceedings.
To be very specific, the EFS-Web system records as the date of
receipt of documents the local date in Eastern Standard Time on which
the USPTO receives the documents, after the user clicks the SUBMIT
button on the Confirm and Submit screen for those documents.
For example, if an applicant in California officially files a
patent application with the USPTO through EFS-Web by clicking on the
SUBMIT button at 1 p.m. Pacific Time in California on May 1, that
application would be officially received by the USPTO at 1 a.m. Eastern
Standard Time on May 2. Accordingly, the application would receive a
filing date of May 2. However, the applicant could alternatively file
the application using Express Mail from the USPS in accordance with 37
CFR 1.10 in which case the applicant would have until midnight on May 1
in his or her local time zone to file the application and obtain a
filing date of May 1.
C3. Can users file documents during non-business hours via EFS-Web?
Hours of operation of EFS-Web will be clearly provided in the EFS-Web
instructions when users log on to the system. The USPTO will post
information on any scheduled down time due to system maintenance in
advance. Users may file patent documents electronically during the
hours of operation of EFS-Web every day of the week, including weekends
and holidays. If the submission is successfully received (even on a
Saturday, Sunday or Federal holiday within the District of Columbia),
the USPTO will assign that receipt date to the submission.
If a transmission is attempted during a down time, the USPTO cannot
accept it and will, if possible, transmit back a notice that the USPTO
is not accepting submissions. No Electronic Acknowledgement Receipt
will be sent. Instead a notice will advise the user to use alternative
filing methods, such as Express Mail from the USPS in accordance with
37 CFR 1.10 or hand delivery of paper to the USPTO, to establish the
filing date. Note that applications filed under 37 CFR 1.53, and
reexamination requests, cannot be submitted by facsimile transmission
(37 CFR 1.6(d)(3) and (5)), and that certificate of mailing procedures
do not apply to new applications and reexamination requests (37 CFR
1.8(a)(2)(i)(A) and (D)). Users are strongly advised to transmit their
electronic filings sufficiently early in the day to allow time for
alternative paper filing when transmission cannot be initiated or
correctly completed.
C4. What if the applicant electronically files an application via
EFS-Web, and on that same day, realizes that the applicant has
inadvertently omitted a document from the application? One advantage of
filing a patent application via EFS-Web is that applicant (who is a
registered user) may view the submission in PAIR and file a document
directly into the application on the same day as the filing date of the
application. In certain situations, applicant may correct an error by
filing a missing item(s) on the same day as the filing date of the
application. Applicant, however, may wish to file another new
application in other certain situations.
The following examples describe implications raised when applicant
inadvertently omits an item when filing an application electronically
via EFS-Web:
1. Oath or Declaration--Applicant may file an executed oath or
declaration on the same day as the filing date as the application via
EFS-Web. The oath or declaration will not be considered late and thus a
surcharge for filing a late oath or declaration will not be required.
2. Filing Fees--Applicant may file the filing fees (e.g., the basic
filing fee, search and examination fees, application size fee, or
excess claims fee) on the same day as the filing date of the
application via EFS-Web. The fees will not be considered late and thus
a surcharge for filing the filing fees will not be required.
3. Nonpublication request--Since 37 CFR 1.213(a)(1) requires any
nonpublication request to be filed with the application, applicant
cannot simply file the nonpublication request to correct the error. If
applicant does not wish to have the application publish, applicant must
file: (a) a new application with a nonpublication request; and (b) in
the initial application, a petition for express abandonment to avoid
publication under 37 CFR 1.138(c) and fee under 37 CFR 1.17(h) in
sufficient time to permit the appropriate officials in the Pre-Grant
Publication Division to recognize the abandonment and remove the
application from the publication process.
4. Drawings--Applicant may file the missing drawings as a
preliminary amendment on the same day as the filing date of the
application. The drawings will be considered as part of the original
disclosure of the application. See 37 CFR 1.115(a)(2). If the
application was filed with the ``wrong drawings,'' a preliminary
amendment could be filed on the same day as the filing date of the
application adding the correct drawings and deleting the ``wrong
drawings.'' An amendment adding new drawings and deleting the ``wrong
drawings,'' filed on a day after the filing date of the application may
raise new matter issues.
5. Claims--Applicant may file claims as a preliminary amendment on
the same day that applicant filed the application papers and such
claims will be considered as part of the original disclosure of the
application. Please note that the application will not be entitled to a
filing date until applicant files at least one claim in the
application.
6. Part of the specification--Applicant may file the missing
portion of the written description as a preliminary amendment on the
filing date of the application. Such amendment will be considered as
part of the original disclosure.
If applicant files another new application to correct an error in
the first application, applicant will have filed two applications.
Applicant may continue to prosecute the first application that has the
error or abandon the first application by filing a declaration of
express abandonment. Please note that any fees paid in the first
application will not be refunded or applied to the second application.
Applicant may request refund of the search fee and any excess claims
fees (but not the basic filing fee, examination fee, and application
size fee) paid in the first application if the application was filed
under 35 U.S.C. 111(a) on or after December 8, 2004, and the applicant
files a petition for express abandonment in accordance with 37 CFR
1.138(d).
C5. Are there any legal consequences of the USPTO's accepting
electronic patent applications on Saturday and Sunday? Applicants may
file patent applications electronically during the hours of operation
of EFS-Web every day of the week, including weekends and holidays. EFS-
Web will provide applicants with the opportunity to receive a filing
date on any day of the week, including Saturday, Sunday, and Federal
holidays. In addition, 35 U.S.C. 21(b) states:
When the day, or the last day, for taking any action or paying
any fee in the United States Patent and Trademark Office falls on
Saturday, Sunday, or a Federal holiday within the District of
Columbia, the action
[[Page 55205]]
may be taken, or fee paid, on the next succeeding secular or
business day.
Further, 35 U.S.C. 119((e)(3)) states:
If the day that is 12 months after the filing date of a
provisional application falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or Federal
holiday within the District of Columbia, the period of pendency of
the provisional application shall be extended to the next succeeding
secular or business day.
Thus, under United States law, applicants will be permitted to take
action on the next business day when the last day for taking action
falls on a weekend or Federal holiday, regardless of the mode or form
of filing.
However, Article 4 of the Paris Convention addresses the priority
period and in Article 4(c)(3) it states:
If the last day of the period is an official holiday, or a day
when the Office is not open for the filing of applications in the
country where protection is claimed, the period shall be extended
until the first following working day.
Further, as stated above, the USPTO is capable of accepting electronic
patent application filings every day of the week, including weekends
and holidays, through EFS-Web. Thus, applicants are cautioned to
consider possible adverse consequences regarding the determination in
other countries of priority periods under Article 4(C)(3) of the Paris
Convention when filing international applications with the United
States Receiving Office. Specifically, the ability to file applications
electronically on weekends and holidays in the USPTO may result in loss
of priority rights in foreign jurisdictions designated in international
applications filed with the United States Receiving Office, if
applicants elect, in accordance with 35 U.S.C. 21(b) or 119(e)(3), to
file an international application on the next succeeding business day
in the event that the twelve-month Paris Convention priority period set
out in Article 4(C)(1) falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or Federal Holiday.
In such circumstances, other patent offices may deny the priority claim
on the basis that the international application was not timely filed if
their national law strictly incorporates the provision of Paris
Convention Article 4(c)(3) and considers the USPTO to be open for the
filing of applications on weekends and holidays. For this reason,
applicants may prefer not to rely upon the ``next business day''
provisions of 35 U.S.C. 21(b) and 119(e)(3) when filing international
applications with the USPTO, and instead file the international
application before the Paris Convention twelve-month priority period
has expired.
D. Proper Usage of EFS-Web
Users should follow the instructions and guidelines for EFS-Web
provided on the USPTO Web site. Before clicking the SUBMIT button, the
user should check whether the correct documents have been attached to
the submission, and whether the information related to the submission
has been entered correctly. Once the user clicks the SUBMIT button on
the Confirm and Submit screen, the submission will be electronically
sent to the USPTO. A submission is officially filed at the USPTO when
the documents are received by the USPTO (Eastern Time). Use of EFS-Web
in a manner significantly in violation of the instructions and
guidelines for EFS-Web provided on the USPTO Web site and in this
notice may result in non-entry of the submission or failure to accord a
filing date in the event the USPTO does not fully, successfully, and
officially receive all of the elements necessary to obtain a filing
date for an intended submission. Furthermore, electronic files
submitted via EFS-Web must be free of executables, worms, viruses, or
any other type of potentially malicious content. Please note that 18
U.S.C. 1030 imposes a duty on users not to intentionally cause damage
to a federal government system.
D1. Filing documents as PDF Files via EFS-Web: EFS-Web accepts
standard PDF documents up to 25 megabytes for each file, and 60
electronic files per submission. See section I4 of this notice for more
information. PDF files created from scanned documents and submitted via
EFS-Web must be created using a scanning resolution no lower than 300
dpi. Lower resolution scans have significantly delayed processing and
publication of applications, e.g., resubmission has been required for
documents failing to comply with the legibility requirements. See 37
CFR 1.52(a)(1)(v) and (a)(5) regarding document legibility
requirements.
In addition, because the PDF format is so feature-rich, certain PDF
features are currently not supported by the USPTO systems. For example,
PDF documents with multiple layers must be flattened prior to
submission to ensure that the complete document is received by the
USPTO and readable to the examiner or other deciding officials. If a
document contains layers that are marked as ``invisible'', the
invisible layers will be lost when the document is processed by the
USPTO, and thus the official records in IFW will not contain the
information on the invisible layers. Furthermore, if a user uses the
PDF comments or annotations to enter the information on a form, only
the blank form without the PDF comments and annotations will be
processed. Therefore, the complete document will not be officially
filed at the USPTO and the user cannot rely on the Electronic
Acknowledgement Receipt as evidence that the completed form was filed
at the USPTO. Users are encouraged to check the contents of their
submissions for completeness and accuracy via PAIR.
Users must follow the PDF Guidelines for EFS-Web and PDF Creation
for EFS-Web (available on the USPTO Web site at https://www.uspto.gov/ebc/portal/tools.htm) to create and submit PDF files via EFS-Web to
ensure that all of the information in the PDF files is successfully
received and processed by the USPTO.
D2. Entering information on EFS-Web Screens: EFS-Web collects
information from on-screen entries made by the user through the EFS-Web
graphical user interface (GUI) data collection screens. Through these
data collection screens, the user provides the USPTO with information
regarding the electronic submission, such as the type of application
being filed, the application number of the application in which a
follow-on document is being submitted, or the type of document being
submitted. The USPTO systems (e.g., EFS-Web, IFW, etc.) will use the
information entered by the user on the EFS-Web screens to
automatically: (1) Assign the application number, create the
application, and process the application, if a new patent application
is being filed; (2) upload the follow-on document into the application
file specified by the user; or (3) message the deciding official based
on the document description selected by the user. Therefore, providing
incorrect information regarding the submission could lead to: (1) An
incorrect type of application file being created; (2) a delay in
processing the document; (3) filing a document in an incorrect
application; or (4) the deciding official not recognizing the document
in sufficient time to avoid publication, to withdraw the application
from issue, or to avoid the abandonment of the application.
1. Follow-on documents: When a user submits a follow-on document
(e.g., a reply to an Office action or notice) via EFS-Web, the user is
required to enter the correct application number and confirmation
number of the application in which the follow-on document is being
filed. Providing the incorrect application number and confirmation
number pair will result in filing the follow-on document in the wrong
application. Therefore, it is important
[[Page 55206]]
for the user to enter the correct application number on the EFS-Web
screen when filing the follow-on document.
After the submission of the follow-on document is completed, the
user should log on to PAIR to review the application file and check
whether the follow-on document has been filed in the correct
application. Checking the application file via PAIR would also help the
user to discover other filing errors, such as filing a wrong document
or omitting a portion of the document.
2. Filing a new patent application: When a user is submitting a new
patent application via EFS-Web, the user is required to select the
application type (e.g., design, utility, provisional or nonprovisonal)
being filed on the EFS-Web screen. Only document descriptions and fee
codes pertinent to the selected application type will be available for
the submission. The system will also automatically generate the
application number based on the user's selection. For example, if the
user indicates that the submission is a provisional application by
selecting the EFS-Web radio button for a provisional application, the
application will be assigned a provisional application number,
provisional application fees will be collected or required, and the
application will be further processed as a provisional application.
Furthermore, the application will not be assigned to an examiner for
examination and will not be published because the submission is
processed as a provisional application. Therefore, it is important for
the user to select the correct application type on the EFS-Web screen,
and review the Electronic Acknowledgement Receipt and the application
file using PAIR after the submission is completed.
3. Document indexing: When a user submits a patent application or a
follow-on document in a patent application using EFS-Web, the user must
select from the list of document descriptions to specify the files
being submitted via EFS-Web. For instance, when the user is filing a
patent application, the submission must be separated into appropriate
sections: specification, claims, abstract, and drawing; and when the
user is filing an amendment, the user must select the appropriate type
of amendment: amendment after non-final, amendment after allowance,
preliminary amendment, and amendment after final. Based on the document
description selected by the user, a document code is assigned and a
message regarding the document submitted to the USPTO will be forwarded
to the appropriate organization for processing, and to the appropriate
official for consideration. Furthermore, the IFW and PAIR systems use
the document code for identifying the document maintained in the
application file. Therefore, accurate document indexing is important to
facilitate efficient processing and proper consideration of the
document by the USPTO. For example: (a) If the user indicated an after-
final amendment as a non-final amendment, the processing of such
amendment may be delayed and the examiner may not have sufficient time
to consider the amendment before the time period expires; (b) if the
user selects the ``Pre-Grant Publication'' radio button on the EFS-Web
data collection screen for submitting a substitute specification filed
in response to a non-final Office action, the submission will be
forwarded to the publication branch rather than processed into IFW and
forwarded to the examiner for consideration; and (c) if the user
selects ``drawings--only black and white line drawings'' for submitting
color drawings in a utility application rather than ``drawing--other
than black and white line drawings'', the color drawings would not be
processed as color drawings, and would be maintained as black and white
drawings in IFW.
More information on document indexing is available on the USPTO Web
site at https://www.uspto.gov/ebc/portal/infodocuments.htm. It is
important for users to select the correct document description, and
check the application file via PAIR after the submission is completed.
D3. Under what conditions will the USPTO allow refunds for fees
paid via EFS-Web? The USPTO will grant refunds to users when, due to a
malfunction with the EFS-Web system, the EFS-Web system has misled a
user into paying a fee in error. If it cannot be determined that a
malfunction occurred, but rather it seems to be a user error, no refund
will be given. The users should contact the Patent EBC if there are any
issues associated with their submissions.
E. Security and Authentication
The USPTO requires PKI certificates to meet federal government
computer system authentication guidelines as defined by the National
Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB). The required evaluation of EFS-Web and
PAIR determined that level three authentication was needed; this is met
by the USPTO's PKI.
Only a PKI certificate holder (or the designated employee under the
certificate holder's direction and control) can submit follow-on
documents. This preserves confidentiality, and is consistent with power
of attorney and correspondence regulations. In order to obtain a PKI
certificate, the user must be a registered practitioner (i.e., an
attorney or agent) or an inventor, and complete the appropriate
paperwork (e.g., review the PKI subscriber agreement and complete the
certificate action form, available on the USPTO Web site). Once the
user has a PKI certificate, the user can authenticate himself or
herself to the USPTO through the EFS-Web sign-on. This will generate a
secure, encrypted connection with the USPTO.
For users that do not have, or do not wish to use, a PKI
certificate to authenticate to the USPTO, they may still submit new
application filings only via a non-authenticated workflow. The user
would go to the EFS-Web page and choose to submit without a PKI
certificate as a non-registered user, which would generate a Transport
Layer Security (TLS) connection for the session, thus allowing secure
data transmission to the USPTO. Non-registered users have the same
level of protection for filing as a registered user, but are limited to
submission of initial filings. This practice minimizes the risk of
improperly-filed third party submissions and other documents. Non-
registered users may file follow-on documents by mail (with a
certificate of mailing in accordance with 37 CFR 1.8), Express Mail
from USPS in accordance with 37 CFR 1.10, or hand delivery.
Note: Users are advised that the USPTO may revoke a user's
digital PKI certificate if the user makes an improper submission
through EFS-Web. See section B and paragraph 4 of the ``United
States Patent and Trademark Office Public Key Infrastructure
Subscriber Agreement'' located at [https://www.uspto.gov/ebc/documents/subscribersagreement.pdf].
E1. PKI Subscriber Agreement: A PKI certificate holder may
designate a single employee of the holder's organization, or a single
employee of a contractor, who may use the holder's USPTO certificate
under the holder's direction and control in compliance with the PKI
subscriber agreement. Accordingly, a practitioner who is a PKI
certificate holder, or the designated employee acting under the
direction and control of the practitioner, may file documents signed by
either the practitioner or another practitioner via EFS-Web, in
compliance with the PKI subscriber agreement. Filing of a document that
is unauthorized to be filed via EFS-Web (e.g., a third party submission
under 37
[[Page 55207]]
CFR 1.99 or a protest under 37 CFR 1.291) is inconsistent with the
subscriber agreement and the rules and policies of the USPTO. Thus, the
certificate holder, and designated employee acting under the direction
and control of the certificate holder, must make sure that document
being submitted is authorized to be filed via EFS-Web, regardless of
whether the document is signed by the practitioner exercising the
direction and control or by another practitioner.
EFS-Web also permits a legal assistant or paralegal to submit an
application or a request for reexamination previously reviewed by a
registered practitioner without the registered practitioner being
present. See section E2 for more information.
E2. Under what authority does an authorized assistant of the
digital certificate holder submit signed documents? A PKI digital
certificate holder is permitted to designate a single employee of the
holder's organization, or a single employee of a contractor, under the
PKI subscriber agreement and certificate action form. The designated
employee under the direction and control of the digital certificate
holder may use the certificate holder's certificate to submit documents
through EFS-Web in compliance with the PKI subscriber agreement and the
rules and policies of the USPTO.
The documents submitted through EFS-Web must be signed in
accordance with 37 CFR 1.4, 1.33(b), and 11.18. If the designated
employee is an assistant who is not an authorized party to sign the
documents, the designated employee is not responsible for the contents
of the documents submitted. Instead, the person who signs the documents
(e.g., the inventor or a registered practitioner who is representing
the inventor) is responsible for the contents. For example, the
documents may be electronically signed or ink signed by the applicant
or attorney of record. The assistant who serves the ministerial
function of pickup and delivery of documents may submit the signed
documents electronically via EFS-Web under the direction and control of
the certificate holder. (Ink signed documents can be electronically
scanned and then e-filed.) The assistant may also view and retrieve
documents from Private PAIR under the direction and control of the
certificate holder in compliance with the PKI subscriber agreement.
In the submission process, the assistant who is using the holder's
certificates to submit the documents through EFS-Web is required to
specify certain ``locator information'' so the documents can be
associated with the proper application file in the IFW system. That
locator information may include the application's title, first named
inventor, docket number, application number, confirmation number,
correspondence address and filing date, all if available. The type of
application (e.g., 35 U.S.C. 111(a), national stage application under
35 U.S.C. 371, international application) and information necessary for
the payment of fees are not considered to be locator information. The
``locator information'' is entered on submission to assure that the
documents are placed in the proper file, and do not constitute a signed
submission of bibliographic data on behalf of the applicant or
reexamination party. Errors made in the ``locator information'' may be
corrected by the USPTO on its own initiative, or by the applicant or
reexamination party, similar to the way they are corrected in paper
processing.
It also should be noted that the assistant could pay the fees
associated with the submission in the EFS-Web process. This is
comparable to the paper practice in which law firms designate
individuals to pay fees.
F. Signature Policy
Signatures, other than handwritten signatures meeting the standard
of 37 CFR 1.4(d)(1), included in image attachments submitted via EFS-
Web are governed by the S-signature requirements of 37 CFR 1.4(d)(2)
(See also Changes To Support Implementation of the United States Patent
and Trademark Office 21st Century Strategic Plan, 69 FR 56481, 56486
(Sept. 21, 2004), 1287 Off. Gaz. Pat. Office 67 (Oct. 12, 2004).
If the signer is submitting an application through EFS-Web as PDF
files, he or she should apply either a handwritten signature in
compliance with 37 CFR 1.4(d)(1) or an S-signature in compliance with
37 CFR 1.4(d)(2) before scanning the document or converting it to a PDF
file. Any follow-on documents, such as an amendment filed in an
application, must also be signed in accordance with 37 CFR 1.33(b).
Even though a new patent application is entitled to a filing date if it
complies with all the statutory requirements set forth in 35 U.S.C.
111(a) or (b), it is noted that when filing a new application by EFS-
Web, a signed transmittal form or a signed application data sheet (ADS)
is recommended for identification purposes, and any nonpublication
request and certification that accompany the application must be
signed.
A legible electronic image of a handwritten signature inserted, or
copied and pasted by the person signing the correspondence into an
application document may be considered to be an acceptable signature.
The legible image of the handwritten signature of the person signing
the correspondence must be inserted by the person. Additionally, the
signature must be surrounded by a first single forward slash mark
before the electronic image and a second single forward slash mark
after the electronic image. That is, the legible electronic image of a
handwritten signature must be enclosed between two single forward
slashes and the signer's name is indicated below or adjacent the
signature as per 37 CFR 1.4(d)(2). The slashes may be inserted into the
document prior to the insertion of the signature.
The presentation to the USPTO (whether by signing, filing,
submitting, or later advocating) of any document constitutes a
certification under 37 CFR 11.18(b) (or former 37 CFR 10.18(b)). See 37
CFR 1.4(d)(4).
G. May pre-grant (eighteen-month) publication requests be submitted via
EFS-Web?
Yes, EFS-Web enables users to electronically submit pre-grant
publication requests for amended publication, redacted publication,
early publication, voluntary publication, or republication under 37 CFR
1.215, 1.217, 1.219, and 1.221(a) via EFS-Web. When filing pre-grant
publication requests via EFS-Web, the form-fillable application data
sheet (PTO/SB/14) is required to be used for fulfilling the
bibliographic data requirements. An electronic submission for voluntary
publication, amended publication, republication (37 CFR 1.221(a)) or
redacted publication must be submitted as a ``Pre-Grant Publication''
by selecting the ``Pre-Grant Publication'' radio button on the EFS-Web
data collection screen. It is not sufficient for a user to submit a
document via EFS-Web requesting amended publication, redacted
publication, early publication, voluntary publication, or republication
without also selecting the ``Pre-Grant Publication'' radio button on
the EFS-Web data collection screen.
H. May photographs and color drawings be submitted via EFS-Web?
The USPTO prefers black and white line drawings as prescribed in 37
CFR 1.84(a)(1) when applicants are required to submit drawings in
patent applications. As stated in 37 CFR 1.84(a)(2) and (b),
photographs and color drawings are not ordinarily
[[Page 55208]]
permitted in utility and design patent applications, but the USPTO will
accept photographs and color drawings in utility or design patent
applications, if they are the only practicable medium for illustrating
the claimed subject matter. The photographs and color drawings
submitted in utility or design patent applications must be of
sufficient quality such that all details in the photographs and
drawings are reproducible in black and white in the printed patent.
Drawings submitted in international applications are required to
comply with PCT Rule 11.13, which does not permit color drawings.
Furthermore, there is no provision for photographs. Nevertheless, black
and white photographs will be accepted where it is impossible to
present in a drawing what is to be shown (e.g., crystalline
structures). Color photographs are not permitted in international
applications.
The USPTO may object to the drawings and photographs, and require
corrections or deletions if they do not comply with 37 CFR 1.84 or PCT
Rule 11.13. Additionally, since color drawings are not permitted in
international applications, color drawings and color photographs filed
in a national stage application will be treated as an amendment and
will be objected to if they introduce new matter.
Types of Photographs and Drawings Permitted to be Filed via EFS-
Web: Black and white line drawings may be submitted via EFS-Web in the
types of patent applications and proceedings listed in section B1 of
this notice. However, photographs, color drawings, grayscale drawings,
and other drawings that are not black and white line drawings may be
submitted via EFS-Web in only the following types of applications and
proceedings:
1. Nonprovisional design patent applications, including reissue
design patent applications;
2. Provisional applications under 35 U.S.C. 111(b);
3. Nonprovisional utility patent applications under 35 U.S.C.
111(a), including reissue utility patent applications; and
4. U.S. national stage applications under 35 U.S.C. 371; and
5. Reexamination proceedings for utility or design patents.
Only black and white photographs may be submitted via EFS-Web in
international applications.
Document Description for Photograph and Drawings: Users must select
the correct document description when submitting photographs and
drawings via EFS-Web. Selecting an incorrect document description may
cause the photographs and drawings to be processed in a quality that is
not sufficient for examination and publication. Applicant must select:
1. ``Drawings--only black and white line drawings'' (document code
``DRW'') for the following:
a. Black and white line drawings in: (i) Provisional applications
under 35 U.S.C. 111(b); (ii) nonprovisional utility patent applications
under 35 U.S.C. 111(a), including reissue utility patent applications;
(iii) international applications and national stage applications under
35 U.S.C. 371; and (iv) reexamination proceedings for utility patents.
These drawings will be converted into TIFF images and stored in IFW.
b. Black and white line drawings, grayscale drawings, photographs,
color drawings, and other drawings that are not black and white line
drawings in design patent applications, including reissue design patent
applications, and reexamination proceedings for design patents. These
drawings will be stored in SCORE, and a black and white copy will be
stored in IFW along with a SCORE placeholder sheet.
2. ``Drawings--other than black and white line drawings'' (document
code ``DRW.NONBW'') for the following:
a. Photographs, color drawings, grayscale drawings, and other
drawings that are not black and white line drawings in: (i) provisional
applications under 35 U.S.C. 111(b); (ii) nonprovisional utility patent
applications under 35 U.S.C. 111(a), including reissue utility patent
applications; (iii) national stage applications under 35 U.S.C. 371;
and (iv) reexamination proceedings for utility patents. These drawings
will be stored in SCORE, and a black and white copy will be stored in
IFW along with a SCORE placeholder sheet.
b. Black and white photographs, and grayscale drawings, in
international applications. These drawings will be stored in SCORE, and
a black and white copy will be stored in IFW along with a SCORE
placeholder sheet.
Other Requirements: For color drawings, a petition filed under 37
CFR 1.84(a)(2) explaining why the color drawings are necessary is
required. See MPEP Sec. 608.02. The requirement for three (3) sets of
color drawings under 37 CFR 1.84(a)(2)(ii) is not applicable to color
drawings submitted via