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- Flash_of_genius abstract "The Flash of Genius Doctrine or Flash of Genius Test was a test for patentability used by the United States Federal Courts for over a decade, beginning about 1941.The doctrine was formalized in Cuno Engineering v. Automatic Devices, which held that the inventive act had to come into the mind of an inventor in a \"flash of genius\" and not as a result of tinkering. \"The new device, however useful it may be, must reveal the flash of creative genius, not merely the skill of the calling. If it fails, it has not established its right to a private grant on the public domain.\" This test, which lasted little more than a decade, was most likely an appealing and easy standard for judges and unsophisticated jurors to apply to any given patent dispute when the technology being disputed was beyond their scientific acumen.The flash of genius test was eventually rejected by Congress in its 1952 revision of the patent statute, now codified in Title 35 of the United States Code. Section 103 was amended to state the new standard of non-obviousness: \"Patentability shall not be negatived by the manner in which the invention was made.\" The United States Supreme Court acknowledged this new language in its landmark opinion on obviousness, Graham v. John Deere Co., noting that the language in Cuno establishing the doctrine had never been intended to create a new standard in the first instance.".
- Flash_of_genius thumbnail Williamodouglas.jpg?width=300.
- Flash_of_genius wikiPageID "7487569".
- Flash_of_genius wikiPageLength "2088".
- Flash_of_genius wikiPageOutDegree "12".
- Flash_of_genius wikiPageRevisionID "652754614".
- Flash_of_genius wikiPageWikiLink Category:United_States_patent_law.
- Flash_of_genius wikiPageWikiLink Cripps_question.
- Flash_of_genius wikiPageWikiLink Epiphany_(feeling).
- Flash_of_genius wikiPageWikiLink Federal_judiciary_of_the_United_States.
- Flash_of_genius wikiPageWikiLink Graham_v._John_Deere_Co..
- Flash_of_genius wikiPageWikiLink Inventive_step_and_non-obviousness.
- Flash_of_genius wikiPageWikiLink Patentability.
- Flash_of_genius wikiPageWikiLink Public_domain.
- Flash_of_genius wikiPageWikiLink Supreme_Court_of_the_United_States.
- Flash_of_genius wikiPageWikiLink Title_35_of_the_United_States_Code.
- Flash_of_genius wikiPageWikiLink United_States_patent_law.
- Flash_of_genius wikiPageWikiLink File:Williamodouglas.jpg.
- Flash_of_genius wikiPageWikiLinkText "Flash of genius".
- Flash_of_genius wikiPageWikiLinkText "flash of genius".
- Flash_of_genius wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:For.
- Flash_of_genius wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Flash_of_genius wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:US-law-stub.
- Flash_of_genius subject Category:United_States_patent_law.
- Flash_of_genius hypernym Test.
- Flash_of_genius type Cricketer.
- Flash_of_genius type Redirect.
- Flash_of_genius comment "The Flash of Genius Doctrine or Flash of Genius Test was a test for patentability used by the United States Federal Courts for over a decade, beginning about 1941.The doctrine was formalized in Cuno Engineering v. Automatic Devices, which held that the inventive act had to come into the mind of an inventor in a \"flash of genius\" and not as a result of tinkering. \"The new device, however useful it may be, must reveal the flash of creative genius, not merely the skill of the calling.".
- Flash_of_genius label "Flash of genius".
- Flash_of_genius sameAs Q1499015.
- Flash_of_genius sameAs Geistesblitz.
- Flash_of_genius sameAs m.02637q1.
- Flash_of_genius sameAs Q1499015.
- Flash_of_genius wasDerivedFrom Flash_of_genius?oldid=652754614.
- Flash_of_genius depiction Williamodouglas.jpg.
- Flash_of_genius isPrimaryTopicOf Flash_of_genius.