Headquartered within steps of the USPTO with an affiliate office in Tokyo, Oblon is one of the largest law firms in the United States focused exclusively on intellectual property law.
1968
Norman Oblon with Stanley Fisher and Marvin Spivak launched what was to become Oblon, McClelland, Maier & Neustadt, LLP, one of the nation's leading full-service intellectual property law firms.
Outside the US, we service companies based in Japan, France, Germany, Italy, Saudi Arabia, and farther corners of the world. Our culturally aware attorneys speak many languages, including Japanese, French, German, Mandarin, Korean, Russian, Arabic, Farsi, Chinese.
Oblon's professionals provide industry-leading IP legal services to many of the world's most admired innovators and brands.
From the minute you walk through our doors, you'll become a valuable part of a team that fosters a culture of innovation, client service and collegiality.
The United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) issued final rules implementing the inventor's oath or declaration provisions of the America Invents Act (AIA) on August 14, 2012.
Les Nouvelles - Licensing Executives Society International (LESI)
Under the new directive, RCE's will be processed like Divisional and Continuation applications. RCEs will be given priority over regular applications. However, there is no longer a 2 month deadline, so the RCE will no longer be acted on immediately. Our experience is that the typical delay from filing a continuation and divisional applications to first office action is 6 to 9 months, so an Amendment filed with an RCE will probably not receive an action for a comparable time period. The Patent Office Examiner Union (POPA) has voted to approve the PTO's proposed changes to the examiner count system. Under the revised counting system the examiner will receive extra credit for first actions (1.25 counts) and reduced credit for RCEs (0.75 counts for the first RCE and 0.5 counts for the 2nd and subsequent RCEs). Previously RCEs and first actions both were one count. The revised system will also reduce the number of cases an examiner must dispose of each quarter to meet his production goal.