Prior Art in the Library of Congress
Business Reference Services is the starting point for conducting research at the Library of Congress in the subject areas of business and economics. On the Library of Congress website, reference specialists in specific subject areas of business assist patrons in formulating search strategies and gaining access to the information and materials contained in the Library's rich collections of business and economics materials.
IP.com`s Intellectual Property Library is in the links of the Library of Congress Business References for Patents. This isn't the only way in which the Library of Congress collaborates with IP.com to record and preserve a permanent record of prior art, assuring that the modern, digital record of prior art is permanently recorded in the traditional print collections of the Library of Congress.
The IP.com Journal is the print and CD counterpart to the IP.com Prior Art Database. The IP.com Journal is published twice per month. It contains all disclosures digitally notarized and made available since the previous publication. It may also contain some disclosures which have been marked to appear in the print journal prior to being made available online. The IP.com Journal is just one of the methods that IP.com employs to ensure that disclosures published to our databases are permanent and forever available. Each edition of the journal is distributed to libraries and law offices around the world .
The IP.com Journal contains a table of contents of included disclosures, printed summary information for each disclosure, an index of keywords, and one or more CD-ROM disks containing each complete disclosure along with its digital notarization record.
Most searchers access Prior Art data from the website or from a periodic data-feed. However, IP.com also distributes physical copies of IP.com Journal to various locations, including the Library of Congress.
- Australian Patent Office
- Austrian Patent Office
- Commissioner of Patents - Ontario, Canada
- European Patent Office (EPO)
- German Patent and Trademark Office
- Hungarian Patent Office
- Instituto Nacional de Propiedad Industrial - Argentina
- Intellectual Property Office of New Zealand
- Japanese Patent Office (JPO)
- National Board of Patents and Registration - Finland
- National Institute of Industrial Property - Brazil
- National Institute of Industrial Property - France
- Netherlands Industiral Property Office
- Norwegian Patent Office
- Patent Office of the People's Republic of Bangladesh
- Patent Office of India
- Russian Patent Office (ROSPATENT)
- State Intellectual Property Office of the People's Republic of China (SIPO)
- South African Patent and Trademark Office
- Swedish Patent Office
- Swiss Federal Intellectual Property Institute
- Taipei Intellectual Property Office
- United Kingdom Patent Office
- USPTO Scientific and Technical Information Center
- Chemical Abstracts
- Denver Public Library - Patent and Trademark Depository Library
- Napier University - Sighthill Campus
- NY Public Library - Science, Industry, and Business Library
- Rochester Institute of Technology - Wallace Library
- Sunnyvale Public Library - Sunnyvale Center for Innovation, Inventions and Ideas
- The British Library - Patents Section
- United States Library of Congress
The Prior Art Database is a vehicle for defensively publishing ideas (often as "technical disclosures") in order to prevent someone else from patenting them. It assures an invention's novelty is established around the world.
The Prior Art Database is the venue of choice for the world's most innovative corporations, including IBM, Siemens, Motorola and many others. It allows both individuals and corporations to publish and search reliably, with the assurance that published technical disclosures are part of the permanent record of prior art in such established library collections with the added security of a digital notational record, its "fingerprint"of the time and date of public disclosure of every innovation published in IP.com's Prior Art Database.


