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Examination Instructions and Guidelines Referenced Items (205, 206, 207, 208, 209, 210, 211, 212, 213, 214, 215, 216, 217, 218, 219, 220, 221, 222)
(210)                   A New Pilot Program Concerning
                 Public Submission of Peer Reviewed Prior Art

I. Introduction

   In June of 2007, the USPTO announced a pilot program to determine the
extent to which the organized submission of documents together with comments
by the public would be useful to examiners. See Pilot Concerning Public
Submission of Peer Reviewed Prior Art, 1319 Off. Gaz. Pat. Office 146
(Jun. 26, 2007). The purpose of the pilot was to test whether such
collaboration could effectively locate prior art that might not otherwise be
located by the USPTO during the typical patent examination process.

   As announced, the pilot program was limited in scope, duration, and size.
In the interest of gathering data from a more diverse pool of patent
applications, the pilot was revised on July 17, 2008, to extend its duration,
increase the maximum number of applications, and expand the scope of the
applications eligible for the program. See Extension and Expansion of Pilot
Concerning Public Submission of Peer Reviewed Prior Art, 1333 Off. Gaz. Pat.
Office 103 (Aug. 12, 2008).

   The culmination of the two-year pilot resulted in numerous data points
that support the premise that members of the public, when collaborating in
an organized on-line fashion, are capable of contributing to the location of
prior art of value to the examiner during the examination process.

   Some of the significant data points collected are:

          * 189 applications accepted into the pilot program;
          * 603 pieces of prior art were submitted and are now a part of the
          record in these applications;
          * 30 of the accepted applications received a first action on the
          merits that contained a rejection of at least one claim based upon
          peer reviewed prior art; in 15 of these 30 applications, the peer
          reviewed prior art was not found by the patent examiner; in the
          other 15 of these 30 applications, the peer reviewed prior art was
          found by the patent examiner;
          * More than 500 unique reviewers participated in a review of an
          application on the Web site; and
          * Over 2700 people registered on the Peer To Patent Web site.

   These results indicate that members of the public are capable of
contributing to the quality of the patent process and willing to participate
voluntarily.

   In the interest of gathering data from a more diverse pool of patent
applications, the USPTO in cooperation with the New York Law School's Center
for Patent Innovations is launching a new one-year pilot. This pilot,
described in more detail below, will test the scalability of the peer review
concept by expanding the candidate pool of applications to technology areas
such as Life Sciences, Telecommunications, Business Methods and Computer
Hardware and Software, and by significantly increasing the total number of
applications that may be accepted into the pilot. This pilot will also
streamline the participation process by utilizing automation solutions.

II. Cooperation with New York Law School's Center for Patent Innovations

   The USPTO is cooperating with Peer To Patent, organized by the New York
Law School's Center for Patent Innovations, which will manage the public
aspects of the pilot. More information on this initiative can be found at
http://peertopatent.tumblr.com/abouttheproject. [This link to a non-Federal
Government Web site does not imply endorsement of this particular organization
or the content on that site]. Peer To Patent will be responsible for the
management of the Internet-based review process by the public that will result
in the submission to the USPTO of up to six (6) documents in any participating
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application as described below. The USPTO did not establish Peer To Patent,
and will not set the membership or agenda, nor assume authority or control
over Peer To Patent. The USPTO and Peer To Patent are independent entities,
and are not agents of each other. Neither party is authorized or empowered to
act on behalf of the other with regard to any contract, warranty, or
representation as to any matter, and neither party will be bound by the acts
or conduct of the other. The USPTO reserves the right to discontinue this
pilot program if continuation is not in the best interests of the USPTO.

   The USPTO will provide Peer To Patent with published patent application
data to aid in the administration of the pilot.

III. Overview and Discussion of the Process

   The USPTO is authorized to engage in this pilot under 35 U.S.C. § 2(b)(11),
which provides that the USPTO "may conduct programs, studies, or exchanges of
items or services regarding domestic and international intellectual property
law and the effectiveness of intellectual property protection domestically and
throughout the world," and 15 U.S.C. § 1525, which provides that the USPTO
"may engage in joint projects, or perform services, on matters of mutual
interest, the cost of which shall be apportioned equitably."

   A limited number of volunteer applicants with unexamined applications
classified in the areas specified below will have the opportunity to consent
to the placement of their published applications onto the Peer To Patent Web
site for the purposes of collaborative review. Peer To Patent is a non-USPTO
Web site developed by New York Law School for this pilot program. These
applications will be analyzed by members of the public, who, in an organized
manner using Internet Peer Review techniques, will determine the (up to) six
(6) most pertinent documents, which will be submitted to the USPTO under a
waiver of certain sections of both 37 CFR 1.99 and 1.291.

   The volunteer applicants must consent to have comments submitted with each
of the documents explaining how the documents relate to the disclosed
invention as defined by the claims of the application. This pilot program will
accept requests for participation from October 25, 2010, until September 30,
2011, or until one thousand (1,000) participating applications have been
accepted into the pilot, whichever occurs first. The period for receiving Peer
to Patent submissions into accepted applications will terminate February 3,
2012, or eighteen (18) weeks after the latest date on which an application is
accepted into the program, whichever occurs last. Results will be compiled and
published in a report on the effectiveness of this public submission process.
As the USPTO will be approving applications for participation in the pilot,
requests to participate received after the close of the pilot will be
dismissed as moot.

   To facilitate this pilot, notwithstanding any provision of Title 37 of the
Code of Federal Regulations, the USPTO will accept submissions from Peer To
Patent for certain (i.e., accepted) applications that:

        (1) are received by the USPTO no later than 18 weeks after the
            publication of the application.
        (2) are limited to six (6) or fewer prior art documents and
            accompanying comments for consideration by the USPTO during the
            examination process. Only comments regarding the relevance of the
            submitted documents as prior art will be considered. Other
            comments, such as comments on the applicability of 35 U.S.C.
            § 112 or 35 U.S.C. § 101, will not be considered; these comments
            will be either redacted or discarded in their entirety by the
            USPTO.

   In order to facilitate the operation of the pilot program and to collect
an adequate sample of data from which to make an effective quantitative
evaluation, this pilot program will be restricted to applications classified
in areas specified in the classes and subclasses designated in the list posted
and available at http://www.uspto.gov/patents/init_events/class_subclasses_
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FY2011pilot.jsp. With the exception of the provisions of the limited waiver of
37 CFR 1.99 and 1.291, the examination process for these applications will be
performed in the normal manner following established USPTO procedure. However,
participating applications will be advanced out of turn for examination for
the initial examination on the merits so the pilot can be reviewed in an
appropriate time frame.

   Effective October 25, 2010, the USPTO will waive aspects of 37 CFR 1.99
and 1.291 for submissions presented under and meeting the conditions of this
program. All other submissions made under either 37 CFR 1.99 or 1.291,
including those submitted during the Peer To Patent time window in accepted
applications, will not be affected by this waiver. This pilot program does not
affect any procedures permitted under 37 CFR 1.99 and 1.291, nor does it
violate 35 U.S.C. § 122 as applicants must provide a certification and request
to participate in the Peer Review Pilot Program (Form PTO/SB/422) that
includes an express written consent to the inclusion of the explanations
submitted by Peer To Patent coordinators regarding how the prior art documents
relate to the disclosed invention as defined by the claims.

A. Requirements and Conditions Applicable to Applicants

   For the purposes of this pilot, the existing requirements of 37 CFR 1.99
and 1.291 will be waived for submissions that comply with the following
conditions:

        (1) Applicant will submit to the USPTO a certification and request to
            participate in the Peer Review Pilot Program (Form PTO/SB/422)
            (signed by all assignees, if any, owning an undivided interest in
            the application, or all inventors if the application is not
            assigned) as specified below for a specific application to
            participate in the program. The certification and request to
            participate in the Peer Review Pilot Program (Form PTO/SB/422)
            may be executed by a legal representative of the assignee(s), if
            any, or if no assignee, by a legal representative of the
            inventor(s). See 37 CFR 1.33 and 37 CFR 11.18.

           (a) The certification and request to participate in the Peer Review
               Pilot Program (Form PTO/SB/422) includes an express written
               authorization for the Peer To Patent submission to the USPTO
               to include comments describing the relevance of the documents
               to the disclosed invention as defined by the claims of the
               application. Applicants will be required to use the USPTO-
               prepared certification and request form (Form PTO/SB/422)
               located at: http://www.uspto.gov/patents/init_events/
               peerpriorartpilotindex.jsp.

           (b) The USPTO will accept no more than 25 total requests to
               participate in the Peer Review Pilot Program (corresponding to
               25 total separate applications) from an applicant and
               applicant's assignee (to include parents, subsidiaries, and
               sister organizations). Patent applications that participate in
               the peer review process, but are not granted advancement of
               examination for any reason (e.g., because they do not receive
               at least one document submitted as a potential reference) will
               not be counted against the 25 total for any one applicant, and
               will be redocketed to the order of examination they would have
               held if the application had not been elected for participation
               in the peer review project.

        (2) To ensure a representative sample of participants, the USPTO will
            initially reserve at least 150 (i.e., 15% of the total) of the
            participation slots for small entities as defined by 37 CFR 1.27.
            The USPTO will revisit this allocation during the course of the
            pilot and adjust as deemed appropriate to support the goals of
            the pilot program.

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        (3) Timing. There are two considerations that affect timing of
            participation of a volunteered application:  (a) the filing of the
            certification and request to participate in the Peer Review Pilot
            Program (Form PTO/SB/422), and (b) the posting capacity of the
            Peer To Patent Web site.

           (a) The certification and request to participate in the Peer Review
               Pilot Program (Form PTO/SB/422) is timely in relation to the
               publication of the application. As described in detail below
               in the section labeled "Timing Considerations," the timing of
               the publication of the application must provide a period no
               less than three (3) months and no more than four (4) months for
               posting (and evaluation) at the Peer To Patent Web site.
               Therefore, a certification and request to participate in the
               Peer Review Pilot Program (Form PTO/SB/422) for an eligible
               application must be submitted to the pilot no later than one
               (1) month following the publication date to be considered for
               participation in the pilot.

           (b) The actual timing of the posting of the applications may vary
               due to capacity limitations of the Peer To Patent Web site.

        (4) The Application must not have previously been granted special
status or requested treatment under any of the following currently available
programs or similar future programs:  Accelerated Examination, the Patent
Prosecution Highway, the First Action Interview Pilot Program, the Patent
Application Backlog Reduction Stimulus Plan, or the Pilot Program for Green
Technologies Including Greenhouse Gas Reduction. (See http://www.uspto.gov/
patents/init_events/index.jsp for details on any of these programs including
links to the relevant Federal Register and Official Gazette publications.)

   The USPTO will determine if the certification and request to participate
in the Peer Review Pilot Program (Form PTO/SB/422) and associated application
meet all of the USPTO requirements for this pilot. If so, the USPTO will
notify applicant and the Peer To Patent coordinators of the inclusion of the
application in the pilot. If the certification and request to participate in
the Peer Review Pilot Program (Form PTO/SB/422) and application do not meet
all requirements or the pilot has ended, the applicant will be notified of the
decision not to include the application in the pilot.

B. Requirements and Conditions Applicable to the Third-Party Submitter

   After an application has been accepted into the pilot and has been posted
at the Peer To Patent Web site for the appropriate period, the third-party
submissions (the peer review consisting of prior art and comments) will be
forwarded by Peer To Patent to the USPTO. The Peer To Patent submission must
comply with the following conditions:

        (1) The submission forwarded by Peer To Patent must be received by the
            USPTO no later than 18 weeks after the publication date of the
            application. It is expected that this period will allow sufficient
            time to complete the Internet-based peer process.

        (2) The submission may include up to six (6) prior art documents and
            accompanying comments for consideration by the USPTO during the
            examination process. Only comments regarding the relevance of the
            submitted documents as prior art will be considered. Other
            comments, such as comments on the applicability of 35 U.S.C.
            § 112 or 35 U.S.C. § 101, will not be considered; these comments
            will be either redacted or discarded in their entirety by the
            USPTO.
        (3) Each submission will be accompanied by the form that is located
            at:
            http://www.uspto.gov/patents/init_events/peerpriorartpilotindex.jsp.

C. Examination by the USPTO
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        (1) Applications that successfully complete the posting and review
            process as outlined above with at least one prior art reference
            document submitted to the USPTO from Peer To Patent will receive
            advancement of examination for the first Office action on the
            merits, "to expedite the business of the Office" (see 37 CFR
            1.102(a)) so the results of the pilot program can be obtained in a
            timely manner. The application will receive a first action using
            the USPTO's usual procedures, with the examiner reviewing the
            Peer To Patent submission as well as all documents produced from
            the normal USPTO search. Data will be maintained on the use of the
            documents submitted under the program and summary statistics will
            be publicly available. Examiners will consider all documents and
            comments provided in the Peer To Patent submission consistent
            with the treatment of any such evidence and remarks submitted in
            an application. Examiners will only consider comments regarding
            the application of the submitted documents as prior art. Other
            comments, such as comments on the applicability of 35 U.S.C. § 112
            or 35 U.S.C. § 101, will not be considered. Such comments will be
            either redacted or discarded in their entirety by the USPTO and
            will not be provided to the examiner.

        (2) Further prosecution of the applications submitted under this
            program will continue in the conventional manner. No further
            submissions under the Peer To Patent pilot will be entered into
            the application file and the application will proceed according
            to the same timelines for action and response as any ordinary
            application.

IV. Program Administration

   Various details in the administration of this program and the processing
of applications submitted thereunder will be considered and resolved as they
arise. The USPTO will endeavor to conduct the pilot in a manner that will
elicit the best data for evaluation of the effectiveness of the submitted
documents, consistent with the proper prosecution of the participating
applications. For example, an applicant may be notified by the USPTO of any
defects found in the certification and request to participate in the Peer
Review Pilot Program (Form PTO/SB/422), and may receive an opportunity to
correct the defects. Similarly, the Peer To Patent coordinators may be
notified by the USPTO of any defects found in the submission, and may receive
an opportunity to correct the defects.

V. Timing Considerations

   The following examples illustrate some of the timing considerations of
which applicants should be aware:

Example 1:  Application Expected to Publish During Pilot.

   For example, an application filed during the month of May 2009, with no
benefit claim under 35 U.S.C. § 120 has a projected publication date during
the month of November 2010. In this situation, applicant may volunteer for
inclusion in the pilot program if the application meets the classification
requirement (see the list at
http://www.uspto.gov/patents/init_events/class_subclasses_FY2011pilot.jsp)
and is not excluded due to inclusion in, or requests for participation in,
other programs. (See item 4, in Section III.A above for the list of
exclusions.)  Provided the Peer To Patent Web site has sufficient capacity
for posting and evaluation of the application, the USPTO would consider this
application eligible for inclusion in the pilot.

Example 2:  Application Requires Request for Early Publication so as to
Publish During Pilot.

   Applications which do not have a projected publication date during the
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pilot may become eligible for participation provided applicant files a
Request for Early Publication (or voluntary publication, if the application
was filed prior to November 29, 2000) so as to induce publication during the
pilot period. For example, applicant might file an application during the
month of October 2010, along with the filing of a Request for Early
Publication. This application would have a projected date of publication
during the month of January 2011. In this situation, applicant may volunteer
for inclusion in the pilot if the application meets the classification
requirement (see the list at
http://www.uspto.gov/patents/init_events/class_subclasses_FY2011pilot.jsp)
and is not excluded due to inclusion in, or requests for participation in,
other programs. Provided the Peer To Patent Web site has sufficient capacity
for posting and evaluation of the application, the USPTO would consider this
application eligible for inclusion in the pilot.

Example 3:  Application Previously Published.

   An application published prior to the start of the pilot program is still
eligible for participation if the certification and request to participate in
the Peer Review Pilot Program (Form PTO/SB/422) is submitted to the pilot no
later than one (1) month following the publication date.

VI. Other Conditions Not Imposed by the USPTO

   Participation in this pilot program may be subject to further conditions
as indicated by the Peer To Patent coordinators, who are responsible for the
prior art submission. The USPTO has no responsibility for these further
restrictions.

   For instance, in the timing consideration examples provided above an
application may be accepted for the pilot, yet not be available for posting
on the Peer To Patent Web site because the Web site is handling its maximum
capacity of current participants.

VII. Results

   In addition to statistical data on participation rates and the number of
prior art references found and utilized by the USPTO, this pilot will be
evaluating the effectiveness of the process more closely as it relates to
patent examination efficiency and quality and peer participation behaviors.
This pilot will test whether a peer review process is a viable addition to
the normal processes of the USPTO and as an option for applicants to choose
among the other products offered by the USPTO.

VIII. Additional Information

   For further information on this pilot, please e-mail
PeerReviewPilot2011@USPTO.gov or contact Jack Harvey, Director, Technology
Center 2100, at Jack.Harvey@USPTO.gov. General inquiries on the Peer To Patent
Web site may be addressed to info@peertopatent.org.

                                                            DAVID J. KAPPOS
                                            Under Secretary of Commerce for
                                  Intellectual Property and Director of the
                                  United States Patent and Trademark Office

                                 [1361 OG 230]