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AI in Patent Research: Revolution or Risky Shortcut?

25 / 2 / 2026

The rapid rise of artificial intelligence has sparked lively debates among intellectual property experts. Can tools like DeepSeek, ChatGPT, and Perplexity Pro really take over the old-school grind of patent research? Recent expert roundtables show a mix of impressive speed and some serious pitfalls.

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AI really delivers in the starting stages, especially with classification and big-picture tech scans. It matches inventions to International Patent Classification codes spot-on, often in seconds flat—something that keeps humans tied up for hours. These models spot trends, whip up detailed overviews of tech fields, and brainstorm keywords perfect for professional databases like Espacenet. Plenty of people call them lifesavers for quickly diving into new areas or sorting out tricky concepts.

But don’t get fooled by the slick wording—facts often trip them up. They hallucinate phony patents, dreaming up numbers and titles that seem real but aren’t, like when ChatGPT spun fake docs from simple prompts. Lacking live links to worldwide databases, they skip fresh filings from the last half-year and can’t handle formal report formats. The biggest headache? Confidentiality. Plug in a secret invention, and it might leak into their training data, later biting you as prior art that kills your patent’s novelty.

Experts all say the same: AI’s a handy sidekick, like a smart notepad, but no substitute for real researchers. That dynamic, interactive, and often cyclical nature of patent analysis of business angles and intent? Machines aren’t there yet.

​Stick to using it for basics like field intros or codes, but double-check every fact, citation, and claim against spots like Espacenet. For touchy stuff, go local—offline models on your own machine, no net needed. Patent work isn’t vanishing; it’s just leveling up. Grab AI as a tool, not a crutch, and you’ll thrive in this shift without the risks.

 

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