An Invention is any new article, machine, composition or process or new use developed by a human.
An invention Disclosure is a written record of a complete description of the invention and how it is made and used containing sufficient detail to permit a skilled reader to duplicate the invention and to describe the basic nature of the invention to an inexperienced reader. The essential elements of a disclosure are a complete description of the invention, the inventor's dated signature, and dated signature of witnesses who fully understand the invention.
A disclosure serves three different purposes:
A U.S. Patent for an invention is the grant of a property right to the inventor(s), issued by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. A patent permits its owner to exclude members of the public from making, using, or selling the claimed invention. Most countries of the world have patent systems, although the patent terms and types of patents vary.
There are 3 major types of patents:
A Patent Application is a set of papers that describe an invention and that are suitable for filing in a patent office in order to apply for a patent on the invention.
Trademark (Service Mark) is any symbol, such as a word, number, picture, or design, used by manufacturers or merchants to identify their own goods and distinguish them from goods made or sold by others.
Copyright is given to an author, artist, composer or programmer to exclude others from publishing or copyrighting literary, dramatic, musical, artistic or software works.
The type of works that copyright protects are:
So the above works are protected by copyright, regardless of the medium in which they exist and this includes the internet. You should also note that copyright does not protect ideas. It protects the way the idea is expressed in a piece of work, but it does not protect the idea itself.
There are five exclusive rights authors obtain with copyright protection:
Copyrightable Distance Learning Materials
Copyrightable Instructional materials (print materials such as books, texts, glossaries, bibliographies, study guides, laboratory manuals, syllabi) and material performed or intended for performance such as lectures, musical or dramatic compositions and scripts; or visual materials such as films, filmstrips, slides, charts, and transparencies. Video and audio recording of presentation, programs or performances; programmed instructional materials and computer programs; computer software and on-line and web-based courses and education multimedia projects incorporating various copyrighted media formats (i.e., motion media, music, text material, graphics, illustration, photographs and digital software) which combined into a integrated presentation and developed for delivery via the distance education mechanism at a particular institution. Joint Ownership of right to offer commercial licenses and make derivative works.
An Intellectual property is any product of the human intellect that is unique, novel, and unobvious such as:
Intellectual property has some value in the marketplace, and it can be reduced to tangible form, such as a computer, a process a chemical etc.