Free access to international intellectual property
The sovereign patent, which is freely accessible and has a global and long-term scope, opens up a new way for all startups to take advantage of international IP. It is a private title that is qualitatively superior to a state title in that it does not presume that the true author of the creation is the applicant for the patent. The author is required to prove that he is the first inventor.
In contrast to the state patent, no fees are payable and no examination is required before delivery. This patent book enjoys immediate copyright protection in all countries that have signed the Berne Convention, for the lifetime of the author and for at least 50 years after his death.
Doubling R&D in the service of ecology
Thanks to the new IP title, all startups and SMEs are able to offer venture capitalists attractive returns on their innovations. Private research and development (R&D) to combat global warming and restore the earth's ecological balance can be financed to the extent required. It's expected that the level of R&D will soon more than double.
There will be a trend reversal in the ecology of the economy. Technological progress will no longer be used to develop environmentally harmful activities. New practices will be introduced so that applicants can only benefit from IP if they serve the common good and the ecology of the planet.
A patent must have the same quality as that of a Nobel Prize winner
The current state patent system is vulnerable because it frequently fails to identify the true inventors. In the Gallo-Montagnier case, Gallo was awarded the patent for AIDS screening. After a dispute, the presidents of France and the USA agreed on a 50/50 split of the invention. Professor Gallo's fraud was then uncovered, and 25 years later Montagnier was recognized as the only true inventor and awarded the Nobel Prize.
The novelty examination by the State Office officials, which takes place on average three years after the filing