[Image Source] (https://ipo.gov.tt/types-of-ip/patents/)
Question
@mackenziejones asked "If two people discovered a new approach to a problem in society and claimed it as their own intellectual property at the same time, how would you decide who gets to keep the rights?"
Response
I think that it would come down to a race to see who got their patent approved. If they both were in the process of being approved, the first one to be approved would be the one who gets to keep their individual rights. However, I think that this is almost unfair. The person with more assets would most likely have a better chance at getting their patent approved first.
If both of their provisional patents were brought to be approved at the same time, I am not sure the most fair way to decide which person's would be approved. I think it would all come down to a review and comparison of both patent applications. It would evaluate the resources needed, the practicality, and the invention itself. I think that who ever presented the idea best, or had the most thought through idea, would be the one to get the property rights to their work.