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In the United States, the first to invent is entitled to obtain
a patent on an invention. When more than one patent application is
filed by different inventors or groups of inventors claiming an
identical invention, the U.S. Patent Office may hold an
interference proceeding to determine the first inventor(s). This
determination focuses on the date of invention by establishing the
competing inventors' dates of conception and reduction to
practice, and potentially, the diligence of the parties to reduce
their invention to practice following conception. Similarly,
establishing the date of invention to determine the first to invent
or to antedate prior art may be required in litigation.
Paper lab notebooks have long been accepted as evidence of
invention in interference proceedings at the Patent Office.
Properly kept paper lab notebooks are well suited as evidence of
conception, reduction to practice, and diligence, and as proof of
the contribution of parties to an invention because they provide a
complete, continuous record on consecutively numbered pages
containing data and results, narrative, names, dates, and
signatures. Paper lab notebooks can be signed and dated by
non-inventor witnesses, which is important because as a matter of
law, one cannot establish the date of invention without
corroboration. Further, paper lab notebooks can be stored for
decades and can be authenticated by ink and paper dating.
Although paper lab notebooks will continue to be well accepted
for Patent Office purposes, in many cases the advance of technology
is making them obsolete for their primary purpose, that is, for use
by researchers to record their results. Paper lab notebooks are not
well suited to storing large data sets, are limited as to the types
of graphical representations that can be included, cannot be easily
shared over the Internet, and are not electronically searchable. To
overcome these drawbacks, electronic notebooks are increasingly
replacing paper lab notebooks.
According to the United States Patent Office, electronic records
are admissible in patent interferences: "To the same
extent that electronic records are admissible under the Federal
Rules of Evidence," which requires authentication by
sufficient evidence that the record in question is what its
proponent claims it to be. Thus, admitting into evidence electronic
lab notebooks that haven't been prepared with
authentication in mind may be difficult. Unless a system is in
place that rules out uncontrolled access, system errors, hacking,
etc., electronic lab notebooks may be subject to accusations of
tampering or other alteration of files, date changes, and
difficulty in proving the authenticity of signatures. In view of
these potential problems in authenticating electronic records, the
Court in Lorraine v. Markle Am. Ins., 241 F.R.D. 534 (D.
Md. 2007) warned "If it is critical to the success of your
case to admit into evidence computer stored records, it would be
prudent to plan to authenticate the record by the most rigorous
standard that may be applied." Therefore, a custodian of
electronic records should be able to establish the trustworthiness
of the records being submitted by testifying to details of the
computer system and software, computer policy, control of access to
the system, recording and logging of changes, backup practices, and
audit procedures. In short, one must provide evidence that the
electronic records being submitted have not been altered from the
original records, that signatures are authentic, and that dates are
accurate.
Technologies have been developed to support the verification of
electronically stored information and thereby satisfy the rigorous
requirements of authentication. For example, the Public Key
Infrastructure (PKI) uses cryptographic keys to apply authenticable
digital signatures and digital time stamps to electronic documents.
Also, the SAFE-BioPharma Association protocol is an example of an
industrydeveloped standard for applying digital signatures and
timestamps to electronic documents (www.safe-biopharma.org ).
The switch to electronic lab notebooks appears inevitable, if it
has not already occurred, in most areas of research. Although the
path to widespread acceptance of the use of electronic notebooks as
evidence has seen many questions raised about the reliability of
computer stored records, if properly authenticated, electronic lab
notebooks are admissible in patent interference proceedings and in
court proceedings. However, to guarantee that electronic lab
notebooks can be relied upon as admissible evidence in the future,
careful thought must be given now about how to create, store, and
authenticate the records, including providing foundational
testimony as to the trustworthiness of the electronic records, to
satisfy potential future scrutiny.
The content of this article is intended to provide a general
guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought
about your specific circumstances.
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