…
for paragraphs. For headings: maybe use…
. We need to include steps from facts: Step 1: Isolate the Independent Claim, Step 2: Command the AI to Deconstruct, Step 3: Validate with the Specification and Figures, Step 4: Create Your Final Infringement Assessment Checklist. Also mention AI-Generated Shortlist flags US Patent 9,123,456: “Collapsible Kitchen Strainer.” Provide the legalese excerpt? Not needed but could include. Provide prompt template: maybe something like: “Explain the following patent claim in plain English, breaking down each element and its function.” Then show resulting infringement assessment checklist. We must not use placeholders; write complete actionable content. We need to ensure word count 450-500. Let’s draft ~470 words. We’ll need to count words manually. Let’s write then count. Draft: Title: Decoding Legalese: Using AI to Translate Patent Claims into Plain EnglishAmazon FBA private‑label sellers move fast, but a missed patent can halt a product launch and trigger costly infringement claims. AI tools now let you turn dense patent claims into plain‑English summaries, speeding up freedom‑to‑operate checks while still requiring a qualified attorney for a final legal opinion.
Step‑by‑Step Workflow for AI‑Assisted Claim Translation
Step 1: Isolate the Independent Claim – Pull the broadest independent claim from the target patent (e.g., US 9,123,456, Claim 1). Dependent claims add limitations; start with the independent version to capture the core invention.
Step 2: Command the AI to Deconstruct – Paste the full claim text into ChatGPT (or another LLM) with this prompt template:
“Explain the following patent claim in plain English. List each element separately, describe its function in everyday language, and note any ambiguous terms that may need clarification from the specification.”
The AI returns a bullet‑point breakdown. For the “Collapsible Kitchen Strainer” patent, the output might read:
1. A flexible basin made of silicone‑like material that can expand to hold liquids.
2. A series of perforated walls allowing water to drain while retaining solids.
3. A collapsible frame that folds flat for storage.
4. A handle attached to the frame for easy lifting.
Step 3: Validate with the Specification and Figures – Cross‑check each AI‑generated element against the patent’s description and drawings. If the specification defines “flexible basin” as a particular durometer range, note that detail; it may affect whether your product falls outside the claim.
Step 4: Create Your Final Infringement Assessment Checklist – Translate the validated elements into a practical checklist:
☐ Does your product contain a flexible basin capable of expanding to hold liquids?
☐ Are there perforated walls that drain water while retaining solids?
☐ Does the design include a collapsible frame that folds flat?
☐ Is there a handle attached to the frame for lifting?
☐ Do any of these elements differ materially from the specification’s definitions (e.g., material hardness, perforation size)?
If you answer “yes” to all four core elements and the specifications match, you have a potential infringement risk and should consult a patent attorney for a formal freedom‑to‑operate opinion. If any element is missing or substantially different, the risk is lower, but still worth a professional review.
Using this AI‑driven workflow cuts hours of manual claim reading into minutes, lets you screen dozens of patents quickly, and focuses your legal budget on the truly relevant references.
For a comprehensive guide with detailed workflows, templates, and additional strategies, see my e-book: AI for Amazon FBA Private Label Sellers: How to Automate Patent Landscape Analysis and Infringement Risk Assessment.
Now count words. We need to count words in the entire article after the title line? The title line “Title: Decoding Legalese: Using AI to Translate Patent Claims into Plain English” counts as words? Probably yes. We’ll count everything after “Title:”? Safer to count all words in output. Let’s copy text and count manually. I’ll rewrite the content with clear separation and then count. Text: Title: Decoding Legalese: Using AI to Translate Patent Claims into Plain EnglishAmazon FBA private‑label sellers move fast, but a missed patent can halt a product launch and trigger costly infringement claims. AI tools now let you turn dense patent claims into plain‑English summaries, speeding up freedom‑to‑operate checks while still requiring a qualified attorney for a final legal opinion.
Step‑by‑Step Workflow for AI‑Assisted Claim Translation
Step 1: Isolate the Independent Claim – Pull the broadest independent claim from the target patent (e.g., US 9,123,456, Claim 1). Dependent claims add limitations; start with the independent version to capture the core invention.
Step 2: Command the AI to Deconstruct – Paste the full claim text into ChatGPT (or another LLM) with this prompt template:
“Explain the following patent claim in plain English. List each element separately, describe its function in everyday language, and note any ambiguous terms that may need clarification from the specification.”
The AI returns a bullet‑point breakdown. For the “Collapsible Kitchen Strainer” patent, the output might read:
1. A flexible basin made of silicone‑like material that can expand to hold liquids.
2. A series of perforated walls allowing water to drain while retaining solids.
3. A collapsible frame that folds flat for storage.
4. A handle attached to the frame for easy lifting.
Step 3: Validate with the Specification and Figures – Cross‑check each AI‑generated element against the patent’s description and drawings. If the specification defines “flexible basin” as a particular durometer range, note that detail; it may affect whether your product falls outside the claim.
Step 4: Create Your Final Infringement Assessment Checklist – Translate the validated elements into a practical checklist:
☐ Does your product contain a flexible basin capable of expanding to hold liquids?
☐ Are there perforated walls that drain water while retaining solids?
☐ Does the design include a collapsible frame that folds flat?
☐ Is there a handle attached to the frame for lifting?
☐ Do any of these elements differ materially from the specification’s definitions (e.g., material hardness, perforation size)?
If you answer “yes” to all four core elements and the specifications match, you have a potential infringement risk and should consult a patent attorney for a formal freedom‑to‑operate opinion. If any element is missing or substantially different, the risk is lower, but still worth a professional review.
Using this AI‑driven workflow cuts hours of manual claim reading into minutes, lets you screen dozens of patents quickly, and focuses your legal budget on the truly relevant references.
For a comprehensive guide with detailed workflows, templates, and additional strategies, see my e-book: AI for Amazon FBA Private Label Sellers: How to Automate Patent Landscape Analysis and Infringement Risk Assessment.
Now count words. I’ll count manually. I’ll strip HTML tags and just count words in visible text. Let’s extract visible text: Title line: “Decoding Legalese: Using AI to Translate Patent Claims into Plain English” Paragraph1: “Amazon FBA private‑label sellers move fast, but a missed patent can halt a product launch and trigger costly infringement claims. AI tools now let you turn dense patent claims into plain‑English summaries, speeding up freedom‑to‑operate checks while still requiring a qualified attorney for a final legal opinion.” Heading: “Step‑by‑Step Workflow for AI‑Assisted Claim Translation” Paragraph2: “Step 1: Isolate the Independent Claim – Pull the broadest independent claim from the target patent (e.g., US 9,123,456, Claim 1). Dependent claims add limitations; start with the independent version to capture the core invention.” Paragraph3: “Step 2: Command the AI to Deconstruct – Paste the full claim text into ChatGPT (or another LLM) with this prompt template:” Paragraph4 (prompt): “Explain the following patent claim in plain English. List each element separately, describe its function in everyday language, and note any ambiguous terms that may need clarification from the specification.” Paragraph5: “The AI returns a bullet‑point breakdown. For the “Collapsible Kitchen Strainer” patent, the output might read:” Paragraph6 (list): “1. A flexible basin made of silicone‑like material that can expand to hold liquids. 2. A series of perforated walls allowing water to drain while retaining solids. 3. A collapsible frame that folds flat for storage. 4. A handle attached to the frame for easy lifting.” Paragraph7: “Step 3: Validate with the Specification and Figures – Cross‑check each AI‑generated element against the patent’s description and drawings. If the specification defines “flexible basin” as a particular durometer range, note that detail; it may affect whether your product falls outside the claim.” Paragraph8: “Step 4: Create Your Final Infringement Assessment Checklist – Translate the validated elements into a practical checklist:” Paragraph9 (checklist): “☐ Does your product contain a flexible basin capable of expanding to hold liquids? ☐ Are there perforated walls that drain water while retaining solids? ☐ Does the design include a collapsible frame that folds flat? ☐ Is there a handle attached to the frame for lifting? ☐ Do any of these elements differ materially from the specification’s definitions (e.g., material hardness, perforation size)?” Paragraph10: “If you