How to Protect an Idea (Without a Patent)

May 12, 2026
How to Protect an Idea (Without a Patent)
Photo: Katrin Bolovtsova on Pexels

"Someone will steal my idea" is the number-one fear of founders, inventors, and creators. The uncomfortable truth: a bare idea isn't legally protectable. The good news: what you actually do with the idea is — and you can build dated proof cheaply.

Why you can't own an idea

Neither copyright nor patents protect ideas themselves:

  • Copyright protects your expression — the actual document, pitch deck, design, or code — not the concept behind it.
  • Patents protect inventions, and only after you file. The U.S. is first-to-file, so an unfiled idea has no patent protection.

So "how do I copyright/patent my idea?" has no direct answer. The right question is: how do I protect the expression of my idea and prove it was mine first?

What you can actually do

  1. Write it down in detail. A concrete document — a spec, business plan, or pitch deck — is copyrightable expression. The more specific, the more protectable.
  2. Use an NDA before sharing. When you pitch to partners, contractors, or investors, a non-disclosure agreement creates a contractual obligation not to use or leak your idea.
  3. File a provisional patent if it's a genuine invention — it locks in an early filing date for 12 months. See how to prove the date of an invention.
  4. Trademark your brand (name, logo) separately — that's a different tool.

Prove your idea was dated and yours

The piece most people miss: dated proof. Before you pitch or post, timestamp your pitch deck, spec, or business plan. A blockchain timestamp records that your exact document existed on a specific date — tamper-proof and independently verifiable. If a dispute arises, you can show your version predated everyone else's, without revealing the contents (only the hash is published).

With BlockchainSign the file is hashed in your browser and you keep a lifetime certificate. It won't stop someone hearing your idea — nothing does — but it gives you the evidence that you got there first.

Prove your work existed today

Timestamp any file on the Ethereum blockchain and get a tamper-proof, lifetime certificate. Your file never leaves your browser.

Create a timestamp

FAQ

Related: How to Copyright Your Work · How To Prove You Created Something First · Proof of Existence