Requirements for Disclosure of Information on Prior Art
Documents in Japan
The prior art information
disclosure system (IDS system) was introduced in Japan in September
2002.
I. Overview
l
The prior art information disclosure system was introduced in
September 2002.
l
All patent applications filed after September 2002 are
required to disclose the prior art information.
l
However, the effect of a violation is so minimal that an
application once patented will not become invalidated.
II. The IDS system
applies to the following applications:
l
All Japanese domestic applications and all international
applications filed after September 1, 2002.
l
In case of a PCT application entering into the Japanese
national phase, an IDS system is required only for
applications whose international filing date falls after
September 1, 2002.
lIn
case of a divisional application, an IDS system is required
if the parent application was filed after September 1, 2002.
III. Methods for
the information disclosure
l
At least one publication should be listed in "Background"
section of a patent specification.
l
Only publication or literature is acceptable, including
electronically formatted Web documents available online.
l
If an applicant has a number of prior arts, an applicant can
disclose only the major ones that are most relevant.
lIf a prior art
is a patent publication, the following information has to be
provided: its application number, publication number or patent
number.
l
For a non-patent publication, including a dissertation, a
thesis or any kind of electronically formatted non-patent
document, the following information is required: the name of
the document, name of the organization published, publisher,
date of presentation, published date, volume, number, cited
page number(s), and/or URL address and online published date.
l
An applicant does not have to submit the original or duplicate
copies of publications. However, depending on the case, the
examiner sometimes asks for the documents for examination
purposes. Only in this case, an applicant is required to
submit copies of publications about prior arts.
lIf
there are no prior arts to disclose, an applicant must state
the reason in the patent specification.
IV. Effects of
Disclosure
l
If a specification does not include any
information on prior arts nor a reason for not including the
prior arts, an official action will be issued from the JPO.
Upon receiving the official action, the applicant can file
an amendment according to the examiner's request.
l
Failure in disclosure could result in the rejection by
examiners but will not invalidate the patent after issued. In
other words, negligence of the duty has no effect on the
validity of the patent right.
l
Therefore, even if the fact that a patentee, who had known the
availability of the prior arts relevant to the invention in
question, did not disclose the prior art information is
discovered after a patent is obtained, there is no legal
effect on the issued patent.
l
However, a patentee knowingly neglecting to follow this system
may face indirect disadvantages when attempting to enforce
his/her rights.
If you have any questions regarding the
Japanese IDS system, please feel free to
e-mail us.
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