LYNCH·LLP
HOME/EXAMINERS/TC 2100/JOSHUA D SCHNEIDER
◈ FIND AN EXAMINER, ART UNIT, OR APPLICATION #
◈ USPTO PATENT EXAMINER STATISTICS

Examiner Joshua D Schneider

TECH CENTER 2100 · 1 ART UNIT · 98 DECIDED APPLICATIONS · LAST ACTION OCT 2007
ALLOWANCE RATE = SHARE OF DECIDED APPLICATIONS (ALLOWED + ABANDONED); PENDING EXCLUDED
OVERALL ALLOWANCE RATE · POOLED ACROSS 1 ART UNIT
70%vs 72% art-unit average2 pts

Examiner Joshua D Schneider has allowed 69 of 98 decided applications in Computer Architecture, Software, and Information Security.

allowed69abandoned29pending0· pending excluded from the rate
DATA UPDATED JULY 14, 2026
// READING THIS EXAMINER

What the data says.

Joshua D Schneider maintains a public record in Technology Center 2100 (Computer Architecture, Software, and Information Security). Across dozens of decided applications, his allowance rate is 70%, meaning that share of his decided applications (allowed and abandoned combined) were allowed. His practice spans one art unit. This pooled record reflects outcomes on applications that have received a final disposition; applications pending examination are excluded from the calculation. The allowance rate represents his historical record and is not a prediction of outcomes on any specific application.

// HOW TO READ THESE NUMBERS

How to read these numbers.

A pooled record aggregates data across all of an examiner's art units into a single allowance rate and application count. This aggregate figure describes past outcomes and is correlational—it reflects what has happened, not what will happen on any individual case. Pooled data masks variation between art units; detailed breakdowns by art unit appear separately on this page. Aggregate statistics are useful for understanding an examiner's overall record but do not predict any specific application's path.

These are aggregate statistics from this examiner's past public record — not predictions about any specific application. The per-art-unit figures below show how the record varies across art units. Our approach to patent prosecution →

// BY ART UNIT

The record, art unit by art unit.

Each section benchmarks this examiner against that art unit's average. Figures are this examiner's own public record within the art unit; the overall rate above pools them.

◈ PRIMARY · ART UNIT 2182
98 APPS · 70% ALLOWANCE

Primarily examines data-processing methods for specific functions, and processing data by its order or content.

70% allowance (of decided)▏ art-unit average 72%
DISPOSITION69 / 29 / 0allowed / abandoned / pending
FIRST ACTION21.5 moart unit avg 24.3 mo
TOTAL PENDENCY36.4 moart unit avg 37.3 mo
// FAQ

Questions about Examiner Joshua D Schneider

  • What is Joshua D Schneider's overall allowance rate?
    His allowance rate is 70% across dozens of decided applications, meaning 70% of his decided applications (allowed and abandoned) were allowed. This is a historical record, not a prediction of any specific application.
  • How many art units does this examiner cover?
    Joshua D Schneider's public record spans one art unit in TC 2100.
  • What does the 70% allowance rate mean?
    Of all applications that have received a final disposition (allowed or abandoned), 70% were allowed. Pending applications are not included. This figure is pooled across all his art units and describes his past record only.
  • Does this allowance rate apply to my application?
    No. The allowance rate is a historical aggregate and is not a prediction of outcomes on any specific application. Many factors affect individual cases, and past statistics do not determine future results.
◈ HOW LYNCH LLP CAN HELP

Where to go next.

Lynch LLP represents applicants in patent prosecution before the USPTO. These are general resources about the firm's services — not advice about this examiner or any specific application.

Lynch LLP's patent practiceApplication drafting, office-action responses, and prosecution strategy before the USPTO.PTAB trials and patent appealsAppeals, inter partes review, and patent-owner defense before the PTAB.Building a patent portfolioHow a patent portfolio is sequenced and built over a multi-year horizon.Booking a consultationFree and paid consultation options across the firm's attorneys.
◈ RESPONDING TO AN OFFICE ACTION

Strategy, not paperwork. Talk to the attorney doing the work.

Lynch LLP represents applicants in patent prosecution before the USPTO. Book a consultation to discuss your matter with the attorney who would handle it.

Book a 30-minute consultation →
METHODOLOGY & DISCLOSURES

Methodology. This page pools every art unit in which Examiner Joshua D Schneider has a public record within Technology Center 2100. Statistics are computed from publicly available USPTO records, refreshed on a recurring schedule. This page's data was last updated July 14, 2026. The overall allowance rate is total allowed divided by total decided applications (allowed plus abandoned) across all art units — not an average of the per-art-unit rates; pending applications are excluded. Figures are rounded for display. Pooled sample: 98 applications.

Rejection rates. Each §-rate is the share of this examiner's applications that drew at least one office-action rejection in which that statutory ground appears; applications with no rejection on record are excluded, and because grounds can co-occur the four do not sum to 100%. The art-unit figure beside each is the unweighted mean of the per-examiner rates across the art unit, published for §101 and §103 only. Beside the overall allowance rate we show a benchmark: for a single-art-unit examiner it is exactly that art unit's average, labeled “art-unit average”; for an examiner spanning several art units it is the “weighted peer average” — the per-art-unit averages, weighted by this examiner's application count in each — labeled distinctly because it is a blended figure, not any single art unit's average. Both are built from the same per-art-unit averages the panels show.

Lynch LLP is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by the United States Patent and Trademark Office. Examiner statistics are derived from publicly available USPTO data.

These statistics describe past examiner behavior and do not predict the outcome of any particular application. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Where this page compares an examiner's allowance rate to an art-unit average, that comparison is a factual description of the public record, not a characterization of any individual examiner's conduct or competence.

This page is for general informational purposes and is not legal advice. No attorney-client relationship is formed by viewing it. Full disclaimers →

ATTORNEY ADVERTISING — Sean Lynch, Partner, Lynch LLP