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A list of Citizendium articles, and planned articles, about Patent.
See also pages that link to Patent or to this page.

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  • Alan Blumlein [r]: Electronics engineer with 128 patents for inventions in telecommunications, sound recording, stereo, television and radar. [e]
  • Albert Einstein [r]: 20th-century physicist who formulated the theories of relativity. [e]
  • Alfred Nobel [r]: (October 21, 1833, Stockholm, Sweden – December 10, 1896, Sanremo, Italy) A Swedish chemist, engineer, innovator, armaments manufacturer and the inventor of dynamite. [e]
  • Azithromycin [r]: A macrolide type of antibiotic similar to erythromycin. [e]
  • Biodiversity [r]: The study of the diversity of life. [e]
  • Copyleft [r]: The use of traditional copyright and intellectual property law to pursue goals of open sharing and collaboration. [e]
  • Copyright [r]: An exclusive property grant on creative works granted to authors of those works for a period set by law. [e]
  • Cryonics Institute [r]: A member-owned-and-operated not-for-profit corporation in Clinton Township, Michigan, which provides cryonics services. [e]
  • Digital Rights Management [r]: Refers to the laws and technologies which provide intellectual property owners control over the distribution and use of their digital property by defining consumers' rights in its usage[1]. [e]
  • Edinburgh [r]: The capital of Scotland. [e]
  • Electronic Frontier Foundation [r]: U.S. online civil liberties advocacy group. [e]
  • Engineering [r]: The profession in which a knowledge of the mathematical and natural sciences gained by study, experience and practice is applied with judgment to develop ways to economically use the materials and forces of nature for the benefit of mankind. [e]
  • Food and Drug Administration [r]: The agency of the United States Department of Health and Human Services responsible for regulating food, dietary supplements, drugs, biological medical products, blood products, medical devices, radiation-emitting devices, veterinary products, and cosmetics. [e]
  • GNU [r]: A free operating system modeled after AT&T's UNIX, originally announced by Dr. Richard Stallman on September 27th, 1983. The acronym GNU stands for "GNU is not Unix" and is intended to be a play on words. [e]
  • Generic drug [r]: Drugs whose drug name is not protected by a trademark. They may be manufactured by several companies (National Library of Medicine). [e]
  • Globalization [r]: The interaction of peoples, cultures, and businesses worldwide, which tend to overcome traditional national and cultural boundaries [e]
  • Google [r]: Internet search engine company jointly founded by Larry Page and Sergey Brin [e]
  • Intellectual property [r]: A term referring to information that can be protected by patents, trademarks, trade secret practices and copyrights. [e]
  • Law [r]: Body of rules of conduct of binding legal force and effect, prescribed, recognized, and enforced by a controlling authority. [e]
  • Medication [r]: A licensed drug taken to cure or reduce symptoms of an illness or medical condition. [e]
  • Metoprolol [r]: An adrenergic beta-antagonist useful in angina pectoris, hypertension, or cardiac arrhythmias. [e]
  • Ormus [r]: The un-assayable form of the transition elements. [e]
  • Public domain [r]: Intellectual property that is not protected by copyright, trade mark or patent. [e]
  • Public [r]: Shared by, open or available to everyone, well or generally known, universally available or without limit, done or made on behalf of the community as a whole, open to general or unlimited viewing or disclosure, frequented by large numbers of people or for general use, or places generally open or visible to all pertaining to official matters or maintained at taxpayer expense. [e]
  • Random Access Memory [r]: Random Access Memory (more commonly, RAM) is a term most often used to describe the main system memory of a personal computer. There have been many types of memory devices called "RAM", most of which share the common features of having read/write access to any non-sequential memory location (thus "random" access), and relatively fast data access times. [e]
  • Strasbourg [r]: Capital of Alsace in France. [e]
  • Trademark [r]: A word, phrase, design, or other feature that is legally accepted to identify the source of a product or service [e]
  • Zeppelin [r]: A type of rigid airship pioneered by German Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin in the early 20th century. [e]
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