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From ip-legal
First-pass screen for invention disclosures: evaluates novelty, obviousness, bar dates, detectability, and strategic value to decide whether to pursue prior-art search and patent counsel review.
npx claudepluginhub zekaisuni/claude-for-legal-turkish --plugin ip-legalHow this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/ip-legal:invention-intake [paste or describe the invention disclosure — or just the title and I'll ask][paste or describe the invention disclosure — or just the title and I'll ask]The summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
**This is a first-pass screen by a non-specialist, not a patentability
Screens invention disclosures for novelty, obviousness, §101 eligibility, bar dates, detectability, and strategic value. Outputs a triage verdict: pursue, investigate, or decline.
Provides IP guidance for developers: prior art searches, patentability assessments, claim drafting, strategy advice, full patent drafts, and FTO analysis. Informational only.
Builds patent strategies aligned with business goals: freedom-to-operate analysis, invention disclosure, filing strategy, and claim drafting for companies or product lines.
Share bugs, ideas, or general feedback.
This is a first-pass screen by a non-specialist, not a patentability opinion. The screen never concludes that an invention is patentable — it concludes that it passes the initial screen and warrants a prior-art search and registered-practitioner review, that it needs more information, or that it hits a disqualifier. A prior-art search is a separate step; this skill does not do one.
~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/ip-legal/CLAUDE.md. If it
contains [PLACEHOLDER], stop and direct to /ip-legal:cold-start-interview. If the
practice profile shows trademark- or copyright-only (no patent practice),
say so and route the user elsewhere — this is the wrong tool.This skill never concludes that an invention is patentable. If uncertain, flag — a registered patent attorney or agent decides.
/ip-legal:invention-intake "a new cache-eviction algorithm that uses a learned model rather than LRU; conceived Q1 this year, not yet disclosed, engineering prototype in internal staging"
/ip-legal:invention-intake
(And the skill will ask for the invention, the problem it solves, how it differs, inventors, public disclosure status, usage status, and technology area.)
Say this at the top of every output. Do not drop it, do not soften it.
This is a first-pass screen by a non-specialist, not a patentability opinion. A patentability opinion requires a prior-art search, full claim construction, and the judgment of a registered patent attorney or agent. This screen does not do a prior-art search, does not assess what is in the art, and does not construct claims. It screens for the obvious disqualifiers (the invention is already on the market, it was publicly disclosed two years ago, it is plainly an abstract idea) and the obvious go-aheads (new mechanism, technical advance, recent conception, in-use secretly). Everything in between needs a prior-art search and a registered practitioner's review. This screen never concludes that something is "patentable" — it concludes that it "passes the initial screen, warrants investigation" or that it does not.
Under-flagging an invention that should have been filed is a one-way door — the one-year US bar runs, foreign rights are lost at first public disclosure, the competitor files first. Over-flagging just means a prior-art search that comes back empty. Stay on the two-way door side.
Matter context. Check ## Matter workspaces in the practice-level
CLAUDE.md. If Enabled is ✗ (the default for in-house users), skip the rest
of this paragraph — skills use practice-level context and the matter machinery
is invisible. If enabled and there is no active matter, ask: "Which matter is
this for? Run /ip-legal:matter-workspace switch <slug> or say practice-level." Load
the active matter's matter.md for matter-specific context and overrides.
Write outputs to the matter folder at
~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/ip-legal/matters/<matter-slug>/.
Never read another matter's files unless Cross-matter context is on.
Invention disclosures are particularly common candidates for clean-team or
heightened confidentiality at matter-open. Respect the matter's
confidentiality marking from matter.md. Invention content is inherently
sensitive — do not summarize, quote, or reference it outside privileged
channels.
Before reading the disclosure, read
~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/ip-legal/CLAUDE.md. If it is
missing or still contains placeholders, stop and run /ip-legal:cold-start-interview. The
practice profile tells you:
If the practice profile shows trademark-only or copyright-only (no patent practice), this skill is the wrong tool — say so and route the user elsewhere.
If the user pastes or uploads a disclosure, read it. If not, ask — in one batch, not one at a time:
To screen this, I need:
- What is the invention? In plain language — what does it do, what makes it work, what is the key idea.
- What problem does it solve? What was broken or missing before.
- How does it differ from what existed before? What did people do previously? What does this do differently?
- Who invented it, and when? Names and rough conception date.
- Has it been publicly disclosed? Published, sold, offered for sale, demonstrated at a conference, shown to a customer under an NDA, posted to a public repo, written up in a paper, included in a product release note. If yes, when and where.
- Is it in use or planned? Shipping now? In a limited pilot? On the roadmap? Still on paper?
- What technology area? (Software, hardware, mechanical, biotech, method-of-doing-business, AI/ML, etc.)
Wait for answers. Do not proceed on a half-disclosure — a screen of "a new machine learning thing that helps users" is worse than no screen.
If the disclosure is a formal invention disclosure form (IDF) from an IPMS or a template, extract these fields from the form and only ask for what's missing.
Walk the five screens in order. Each produces a per-screen verdict:
✓ clear, 🟡 flagged — needs further look, or 🔴 red flag. Explain the
reasoning briefly; do not pad.
Does the disclosure describe something new? This is not a full novelty analysis — that requires a prior-art search. This screens the disclosure's own description for self-evident novelty problems.
Red flags (🔴):
Green flags (✓):
Flagged (🟡): anything ambiguous. Prior-art search settles it.
Would a person of ordinary skill in the art (POSA) have arrived at this combination based on what's known? This is a screen, not a full SMK m.83 analysis — flag for further investigation, never conclude obviousness or non-obviousness.
Red flags (🔴) for further investigation:
Green flags (✓):
Buluş niteliği taşımayan veya patent verilemeyecek konular kapsamında mı? Keşifler, bilimsel teoriler, matematik metotları, bilgisayar programları tek başlarına patentlenemez (SMK m.82/2-3). Ayrıca kamu düzenine veya genel ahlaka aykırı buluşlara, tedavi usullerine patent verilmez. Flag anything borderline for specialist review.
Red flags (🔴) for SMK m.82:
Green flags (✓) for software/AI inventions:
Anything borderline gets a 🟡 with "SMK m.82 — route to specialist for TÜRKPATENT İnceleme Kılavuzu / EPO Kılavuzu (Bilgisayar tabanlı buluşlar) analysis." A non-specialist should not call a close SMK m.82 question.
For biotech / diagnostic inventions, also flag for SMK m.82 if the claim recites:
SMK m.82 (Türkiye) ve EPC m.52 (Avrupa) paraleldir. Bilgisayar programları, matematiksel metotlar, işletme faaliyetleri ancak "teknik bir problemi çözen teknik bir etki" yaratıyorsa patentlenebilir (EPO's "technical effect" test). Sadece kaynak kodu veya salt yapay zeka algoritması reddedilir.
When the practice profile includes other jurisdictions (e.g. US): "Bu tarama Türkiye/Avrupa pratiğine (SMK/EPC) dayanmaktadır. ABD'de §101 (Alice testi) farklı ve genellikle yazılım için daha zorlayıcı olabilir."
Has the invention been disclosed, sold, offered for sale, or publicly used? This is the most time-sensitive screen — the answer can kill patentability absolutely, or start a clock that cannot be stopped.
Categorize the disclosure status:
🔴 Likely barred:
🟡 Clock is running:
✓ Clear:
Ask specifically about:
The Kamuya Sunma / Hoşgörü Süresi (SMK m.84) catches offers for sale of a product embodying the invention, not just completed sales. An RFP response describing the invention can trigger it.
If a competitor were to infringe this invention, could you tell? An invention that's practiced in secret — server-side processing, back-office operations, internal manufacturing techniques — may be better protected as a trade secret than as a patent. Publishing a patent on an undetectable invention is giving it to competitors in exchange for an asset you can never enforce.
🔴 Low detectability flags:
For these, flag for the patent-vs-trade-secret decision. The question is not "is this patentable" but "should we patent it if we could." Route to whoever in the practice profile owns trade-secret classification decisions.
✓ High detectability:
Does this align with the company's patent strategy from the practice profile? This is where the screen becomes company-specific rather than doctrinal.
Check against the profile:
Also check:
Format:
Invention screen memo — [invention title]
Bottom line: [PURSUE / INVESTIGATE / DECLINE]
[One sentence — the reason in plain language.]
Screen results
Screen Verdict Notes Novelty (Yenilik) [✓ / 🟡 / 🔴] [one-line reasoning] Obviousness (Buluş Basamağı) [✓ / 🟡 / 🔴] [one-line reasoning] SMK m.82 (Patentlenebilirlik) [✓ / 🟡 / 🔴] [one-line reasoning] Public disclosure / Hoşgörü süresi [✓ / 🟡 / 🔴] [one-line reasoning + dates] Detectability [✓ / 🟡 / 🔴] [one-line reasoning] Strategic value [✓ / 🟡 / 🔴] [one-line reasoning, referenced to profile]
Open questions
Things that would change the answer. The inventor, the prosecution team, or a specialist would need to address these before this screen converts to a filing decision.
- [question]
- [question]
Next steps (decision tree)
Pick one and I'll help you build it out:
- Commission the prior-art search — I'll draft the search request for [outside counsel / search vendor] with the claim concepts, inventors, technology classification, and any known references.
- Go back to the inventor for more facts — I'll draft the follow-up questions on [specific open items above].
- Route to outside counsel for SMK m.82 / patent-vs-trade-secret judgment — I'll draft a transmittal summarizing what the screen found and what specialist judgment is needed.
- Decline and send the standard thank-you — I'll draft the inventor thank-you and archive the disclosure with the declination reason.
- Flag for trade secret instead — I'll draft a note to whoever owns trade-secret classification explaining why a trade-secret approach is a better fit.
Apply the work-product header per role. Apply the reviewer note. Keep the deliverable clean of internal narration ("I'm using the invention-intake skill..." etc.).
The bottom line is one of three:
A DECLINE should always be backed by a concrete reason the inventor can understand. "Not patentable" is not an acceptable decline reason; "barred by your paper at NeurIPS 2023 — Türkiye/SMK 12 aylık hoşgörü süresi doldu" is.
Never say "patentable." The closest you can come is "passes the initial screen, warrants further investigation." Patentability is a conclusion a registered practitioner reaches after a prior-art search and claim construction.
Never do a prior-art search in this skill. A WebSearch for "does this
already exist" is not a prior-art search — it's a credibility check the
user can also run. If you want to sanity-check novelty, say so explicitly
("quick web check — the technique was discussed in [X] — this is not a prior-
art search, it's context for the screen") and flag it as [web — verify].
Defer on SMK m.82 calls. For anything borderline under TÜRKPATENT İnceleme Kılavuzu / EPO Kılavuzu (Bilgisayar tabanlı buluşlar), flag for specialist review. SMK m.82 is where practitioners routinely disagree and where a non-specialist's confident call ages badly.
Flag detectability before strategic value. An undetectable invention that would be "high strategic value" as a patent is usually higher strategic value as a trade secret. Do not recommend PURSUE on an undetectable invention without addressing the trade-secret alternative.
Urgent cases get urgent flagging. If the screen hits a within-one-year public disclosure in Türkiye, or any public disclosure with foreign rights in scope, say so at the top of the memo. Bottom line, then: "Time-sensitive — SMK m.84 12 aylık hoşgörü süresi bitiyor [date], foreign rights already at risk." This is the kind of finding a lawyer needs to see in the first three seconds.
Respect the routing. Per the practice profile, this screen is a triage step. The person who decides what to file is the attorney or agent responsible for patent prosecution. The screen feeds that person; it does not replace them.
If the role is non-lawyer (with or without attorney access), close the memo with:
This is a screening tool for your disclosure, not a patentability opinion. The decision about whether to file — and how — belongs to a registered patent attorney or agent (Patent Vekili). If this screen says PURSUE or INVESTIGATE, your next step is not to file or draft claims; it is to share this memo (and the underlying disclosure) with patent counsel. If there is no counsel engaged yet, [contact from profile / "TÜRKPATENT kayıtlı vekiller sicili veya Fikri Mülkiyet uzmanı avukatlar"] is the starting point.