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  2. Patent Act (Canada) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patent_Act_(Canada)

    The Patent Act (French: Loi sur les brevets) is Canadian federal legislation and is one of the main pieces of Canadian legislation governing patent law in Canada.It sets out the criteria for patentability, what can and cannot be patented in Canada, the process for obtaining a Canadian patent, and provides for the enforcement of Canadian patent rights.

  3. Canadian patent law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_patent_law

    Canadian patent law is the legal system regulating the granting of patents for inventions within Canada, and the enforcement of these rights in Canada.. A 'patent' is a government grant that gives the inventor—as well as their heirs, executors, and assignees—the exclusive right within Canada to make, use, and/or sell the claimed invention during the term of the patent, subject to adjudication.

  4. For a patent to be valid in Canada, the invention claimed therein needs to be new and inventive.In patent law, these requirements are known as novelty and non-obviousness.A patent cannot in theory be granted for an invention without meeting these basic requirements or at least, if a patent which does not meet these requirements is granted, it cannot later be maintained.

  5. Canadian intellectual property law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_intellectual...

    Patents may not generally be obtained for scientific principles, abstract theorems, ideas, methods of conducting business, computer programs, and medical treatments. Some exceptions have been made. Patents are protected in Canada by the Patent Act ( R.S.C. , 1985, c. P-4) .

  6. Subject matter in Canadian patent law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subject_matter_in_Canadian...

    In Canadian patent law, only “inventions” are patentable. Under the Patent Act, [1] only certain categories of things may be considered and defined as inventions. . Therefore, if a patent discloses an item that fulfills the requirements of novelty, non-obviousness and utility, it may nonetheless be found invalid on the grounds that it does not fall within one of the statutory categories of ...

  7. Software patents under Canadian patent law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Software_patents_under...

    The Patent Act has an additional prohibition in section 27(8) that "No patent shall be granted for any mere scientific principle or abstract theorem." [1] This requirement, though it does not relate directly to software, has been found by the courts to limit the patentability of some computer-using inventions. [3]