description of how your invention addresses a technical problem
list of figures
detailed description of your invention
one example of intended use
a sequence listing if relevant
The excess is the novel method of introducing currency into the system.
Instead of Fractional Banking we have fractal banking
The value is priceless as an invention it has the possibility of remaking the
whole financial system, redefining the whole structure.
Base Dozenal (12)
1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,*,#, 10
10% (1/12) Through the portal of the sign-up person or organization. This is
a focus to bring in organization who can themselves bring a lot of groups or
individual under them
10% ( 12/12) Ring One - 12
10% Ring Two - 144%
10% Ring Three - 1728
10% Ring Four - 20,728
10% The whole MD..XL..
10% The top 10% in excess generation
20% Overhead, events, etc.
10% Free offerings - software, fonts, coupons, etc.
10% For ecological costs
10% Investor sharing based on the e% of the total amount invested shared on a
prorated basis.
10% Is taken from the lowest in Eco rating a given to the highest in eco
rating.
This amount is divided into half with each group Dimension 1 having to
addresses, one local and one Global. So the division is 5% to each one. One of
the addresses is producer and the other is consumer so in any transactions the
surplus gift is divided between the two Holomids. The global is connected to the
opposite in wealth base. So the poorest area gets a riches address and the
richest gets a poorest address. The middle is balanced between the two. The
producer is local and the consumer is global. So a consumer in California might
be linked to producers in Africa. 50% of each holomid is local and 50% is
global.
If the group does not do the minimum they are downkeyed and are not eligible
for the sharing.
Each person/group is given a unique logo based on
Iso/Docdac type
Image overlay
Color
Lightness
75/25 rule - As a principle 75% of the cost goes to the producer and 25% is
distributed through MD..XL..
Recapitalizing - As the value so the whole goes up the lines of credit go up.
Ring 1 - 1 Credits each
Ring 2 - 12 Credits each
Ring 3 - 144 Credits each
Ring 4 - 1723 Credits each
12 to 5th 20,728 Credits each or 248,736 times 20,728 credits or around 5
billion credits
See Solari and The Mystery of Capital
These credits circulate become a new currency backed by the total value of
the Holomids.
The optimal size of a city is around 20,000 according to many studies
To begin, it might be helpful to just jot down brief notes and points to
cover from each of the above headings. As you polish your description into its
final form, you can use the outline suggested below.
Continue by offering background information that people will need to:
understand, search for, or examine, your invention.
Discuss the problems that inventors have faced in this area and how they have
attempted to solve them. This is often called giving the prior art. Prior art is
the published body of knowledge that relates to your invention. It is at this
point that applicants frequently quote previous similar patents.
The problem is that marketing systems especially network of Multi-level
marketing concentrate returns to a few while the many are not compensated or
share in the benefits. This is true also in traditional economic models. Also
the incentive is to benefit while the total marketing network does not.
Then state in general terms how your invention solves one or several of these
problems. What you are trying to show is how your invention is new and
different.
This invention solves this problem by distributing the returns to many while
at the same time benefiting the initiator of the activity. Another advantage is
that the whole group is motivated to help the success of each person or
organization involved.
List the drawings giving the figure number and a brief description of what
the drawings illustrate. Remember to refer to drawings throughout the detailed
description and to use the same reference numbers for each element.
Describe your intellectual property in detail. For an apparatus or product,
describe each part, how they fit together and how they work together. For a
process, describe each step, what you start with, what you need to do to make
the change, and the end result. For a compound include the chemical formula, the
structure and the process which could be used to make the compound. You need to
make the description fit all the possible alternatives that relate to your
invention. If a part can be made out of several different materials, say so. You
should aim to describe each part in sufficient detail so that someone could
reproduce at least one version of your invention.
If relevant to your type of invention, provide the sequence listing of your
compound. The sequence is part of the description and is not included with any
drawings.
Tips on writing patent claims for a patent application.
Claims are the parts of a patent which define the boundaries of patent
protection. Patent claims are the legal basis for your patent protection. They
form a protective boundary line around your patent that lets others know when
they are infringing on your rights. The limits of this line are defined by the
words and phrasing of your claims.
As the claims are key to receiving complete protection for your invention,
you may wish to seek professional help to ensure that they are properly drafted.
When writing this section you should consider the scope, characteristics, and
structure of the claims.
Scope
Each claim should have only one meaning which can be either broad or narrow,
but not both at the same time.
In general a narrow claim specifies more details than a broader claim. Having
many claims, where each one is a different scope allows you to have legal title
to several aspects of your invention.
Important Characteristics
Three criteria to take note of when drafting your claims are that they should
clear, complete, and supported. Every claim must be one sentence, as long or as
short a sentence as required to be complete.
Be Clear
Your claim must be clear so that you do not cause the reader to speculate
about the claim. If you find yourself using words such as "thin", "strong", "a
major part", "such as", "when required", then you are probably not being clear
enough. These words force the reader to make a subjective judgment, not an
objective observation.
Be Complete
Each claim should be complete, so that it covers the inventive feature and
enough elements around it to put the invention in the proper context.
Be Supported
The claims have to be supported by the description. This means that all the
characteristics of your invention that form part of the claims must be fully
explained in the description. In addition, any terms you use in the claims must
be either found in the description or clearly inferred from the description.
Structure
A claim is a single sentence composed of three parts: the introductory
phrase, the body of the claim, and the link that joins the two.
The introductory phrase identifies the category of the invention and
sometimes the purpose for example, a machine for waxing paper, or a composition
for fertilizing soil. The body of the claim is the specific legal description of
the exact invention which is being protected.
The linking consists of words and phrases such as:
which comprises
including
consisting of
consisting essentially of
Note that the linking word or phrase describes how the body of the claim
relates to the introductory phrase. The linking words are also important in
assessing the scope of the claim as they can be restrictive or permissive in
nature.
In the following example, "A data input device" is the introductory phrase,
"comprising" is the linking word, and the rest of the claim is the body.
Example of a Patent Claim
"A data input device comprising: an input surface adapted to be locally
exposed to a pressure or pressure force, a sensor means disposed below the input
surface for detecting the position of the pressure or pressure force on the
input surface and for outputting an output signal representing said position
and, an evaluating means for evaluating the output signal of the sensor
means."
Keep in Mind
Just because one of your claims is objected to does not mean that the rest of
your claims are invalid. Each claim is evaluated on its own merit. This is why
it is important to make claims on all aspects of your invention to ensure that
you receive the most protection possible. Here are some tips on writing your
claims.
Decide which are the essential elements of your invention that you want to
claim exclusive rights to. These elements should be the ones that distinguish
your invention from known technology.
Begin with your broadest claims and then progress to narrower claims.
Start claims on a new page (separate from the description) and number each
claim using Arabic numbers starting with 1.
Precede your claims with a short statement such as "I claim:". In some
patents this reads as "The embodiments of the invention in which an exclusive
property or privilege is claimed are defined as follows:"
Check to see that each claim consists of an introduction, linking word, and
body.
One way of ensuring that specific inventive features are included in several
or all claims is to write an initial claim and refer to it in claims of narrower
scope. In this example from a patent for an electrical connector, the first
claim is referred to frequently by subsequent claims. This means that all the
features in the first claim are also included in the subsequent claims. As more
features are added the claims become narrower in scope.
Tips on Writing a Patent Application Abstract
More Tips on Writing Patent Applications
. Patent Guide
. Instructions on Writing Patent Application
. Drawings
. Description
. Claims
. Abstract
The abstract is a short summary of your invention. It is a condensed version
of your patent where you abstract, or take out the essence of your invention.
Abstracts are used primarily for searching patents. They should be written in
a way to make the invention easily understood by those with a background in the
field. The reader should quickly be able to get a sense of the nature of the
invention so that they can decide whether they need to read the rest of the
patent.
The abstract describes your invention and says how it can be used, but does
not discuss the scope of your claims.
To write your abstract:
Give the page a title such as "Abstract" or "Abstract of the Specification"
for the CIPO. For the USPTO use "Abstract of the Disclosure."
Say what your invention is.
Say what your invention is used for.
Describe the main components and how they work.
Don't refer to any claims, drawings or other elements of your application.
Since your abstract may be read on its own the reader will not understand
references to other parts of your application.
It may take you a couple of tries to fit your summary into 150 words or less
for the CIPO and for the USPTO. Read it over a few times to eliminate
unnecessary words and jargon. Try to avoid removing the articles such as 'a',
'an' or 'the' as this can make the abstract difficult to read.
Here are two examples of abstracts. One is from a patent for a collapsible
tent frame and the other is from a patent for an electrical connector.
How to file a patent application for a non-provisional utility patent.
A patent application is a complex legal document and should be prepared by
someone trained to prepare such documents. After reading this guide, you may
wish to consult with a registered patent attorney or agent. However, getting
educated in the patent application process makes you an informed consumer.
Types of Patents
There are three types of patents, utility, design, and plant. There are also
two subtypes of utility and plant patents called provisional and nonprovisional.
The majority of patents are for nonprovisional utility patents.
Don't know what kind of patent application you need? Read A Guide To
Patenting to learn more about the basics.
Nonprovisional Utility Patent
This tutorial contains information to assist you in filing your
nonprovisional utility patent application.
It discusses the required parts of a utility patent and how to prepare and
file your patent application.
Patent applications follow a format derived from the patent laws and
regulations, found at Title 35 of the United States Code (U.S.C.), and Title 37
of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR).
It is not always necessary to read these laws and regulations in order to
file a patent application. However, the application is a legal document and you
might have to reference this material or want to. You will find it all
referenced below.
Reference Material
Manual of Patent Examining Procedure
Title 37 - Patent Rules
Title 35 - Patent Laws
With your patent application an application transmittal form/letter should be
included to instruct the USPTO as to what actual types of papers you are filing
and the amount and type of filing fees you are paying. You will not know what
your initials fees will be until you know how many claims you will be
making.
Also, an application data sheet may be voluntarily submitted with your patent
application. The application data sheet contains bibliographic data, arranged in
a format specified by the Patent Office.
Utility Patent Musts
A nonprovisional utility patent application must include a specification,
including a claim or claims; drawings, when necessary; an oath or declaration;
and the prescribed filing fee. All in the right format.
Remember the application you write eventually becomes your patent. It is a
legal document that must be written clearly, precisely and in a particular
format. If you have read a few patents, you may have found the language and
style difficult to understand. But the more you become familiar with the
structure of a patent document, the clearer the descriptions and claims will
become. Keep in mind that there is a reason they are written this way. It's to
make your invention and claims clear to the examiner and anyone else reading
your patent.
A nonprovisional utility patent application must be in the English language
or it must be accompanied by a verified translation in the English language and
an extra fee.
Paper Formats
All papers which are to become part of the permanent records of the USPTO
must be typewritten or produced by a mechanical (or computer) printer.
The text must be in permanent black ink or its equivalent.
It has to be printed on a single side of the paper.{/li]
The paper must be in portrait orientation.
It has to be white paper and the pages have to be all the same size.
The paper has to be flexible, strong, smooth, non-shiny, durable, and without
holes.
Don't use old, delicate, dirty, or damaged paper.
Don't use stiff cardboard.
Don't use punched paper.
You can use regular, new, white inkjet paper.
The paper size must be either:
21.6 cm.
by 27.9 cm. (8 1/2 by 11 inches), or
21.0 cm. by 29.7 cm. (DIN size A4).
The margins must be:
There must be a left margin of at least 2.5 cm. (1 inch)
There must be top, right, and bottom margins of at least 2.0 cm. (3/4
inch).
Computer program listings, when submitted as part of the specification:
Must be direct printouts (not copies) from the computer's printer
With dark, solid black letters not less than 0.21 cm. (0.08 inch) high (elite
type)
On white, unshaded and unlined paper
And the sheets should be submitted in a protective cover.
The requirements for any drawing pages are separate.
The Application Must Include
A nonprovisional utility patent application must include a specification,
including a claim or claims; drawings, when necessary; an oath or declaration;
and the prescribed filing fees. A complete nonprovisional utility patent
application should contain the elements listed below, arranged in the order
shown.
Utility Patent Application Transmittal Form or Transmittal Letter
Fee Transmittal Form and Appropriate Fees
Application Data Sheet
Specification (with at least one claim)
Drawings (when necessary)
Oath or Declaration
Writing the Specification For A Utility Patent
< Introduction
< Requirements
The specification is a written detailed description of the invention and how
to make and use the invention. The specification must be written in full, clear,
concise, and exact language that a person that is skilled in the technology
involved in your invention could make and use your invention. The patent office
examiner will be skilled in the technology involved with your invention.
Patent specifications are not written at a layperson's level of
understanding, they are written at an expert's level of understanding. In
addition, they are ways to write things based on legal interpretation that can
give you the best patent protection.
Writing the specification for a utility patent requires both technical and
legal skill.
Remember you must follow the Patent Office's paper format for anything you
prepare.
You can also file electronically (more about that at the end).
Formatting and Numbering The Pages
All the pages of the specification including claims and abstract, have to be
numbered consecutively, starting with 1. This does not apply to the transmittal
letter sheets or other forms.
The page numbers should be centrally located preferably below the text.
The text lines of the specification must be 1.5 or double spaced (lines of
other text not comprising the specification need not be 1.5 or double
spaced).
Include an indentation at the beginning of each new paragraph, and number the
paragraphs starting at (0001 etc.).
Use all of the section headings listed below to represent the different parts
of the specification. Section headings should be in all upper case letters
without underlining or bold type. If the section is not applicable to your
patent and contains no text, type the text "Not Applicable" following the
section heading.
Section Headings
Detailed instructions for each section heading will be on the pages following
this one.
TITLE OF INVENTION
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
STATEMENT REGARDING FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH OR DEVELOPMENT
REFERENCE TO A SEQUENCE LISTING, A TABLE, OR A COMPUTER PROGRAM, LISTING
COMPACT DISC APPENDIX
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWING
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
CLAIM OR CLAIMS
ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE
DRAWINGS (When Necessary)
OATH OR DECLARATION
SEQUENCE LISTING (When Necessary)
Writing the Specification For A Utility Patent
TITLE OF INVENTION
The title of the invention (or an introductory portion stating the name,
citizenship, residence of each applicant, and the title of the invention) should
appear as the heading on the first page of the specification. Although a title
may have up to 500 characters, the title must be as short and specific as
possible.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
Any nonprovisional utility patent application claiming the benefit of one or
more prior filed co-pending nonprovisional applications (or international
applications) under laws 120, 121 or 365(c) must contain in the first sentence
of the specification following the title, a reference to each prior application,
identifying it by the application number or international application number and
international filing date, and indicating the relationship of the applications,
or include the reference to the earlier application in an application data
sheet.
Cross-references to other related patent applications may be made when
appropriate.
STATEMENT REGARDING FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH OR DEVELOPMENT
The application should contain a statement as to rights to inventions made
under federally sponsored research and development (if any).
REFERENCE TO A SEQUENCE LISTING, A TABLE, OR A COMPUTER PROGRAM, LISTING
COMPACT DISC APPENDIX
Any material submitted separately on a compact disc must be referenced in the
specification. The only disclosure material accepted on compact disc are
computer program listings, gene sequence listings and tables of information. All
such information submitted on compact disc must compliant with rule 1.52(e), and
the specification must contain a reference to the compact disc and its contents.
The contents of compact disc files must be in standard ASCII character and file
formats. The total number of compact discs including duplicates and the files on
each compact disc must be specified.
If a computer program listing is to be submitted and is over 300 lines long
(each line of up to 72 characters), the computer program listing must be
submitted on a compact disc compliant with rule 1.96, and the specification must
contain a reference to the computer program listing appendix. A computer program
listing of 300 or less lines may similarly be submitted on compact disc. The
computer program listing on compact disc will not be printed with any patent or
patent application publication.
If a gene sequence listing is to be submitted, the sequence may be submitted
on a compact disc in compliance with laws 1.821, 1.822, 1.823, 1.824, and 1.825,
instead of submission on paper, and the specification must contain a reference
to the gene sequence listing on compact disc.
If a table of data is to be submitted, and such table would occupy more than
50 pages if submitted on paper, the table can be submitted on a compact disc
compliant with rule 1.58, and the specification must contain a reference to the
table on compact disc. The data in the table must properly align visually with
the associated rows and columns.
Writing The Specification And Descriptions For A Utility Patent
The description, together with the claims forms the bulk of your patent
application. It is here that you give a full account of your invention. The
description begins with background information relevant to the invention and
describes the invention in increasing levels of detail. One of your goals in
writing the description is to compose it so that someone skilled in your field
would be able to reproduce it just from reading your description and looking at
the drawings.
Reference Material
Tips on Writing the Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This section should include a statement of the field of endeavor to which the
invention pertains. This section may also include a paraphrasing of the
applicable U.S.
Definitions or the subject matter of the claimed invention. In the past, this
part of this section may have been titled "FIELD OF INVENTION" or "TECHNICAL
FIELD."
This section should also contain a description of information known to you,
including references to specific documents, which are related to your invention.
It should contain, if applicable, references to specific problems involved in
the prior art (or state of technology) which your invention is drawn toward. In
the past, this section may have been titled "DESCRIPTION OF THE RELATED ART" or
"DESCRIPTION OF PRIOR ART."
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
This section should present the substance or general idea of the claimed
invention in summarized form. The summary may point out the advantages of the
invention and how it solves previously existing problems, preferably those
problems identified in the BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION. A statement of the
object of the invention may also be included.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWING
Where there are drawings, you must include a listing of all figures by number
(e.g., Figure 1A) and with corresponding statements explaining what each figure
depicts.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
In this section, the invention must be explained along with the process of
making and using the invention in full, clear, concise, and exact terms. This
section should distinguish the invention from other inventions and from what is
old and describe completely the process, machine, manufacture, composition of
matter, or improvement invented. In the case of an improvement, the description
should be confined to the specific improvement and to the parts that necessarily
cooperate with it or which are necessary to completely understand the
invention.
It is required that the description be sufficient so that any person of
ordinary skill in the pertinent art, science, or area could make and use the
invention without extensive experimentation. The best mode contemplated by you
of carrying out your invention must be set forth in the description. Each
element in the drawings should be mentioned in the description. This section has
often, in the past, been titled "DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT."
Pyramid Focus vs. Holomid Whole-System Focus
Focusing on Things and Materialism
Factor
Focusing on Whole Systems
Mechanistic model in which observer & observed are seen separate,
unrelated and not connected in any way except by virtue of physical perception
in closed system entropy universe.
Physics
Taking into account more than a decade of discoveries in quantum physics, and
a model in which observer participates on a quantum consciousness level in
creating reality as we experience it; takes into account discoveries in science
which reveal that we live in an open system entropy universe which is expressed
through a definitive "holo-movement" - (Bohm), unfolding-enfolding
psychological system which perpetuates rigid outer roles, social
dysfunctionality; who has the power in the hierarchy? Imposition
of authoritarian concepts of emotional and mental health; Dictating the
healing process.
Understanding Mind and Behavior
Authentic self in dynamic relations; "learning organizations" (Senge);
Honoring each person's inner living process (Schaef); Healing as exploring each
person's own process in the context of spiritual growth
Inevitable conflict, Might makes Right; Carrot-Stick systems for control;
Justice as reward & punishment;
Laws serve those in power
"Politics, Law and Justice"
Partnerships in evolving systems;
Soul-expression instead of brute force; Developing individual potential;
"Justice" as each one doing what's theirs to do;
Laws serve the spectrum of human development on a temporary basis as they are
replaced by self-responsibility, conscious focus and evolutionary,
growth-oriented intent, individually and as a civilization.
Authoritarian, domination-control institutions: "Leviathan" solutions;
institutions solve problems; the numbers game; institutions exist to preserve
their own existence.
Institutions
Philosophies (maps) make institutions what they are for better or worse;
the power of individuals to change institutions-to dance a new dance ;
Institutions exist on a temporary basis to solve problems, not to serve
solutions.
Scarcity focus; economies are "out there," bound by impersonal, iron laws;
the game of "Monopoly" is the model for infinite business expansion, trashing
the environment and the population in the process.
Economies
Knowledge & creativity; economies reflect us and the maps we use; we
create our economies as evolving aspects of society which contribute toward the
evolution of both society and the planet as a whole; allows expansion of the
idea of "economy" into other levels.
"superstition of materialism"
(Chopra), reductionism, value-free, fact-only view of knowledge, etc.
Reality Model
Spiritual/holographic models; integrated systems including ideas and the
dynamics of consciousness itself.
Rethinking Assumptions, Strategies, Responses and Purposes
By Rethinking Our -
Material Mapping
Whole - System Mapping
Assumptions
Economic Reality
Scarcity: "unlimited desires" competing for "limited resources" Re: Monopoly
Model, Defunct Malthusian Model
Economic Reality
Know-how and Creativity: Managing creatively what we have and using order to
offset scarcity and evolve more efficient ways of doing things
Strategies
Economic Interaction
Maximizing Ownership of Things: Land, Labor, and Capital
What's Different: Who owns What or Whom
Hoarding Matter
One-Sided Gain (Win-Lose)
Economic Interaction
Developing Systems of Exchange:
What's common: Knowledge and Creativity
What's different:
How we Develop and Use Knowledge
Exchanging differences
Mutual Benefit (Win-Win)
Responses
Regulatory Response Shaped by Belief in:
A Dark End: human nature as inevitably selff-destructive, apocalyptic belief
systems,
a death-oriented cultural model
Self-interest as Selfishness
Competition, Bully Style
Domination of the many by the few; Suppression of knowledge, genocidal
action
Regulatory Response Shaped by Belief in:
The spectrum of human nature- in process and evolution of awareness and
capabilities of the planet.
Self-Betterment, enlightened by our relation to the collective good and the
spiritual continuum of the universe.
Cooperation
Liberty as an Ideal to approximate through Inner and Spiritual Growth
Purposes
Goal for acting is: To maximize control/ownership
of economies by :
Reducing them to fixed quantities of matter and Energy,
Controlling Information and Ignoring ideas and values
which turns economies into closed systems that run down and self destruct,
preserving an elite social class of profiteers which deliberately restrict the
evolution of society and the planet for personal gain.
Goal for acting is: To evolve economic systems of exchange by expanding them
from :
Matter to Energy
Energy to Information
Information to Consciousness and Ideas
which works as a method for breaking through limits & pursuing unlimited
possibilities in how we manage our "household" individually and as a
planet.
A True Prescription for Change
Well, as an individual I was the publisher of The Paradigm Conspiracy, and it
remains one of the proudest accomplishments of my professional career. The
Paradigm Conspiracy is a brilliant, powerful, and tremendously successful
synthesis of what is essentially "wrong" with our culture and its institutions.
The authors somehow are able to cast away the ephemera of intellectualism or
agenda and simply state what so many of us dared not speak: that there is
something essentially wrong here, and that it is only with a completely new
vision, accepted with courage, that the wrong can be made right. I am proud to
have been one of the champions of this book during my tenure as publisher, and
recommend all of Chris and Denise's books to every reader. Only, only through
this type of understanding personally and culturally can our culture advance.
Paradigm Conspiracy provides both the understanding and the means for true
transformation. Its reading is required of each of us.