A useful manufacturing innovation qualifies for patent protection, which grants the inventor exclusive rights to make, use, and sell the invention for a set period (typically 20 years). Patents protect new, useful, and non-obvious inventions, including manufacturing processes, machines, and industrial innovations.
Why Not the Others?
A. Trademark → Protects logos, brand names, and symbols, not innovations or inventions.
B. Copyright → Protects artistic, literary, and creative works (e.g., books, music, software code), not functional innovations.
D. Trade Secret → Can protect confidential manufacturing processes, but does not provide exclusive legal rights like a patent does.
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