Incredible utility
In United States patent law, incredible utility is a concept according to which, in order for an invention to be patentable, it must have some credible useful function. If it does not have a credible useful function despite the assertions of the inventor, then the application for patent can be rejected as having "incredible utility". The invention does not have to work the way the inventor thinks it works, but it must do something useful. Patents that have been held invalid for incredible utility include:
- an invention asserted to change the taste of food using a magnetic field,
- a perpetual motion machine,
- a flying machine operating on "flapping or flutter function",
- a cold fusion process for producing energy,
- a method for increasing the energy output of fossil fuels upon combustion through exposure to a magnetic field,
- uncharacterized compositions for curing a wide array of cancers, and
- a method of controlling the aging process.