Inventorship is Amron's Constitutional given right as the first to conceive, and the first to put into practice, the sticky note combination invention. Solidly putting my sticky back notes into commerce in 1974, and thereby not ever concealing it. I then started to develop a mixture of different adhesives and solvents for what I called my Stick-Em Up sticky glue that I had a local aerosol can company put into spray cans for me to hand spray each Press-on memo sheet back top to make sticky backed note pads to sell in the stationery industry, stationery stores and photographic stores nationally in 1974.Īlso in 1974, I went to an invention show in New York City at the Sheridan hotel and paid for a 10' x 10' booth to sell my ideas, I disclosed and gave samples of my sticky back notes I called Press-on memo and its spray can sticky adhesive I called Stick-em up glue, to two 3M executives that visited my booth at that show and had requested them to take back to consider licensing them as a new product for 3M, and I did a mass mailing by purchasing a professional mailing list going to all stationery industry executives, makers and stationery industry sellers thru a large mass mailing company located in Plainview Long Island New York industrial park. It turned out to be too sticky on my fingers and so with a little dust from the counter mixed in with it, I made it less sticky and used it to post the note, and it worked great! It held the note on the refrigerator, and when my wife came home and removed it from the refrigerator it didn't leave any residue at all. In 1973 when I couldn't find any scotch tape to post a note for my wife, I was thinking about chewing gum and how "sticky and tacky" it was, to use a tiny piece of it to post that note. Since Amron in facts and in evidence put forth herein has that title of inventorship, 3M is in fact continuing to defame and damage his professional and personal reputation. Patent Law Right to title of inventorship. Because 3M claims (and the facts put forth herein are clear) to have invented the Press n' peel secure bookmark " while in a church choir in 1974", and Amron (and the facts put forth herein are clear) had already invented the Press on memo sticky note "at his home in 1973", it's Amron's U.S. It is legally called "Res Judicata" and it cannot be bared by any release" - it's already been decided by the documented evidence and facts put forth herein, that in a continuous tort of breach of agreement, a subsequent actionable conduct on the part of 3M by them saying publicly today that Amron didn't invent the sticky notes, that they did. Spencer Silver (may he rest in peace) is credited for that not so great holding adhesive. Successfully introduced in 1980, was Alan Amron's Press on memo sticky notes 3M called Post it sticky Notes. Unsuccessfully introduced in 1977, was Silver and Fry 3M sticky bookmark called Press n Peel. However, the use was for Art Fry's idea of a sticky bookmark, to hold his place in his church choir hymn book. 3M had no use for it until 1974.įrom 1968 to 1974, soon after I disclosed my Press on memo sticky notes invention to 3M in 1974, they found a use for that not so great holding adhesive. In 1968 Spencer Silver, while working on another adhesive for 3M, came up with the not so great holding adhesive. Federal Court was declared dismissed and the 1998 settlement agreement upheld.Īlan Amron is in talks with a large known New York City Contract litigation law firm to continue his breach of agreement and patent office inequities fight in this WAR. 3M, Arthur Fry and Spencer Silver - Post-it WAR in 2016 U.S. The inventor of the Post it sticky note Alan Amron v. Federal Court was quickly financially settled by now known to be lies and misleading statements made by 3M and their counsel. The Post-it sticky notes wars going on from Canal Street to Tokyo are fun to watch, however on a more "serious Post-it sticky note" WAR: The inventor of the Post it sticky note Alan Amron v.
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