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If I have a patent, can someone else still practice the invention if their implemetation of the invention is different from mine?

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If I have a patent, can someone else still practice the invention if their implemetation of the invention is different from mine?

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A carefully prepared utility patent can give the inventor the right to exclude others from practicing certain alternate implementations of the invention. A utility patent includes precise sentences, called claims, that define the invention. The inventor and patent attorney can formulate a generic definition covering different implementations of the invention, beyond the inventor’s particular implementation.

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