Patent Marking Basics
Patent Marking Basics The National Law Review Full coverage
In: PATENT NEWS
Patent Marking Basics The National Law Review Full coverage
In: PATENT NEWS
She is joined by Dr Burcu Kilic, from the US organisation Public Citizen, who provides technical assistance to governments and civil society groups on intellectual property law and global access to medicine, as well as former MP and employment lawyer Laila Harré. The event will also provide an update …
In: PATENT NEWS
Currently, I am not leaning toward becoming a patent lawyer but just a patent agent. Do people typically go back to law school to become one? Or is the transition from agent to lawyer not typically made? (I know you need to go to Law School, I’m more concerned about... Continue reading
In: PATENT NEWS
Honeywell (HON) Announces Settlement with Code Corp. on Patent Infringement Claims; HON to Receive ‘Significant … StreetInsider.com Full coverage
In: PATENT NEWS
Law360 (February 12, 2018, 1:05 PM EST) — The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office recently indicated that its accelerated examination program (AE) could be terminated and requested public input. There were only a few responses, some pro and some con.[1] To date, no changes have been made and, …
In: PATENT NEWS
For well over a century, Fish & Richardson has been winning cases worth billions in controversy – often by making new law – for the world’s most innovative and influential technology leaders….
In: PATENT NEWS
See, e.g., Ronen Avraham’s recent article arguing for pain-and-suffering damages in patent cases (a view I don’t particularly share, however), which I mentioned here , and some of my previous posts on damages for “moral prejudice” in patent law (see, e.g., here and here). So the issue Mr. Brodsky …
In: PATENT NEWS
The usual answer is no, you should not. Just statistically speaking. Most patents are useless expenses, destined to go nowhere. So approach it with prejudice. Still look into it. But the presumption should be against it. Next question is, can you?…
In: PATENT NEWS
Patents protect inventions and processes from being copied by others without the inventor’s permission. Ideas do not have such protection. People are are permitted to take the same basic idea, regardless of who came up with that idea, and implement it as different creative works or inventions so long as …
In: PATENT NEWS
“There’s no pornographic picture of the actual individual being released,” Jonathan Masur, a professor who specializes in patent and technology law at the University of Chicago Law School, told Mashable earlier this month. “It’s just the individual’s face on someone else’s body.” Apart from the obvious …
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