Why inventors need timestamps — not just patents
The patent process takes 1–3 years. During that time — from the moment you have an idea to the day your patent issues — your invention is completely unprotected.
You pitch to investors. You hire developers. You talk to potential customers. Every conversation is a potential leak. And if a competitor files first, you may have no recourse — unless you can prove you had the idea before they did.
A blockchain timestamp creates an immutable, publicly verifiable record of your invention document at a specific moment. It's not a patent — but it's evidence that can be critical in a priority dispute, a trade secret lawsuit, or a patent interference proceeding.
Three key properties
Instant protection — Your invention is timestamped in under 2 minutes, before you even talk to an attorney.
Private by design — Only the cryptographic hash is recorded on-chain. No one can read your invention from the blockchain. The hash is a 64-character string that looks like random data — mathematically impossible to reverse.
Permanent record — Blockchain records cannot be altered or deleted by anyone, ever. Your timestamp will exist as long as the blockchain does.
What to timestamp and when
| Stage | What | When | Urgency |
|---|---|---|---|
| Idea stage | Concept description, initial sketches | Before telling anyone | 🔴 Critical |
| Design stage | Architecture diagrams, technical spec | Before hiring contractors | 🟡 High |
| Development stage | Algorithm descriptions, source code | Before open-sourcing | 🟡 High |
| Pre-launch | Full product spec, business method | Before investor pitch | 🔵 Medium |
How blockchain timestamps work as prior art
In patent law, "prior art" is evidence that an invention was known or used before a patent application. Blockchain timestamps can serve as prior art evidence:
- In the US (AIA): Invention date matters for derivation proceedings — proving someone stole your idea
- In Europe: Even in first-to-file systems, timestamps demonstrate you had the idea before the filer — relevant in copying/theft cases
- In trade secret litigation: Timestamps prove the secret existed before the alleged misappropriation date
- For investor disputes: Timestamps prove IP ownership before funding discussions began
Real-world scenario
An inventor describes a novel algorithm and timestamps it on January 1st. They show it to a potential co-founder under NDA. Six months later, the co-founder starts a competing company and files a patent for the same algorithm.
The inventor has a blockchain timestamp from six months before the filing date. Combined with the signed NDA, this becomes strong evidence in a derivation proceeding.
Without the timestamp, it's a he-said/she-said battle. With it, the inventor has a strong case.
How to create a blockchain timestamp
- Write your invention description (Word, PDF, plain text — any format)
- Go to Patent.rocks and create a free account
- Drag and drop your file — it's hashed locally in your browser, never sent to any server
- Pay with crypto (USDT, BTC, ETH) — from $5
- Receive your blockchain-anchored certificate with transaction ID, block number, and timestamp
- Store the certificate alongside your original file — together they are your evidence package
Total time: under 2 minutes. Total cost: $5.
Timestamp every version
Don't just timestamp once. Every significant version of your invention document should be timestamped separately. This creates a complete development timeline that's far more powerful than a single timestamp — it shows the evolution of your thinking and makes it much harder for anyone to claim priority.
The bottom line
You're going to share your invention with someone before filing a patent. That's inevitable. The $5 blockchain timestamp is the cheapest insurance you can buy.
Create your first blockchain timestamp at Patent.rocks — it takes 2 minutes.
Originally published at patent.rocks/en/blockchain-timestamp-for-inventors
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