Friday, December 31, 2010

Intellectual Property: Examples & Explanations, Third Edition

Intellectual Property: Examples & Explanations, Third EditionKeeping up with the fast pace of change in Intellectual Property, the third edition of Intellectual Property: Examples & Explanations offers timely coverage of central concepts in the proven-effective Examples & Explanations format. Student-friendly, concise, and timely, Intellectual Property: Examples & Explanations features: complete coverage keyed to the leading IP casebooks for the survey course proven-effective Examples & Explanations pedagogy that fills in any gaps in students understanding of casebook assignments consistent emphasis on central concepts, without digressing into more advanced topics free-standing chapters that are easily adapted to any course structure and make this study guide useful to as a reference throughout the semester Key Conceptsand Policy Issues highlighted in each chapter Updated throughout, the Third Edition includes: new developments effecting Internet service providers new material on patents, including landmark Supreme Court cases (on first sale, injunctions, patentable subject matter, licensing, declaratory judgments, nonobviousness, infringement abroad, and experimental use) and key Federal Circuit cases minimum statutory damages for downloading musicoriginality copyright in forms, digital images of public domain works DMCA anticurcumvention provisions new exemptions cases protecting legitimate uses of copyright protected works First Amendment limits on Congress's power to expand copyright protection international issues, such as copyright restoration for foreign works, and scope of protection abroad for US works copyright protection for databases, software, and orphan works consumers licensing, such as click-through copyright licenses and arbitration clauses new material on fair use thumbnail images in search engines Google Book case Turnitin, on-line plagiarism protection Public records in private databases Legal documents new cases on audio books, sampling, and data use restrictions new material on patents, including landmark Supreme Court cases and key Federal Circuit cases new material on trademark Trademark Dilution Revision Act use of trademarks as keywords in search engine advertising unauthorized use of trademarks in video games and films cases on likelihood of confusion standard, scope of international protection, functionality of trade dress, and fair use of trademarks new material on trade secret, such as remedies, reverse engineering, and government use of trade secret information new material on state intellectual property law, such as First Amendment limits on right of publicity; unjust enrichment and Intellectual Property law; scope of employee invention assignment agreements; preemption by federal law Intellectual Property is a big field and continually in the throes of change. Stephen M.McJohn keeps his coverage focused and current in Intellectual Property: Examples & Explanations, Third Edition. For a complete, concise, and clear introduction to central IP concepts, trust the proven-effective Examples & Explanations methodology to convey Intellectual Property concepts to your students.

Price: $47.95


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Intellectual Property in the New Technological Age: Fifth Edition

Intellectual Property in the New Technological Age: Fifth EditionIn the fifth edition of Intellectual Property in the New Technological Age, luminary authors Merges, Menell and Lemley continue to offer broad, accessible coverage of the full range of legal protections for intellectual property. Including seminal and cutting-edge cases and materials, this landmark casebook incorporates practice problems that encourage students to think like practitioners.

Timely and forward thinking, the authors of Intellectual Property in the New Technological Age offer:
- Complete coverage of basic and cutting-edge Intellectual Property law issues;
- An excellent selection of cases and materials;
- Practice problems that develop students' skills in applying the law;
- A law and economics perspective;
- Detailed treatment of new media issues, such as computer software;
- An introduction to biotechnology and the latest legal developments in the Statutory and Case Supplement;
- An Author Website with new cases and developments in IP law.

Updated throughout, the Fifth Edition offers:
- Revised patent materials that include the Bilski decision;
- Changes in patentable subject matter, obviousness, and the law of willfulness;
- New developments in digital copyright law and fair use;
- Trademark chapter revised to include dilution, merchandising, Internet keywords, Rescuecom v. Google, and fair use Software cases newly integrated into main chapters.

Price: $170.00


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Intellectual Property-Patents, Trademarks And Copyright in a Nutshell

Intellectual Property-Patents, Trademarks And Copyright in a NutshellAuthors Michael Davis and famed Harvard professor Arthur Miller provide authoritative coverage on the foundations of patent protection, patentability, and the patenting process. Presents the fundamentals of trademarks and copyright laws. Text further addresses torts and property, antitrust and government regulation, concepts of federalism and state, and federal conflicts.

Price: $35.00


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Intellectual Property Crunchtime 2009

Intellectual Property Crunchtime 2009

CrunchTime provides a comprehensive topic breakdown and critical information review all in one tool. The application flow charts can be used all semester long, but the capsule summaries are ideal for exam preparation. Each title offers capsule summaries of major points of law and critical issues , exam tips for identifying common traps and pitfalls, sample exam and essay questions with model answers, and recommended approaches for crafting essays that will get winning grades!

CrunchTime Series Features:

  • Capsule summary of subject matter
  • Condensed format
  • Flow charts illustrate major concepts
  • Multiple-choice questions with answers
  • Essay questions with model answers

Price: $34.95


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Thursday, December 30, 2010

Licensing Intellectual Property In The Information Age (Carolina Academic Press Law Casebook)

In addition to adding Jay Dratler, one of America s leading authorities on licensing intellectual property, and Barbara Wrigley, a practitioner with many years experience in the field, to the list of co-authors, the Second Edition of Licensing Intellectual Property in the Information Age (formerly Licensing Intellectual Property in the Digital Age) has been largely redone. Keeping the same basic structure, each chapter has been updated with the most current developments in licensing law. Chapter 2 now works as a much more efficient introduction to intellectual property. In addition to adding Jay Dratler, one of America s leading authorities on licensing intellectual property, and Barbara Wrigley, a practitioner with many years experience in the field, to the list of co-authors, the Second Edition of Licensing Intellectual Property in the Information Age (formerly Licensing Intellectual Property in the Digital Age) has been largely redone. Keeping the same basic structure, each chapter has been updated with the most current developments in licensing law. Chapter 2 now works as a much more efficient introduction to intellectual property. Additionally, with the inclusion of the Uniform Electronic Transactions Act in Chapter 8 and an entirely new chapter on Biotechnology, the book is now the most up-to-date and authoritative textbook available.

The book emphasizes application in actual situations, with chapters designed to simulate the work flow a lawyer is likely to face in the negotiation, formation, and enforcement of an intellectual property license.

Price: $90.00


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Licensing Intellectual Property: Law and Application

Licensing Intellectual Property: Law and ApplicationLicensing Intellectual Property: Law and Application is a streamlined and highly accessible casebook on the law of licensing and the application of licensing in practice. The authors painstakingly cover all aspects of licensing from the global:
Why is licensing the predominant transaction model for ideas and information?
Why and how do social policy decisions limit creative legal practice solutions?
To the particular: What are the most common licensing provisions?
What are the issues in various types of intellectual property licensing?


This exciting new casebook is imminently teachable and can be used in courses of varying length. Look for these distinguishing features:

user-friendly and accessible to students and instructors of varied backgrounds and levels of expertise
the authors carefully explain the legal and business context for licensing and provide students with a framework that enables them to understand why and how social policy shape creative legal practice solutions (e.g., limits from fair use, first-sale, and antitrust on contract)
clearly and concisely enumerates the basic substantive rules of licensing law and underlying policy concerns
explains why licensing is the predominant transaction model for ideas and information and why publishers, inventors, software developers, and others often use licensing as a transaction model
goes beyond familiar licensing transactions (e.g., an in-box license and an online 'clickwrap' agreement) to explore more sophisticated licenses and what clients (licensor or licensee) are trying to accomplish and why
covers alternative transaction models (e.g., first sale, public domain, assignment) so that students can help future clients assess the alternatives and choose the best-fitting transaction model
extensive discussion of timely topics such as free and open source software, technology transfers from universities and research institutions and the government, and licensing in litigation
introduces students to license drafting through a series of problems and drafting exercises
the authors website will offer additional drafting exercises and sample language
An exceptional, comprehensive Teacher s Manual will include:


sample license agreement language for drafting exercises, complete with commentary on how to evaluate student-drafted license language
guidance on how to use the book in courses of varying lengths (2, 3, or 4 credits)

detailed answers to all the problems in the book

additional suggested background materials on the relevant industries and technologies

additional suggested cases, statutes and law review articles

With its problem- and exercise-based approach Licensing Intellectual Property: Law and Application is the ideal casebook for the instructor who takes a practice-oriented approach to teach licensing law.

Price: $151.00


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Emanuel Law Outlines: Intellectual Property

Emanuel Law Outlines: Intellectual PropertyThe most trusted name in law school outlines, Emanuel Law Outlines support your class preparation, provide reference for your outline creation, and supply a comprehensive breakdown of topic matter for your entire study process.

Created by Steven Emanuel, these course outlines have been relied on by generations of law students. Each title includes both capsule and detailed versions of the critical issues and key topics you must know to master the course. Also included are exam questions with model answers, an alpha-list of cases, and a cross reference table of cases for all of the leading casebooks.

Emanuel Law Outline Features:
outline choice among law students
Comprehensive review of all major topics
Capsule summary of all topics
Cross-reference table of cases
Time-saving format

Price: $40.95


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Intellectual Property and Unfair Competition in a Nutshell (Nutshell Series)

Intellectual Property and Unfair Competition in a Nutshell (Nutshell Series)This Nutshell covers many areas of law under the unfair trade practices umbrella. These areas include unfair competition, antitrust, consumer protection, regulated industries, and labor. Covers intellectual property, trade secrets, and trademarks. Also touches on the law governing interference with contractual and non-contractual relations.

Price: $35.00


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Intellectual Property Stories 2005 (Law Stories)

Intellectual Property Stories 2005 (Law Stories)Intellectual Property Stories brings famous cases to life by telling the true, never-heard-before stories behind landmark Intellectual Property cases. Intellectual Property Stories is organized into six chapters, each drawing on cases in patents, copyrights, trademarks, or unfair competition, to illustrate the problems intellectual property law encounters. The works, inventions, and marks at issue in these cases vary widely.

Price: $40.00


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Essentials of Licensing Intellectual Property (Essentials (John Wiley))

Essentials of Licensing Intellectual Property (Essentials (John Wiley))Full of valuable tips, techniques, illustrative real-world examples, exhibits, and best practices, this handy and concise paperback will help you stay up to date on the newest thinking, strategies, developments, and technologies in licensing intellectual property.

Price: $34.95


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Thursday, December 16, 2010

Resolved Question: Who owns the intellectual property when a software company goes bankrupt?

During any Bankruptcy proceedings, the property is held by the Bankruptcy Trustee: Once all assets have been purged to cover outstanding debts, the trustee can tell you who the rightful owner is.. You will have to go to the bankruptcy court and look at the MATRIX to see whom the outstanding creditors are and ask the trustee to give you an inventory of how assets were distributed.

That is the only real way to know..


View the original article here

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Resolved Question: How can the safety of intellectual property be ensured?

The best way to protect intellectual property is to keep it in your head. Not very practical.

The second best way is to register it with your copyright office. That won't "protect" it, per se, but it will allow you to pursue legal action when an infringement is discovered.


View the original article here

Resolved Question: What are the intellectual property policies concerning academic papers written for conferences or jo…

Generally speaking the journal in which a paper is published owns the copyright. They recover their costs (and make a profit) from selling access to the journal.

The broader questions of ownship of intellectual property and the universities is a huge issue. Each university has its own policy and, typically, a professor agrees to that policy by virtue of signing an employment contract. You could look at various universities' websites to see the variety of cases.


View the original article here

Monday, December 13, 2010

Resolved Question: Why did the intellectual property rights start? who invented them?

In the United States, the Patent office was established around 1804 by Thomas Jefferson. The idea behind it was to promote innovation by trading an exclusive right to an inventor in exchange for publishing all the secrets to that invention. That is, the inventor has to make public how the invention works. They are protected for a period of time in that nobody else can sell their invention. But, in the meantime, others can see how the invention works and try to make something better. The inventor who has the patent is also encouraged to make improvements on their product knowing that their exclusive right to it won't last forever.

The idea of intellectual property goes back before that. The first use of it that I know of is the issuing of Copyrights to particular printers by the monarch of England. This allowed the monarch to have some control of the publishing of information but also enabled publishers to make a profit from publishing books and political treatises.

That doesn't answer all of your question but I hope it provides some information to you.


View the original article here

Resolved Question: What are the requirements to being an intellectual property attorney?

I recently graduated from law school and am studying for the NY bar (didn't take July).

My undergraduate is in independent studies (yes, a quite useless degree).

Does practicing intellectual property require passing a separate bar (as does patent law does). Do I need a technical background? It is essentially a sub-practice of patent law?

And if the answer to the above is yes, is there a work around?

Thank you.


View the original article here

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Resolved Question: Where do I get intellectual property than can be infringed upon?

Yahoo says that if my intellectual property has been infringed upon, I can file a complaint.

But first, I gotta find some intellectual property, and then someone to infringe on it. Any ideas?


View the original article here

Resolved Question: intellectual property?

Sorry, I could not read the content fromt this page.

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Saturday, December 11, 2010

Resolved Question: How can I protect my intellectual property from being plagiarized, without patenting it?

(1) If you insist on not getting a patent, then you are insisting to forgo the measures that are intended to protect your intellectual property. So you really have no way of protecting that property. The only thing you can do is hide it from those who would want to duplicate it.

(2) Yes, the majority of useful and patentable ideas that come out of universities are patented. All major universities have programs or departments that facilitate the patenting of ideas and products. In fact, this is a major source of income for universities, so these departments are usually quite substantial and efficient. However, universities claim the patent rights to all work that is done by students using university resources, for university classes, or at university labs. This is quite similar to the way businesses retain the patent rights to the work of their employees, instead of the employees themselves having patent rights. What compensation the students get for their patented ideas depends on the university. Many schools give the 'inventor' some percentage of any profits as an incentive to patent, while others do not.


View the original article here

Undecided Question: Is school work covered by intellectual property law?

There are plenty of examples of intellectual products that are covered by Intellectual Property laws (which vary from country to country, and perhaps even between states). Examples of those can be: music compositions, software, writing, etc. This might also lead to tangent subject such as patentability, but that's beside the subject of this question.

On the other hand, I'm under the impression that in academia the researchers don't have exclusive rights over their work. Instead it belongs to the institute. In case of articles published in peer reviewed journals, the authors sign the articles but the property rights are transferred to the publisher; the same happens to books, whose rights are transferred to the publisher given a compensation to the authors. In other words, the authors let go of the rights to (re)publish their work through a different publisher without previous consent (which makes sense).

However, I'm not sure to WHOM belongs work that is produced under a school project (i.e. part of academic curriculum). If someone on the University produces a brilliant piece of math, or software, as result of their school project, does it belong to the school or to its creator? Are intellectual property rights tacitly attributed to the author, or does its rights transfer to the institute/university after the work is submitted (irrespective of the grade attributed by the course teacher)?

Instead it belongs to the institute.
I'm thinking, for example, of a researcher who creates a means of identifying the presence of a certain protein in blood samples and thus claims authorship (although the work "belongs" to the institute the researcher works/worked for).

View the original article here

Friday, December 10, 2010

Resolved Question: What is the differences between reusing code and theft of intellectual property?

Theft of intellectual property doesn't always apply. If you work at a company, another employee may have created code that you could reuse in your own project, which you typically can because the company owns the code. Not to mention the case where you create code and you want to reuse it in another project. That's also code reuse.

I (and many other people with me) have published code on the Internet for other people to (re-)use. Most of the time, the license under which it was published makes it clear this was the intent of the programmer; sometimes, admittedly, you just hope the other programmer doesn't mind. (Personally, I leave out a copyright notice but because I use comments like 'When you use this code in your own project, make sure that...")

Just look for copyright notices and/or the license under which the code was published.


View the original article here

Resolved Question: How enforceable is a company's claim to own the intellectual property in any ideas that may be share…

In nearly all cases, you need a specific, written assignment for a copyright transfer. I suspect the typical boilerplate "terms and conditions" will not be enforceable (or at the very least, very difficult to enforce in most courts).

http://www.ivanhoffman.com/transfers.html


View the original article here

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Undecided Question: what are the intellectual property laws in the US?

Home >All Categories > Politics & Government >Law & Ethics >Undecided Questionwooter wooter Member since:September 01, 2007Total points:107 (Level 1)I had my facebook settings set so that friends of friends could see my photos. That was a mistake and I changed it because someone I didnt know used my picture as theirs. It's a picture of my face. I filed a complaint with facebook under their intellectual property infringement section, and they said they may remove it if the law requires it. So my question is, do they have to remove it?Sign in to Vote for the Best Answer

Answerer 1

Technically, you own the copyright, so they had no right to use it as theirs. But if you don't know who the person is, then you won't be able to file charges or sue the person. The burden is on you to seek out the person who violated your copyright. This is why it's not a good idea for teens to be posting pics of themselves online. I see more and more teens getting in trouble over Facebook in recent years.

Sometimes none of the answers get it just right. If so, pick "No Best Answer". Voters DO NOT get any points for voting on the No Best Answer.


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Resolved Question: How can we respect others intellectual property?

You respect others' property by not taking as your own something that is not yours. We learn it as toddlers, then forget the concept by the time we reach middle school, for some reason.

The same way you wouldn't dream of eating someone else's lunch just because it was there, you don't copy & paste articles off the internet and turn it in on a composition with your name on it. To claim their words as your words is stealing.

What about music and books? Just because they're there, digitally speaking, does not make them yours. You should buy, not pirate, software, music, movies that are the creative work of another. I know that "everybody" does it. However, right is right even if nobody is right; wrong is wrong, even if everybody is wrong.

I'll get off my soapbox now. Hope this helps.


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Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Resolved Question: How do I register the intellectual property of an investment project?

The first questions are:
1. Where do you want to register?
2. What do you want to register?
3. How do you plan to use the IP?

The three basic types of intellectual property are copyrights, trademarks and patents. Depending on which you want to register and the country or countries in which you want to register, you'll be headed in different directions.

The best advice for now is to consult an intellectual property attorney, who can give you specific advice relating to your project.

http:/www.browdelaw.info - we do trademarks and copyrights, but not patents.

View the original article here

Friday, November 5, 2010

Property Tax Appeals - Property Tax Reduction

Engage in a property tax appeal? Lower your property tax once and it continues for years. Consumer Reports report 40% of the population is over-assessed! Some say higher. Step-by-step specifics, percentages and numbers to use maximize the win!


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Thursday, November 4, 2010

Property Quotes that can make you rich

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Instant ecourse gives access to all the techniques, including the little-known ones, on how to renovate property and boost profits. Full, complete and comprehensive course with personal email consultation included. Affiliates see Vendor Spotlight.


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Yes, it is possible to quickly find genuine bargain properties

If you are serious about finding undervalued properties easily and quickly without having to get on all fours for an estate agent or pay finders fees for properties you can easily find yourself then this may be the most important message you ever read.


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Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Virtual Property Tycoon: Online Business Masterplan

How to obtain free information, 'flip' it and sell it on as instant businesses for thousands of dollars. Proven Formula, Unique product, no competition. This step by step Home Study Program teaches the entire process. 75% commissions. Massive Payouts.


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Home Staging Handbook - Prepare Property To Sell Faster For More

Learn essential Home Staging techniques. Quickly get properties presented and ready for viewing. Declutter, Redecorate, Accessorize and Organize. Whether selling or renting, a private owner, realtor or property developer this handbook shows you how.


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Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Profitable Property Tax Appeal Service

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Monday, November 1, 2010

How To Purchase A Rental Property For Under $5k!

This is a great book explaining where to find rental properties all over the US that are selling online for under $5k, without paying a finders fee or commission, and what to look for before and after purchasing one of these "low cost rental properties".


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The worlds #1 Property Management Software

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Big Money in Distressed Property

A expansive e-book by an industry professional, on how to invest and make large amounts of money in the commercial and residential real estate through distressed properties.


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Sunday, October 31, 2010

Tips for Renting a Property

Discover a Proven System Gauranteed to Get You the Rental Property you want, the first time...


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Free Crash Cash - How To Buy And Rent Back Property With No Money Down

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How to Buy and Manage Your First Rental Property

Written for the beginner but has many useful ideas, forms and information for the experienced landlord. Ideal for Canada and U.s. but applies to any English speaking country. A step by step guide to increase your wealth through real estate.


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Saturday, October 30, 2010

Successful Property Managers

Whether you are a seasoned veteran or a novice just entering the Property Management field, Successful Property Managers Vol. 1 & 2 will provide you excellent advice and winning strategies from some of the best leaders in the Property Management industry.


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Hmo Property Riches

How To Become Asset And Cashflow Rich From Property.


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Code Violation Properties, Auctions + Cash Buyers = Deals!

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Friday, October 29, 2010

Darryl Kraemer's Investment Property Calculator

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Thursday, October 28, 2010

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Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Lower Your Property Taxes Guide

Use this step by step manual to lower your property taxes today. If your property taxes went up during the boom, then they should go down during the bust. You deserve to have your taxes lowered if your home has lost value over the past 24 months.


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Thursday, October 7, 2010

How Brand as an Intellectual Property has Led to Corporate Globalisation?


Introduction

Globalisation is referred to as a set of profound material changes that have an impact on relations between societies in the past few decades. The identifiable features of these material changes are witnessed in the development and growth of web, satellite transmission, fibre-optic technology, broadband operations, transnational corporations and the emergence of World Trade Organisation.

Globalisation is transformation of how ideas travel and the nature of their final destination leading to increase in international trade thereby increased competition. Firms expand by penetrating established markets to create new markets for their products. This necessitates them to have identity for them by establishing trademarks by way of branding and keep on administering to create value. While expanding and penetrating newer markets; developing, promoting and performing marketing operations using different trade marks for different countries become costlier. The more the countries a trademark is known, the greater is its value and the greater the need to protect the same by registering at the global level. Trademark registration involves not only higher costs but also procedural constraints while registering the same in every country.

Brands have become part of not only an economic market, but also a metaphorical market because they involve and propagate a system of using signs to control meaning and language as brands fulfils several different economic functions.

Identification: On a basic level, it serves an identification function by associating a product with a company.

Communication: More abstractly, it has an informative function, in that it provides a vehicle for the efficient communication of information, thereby reducing consumer search costs in choosing a product. Signaling: The use of branding in advertising also serves a signaling function, in that, it suggests that a company who is willing to expend a substantial sum on its advertising must have developed a good product. Expression: Lastly, branding also serves an expressive function, in the sense that it links a particular consumer identity or essence with a product.

Mega - branding Strategy

Branding involves not just the product name, advertisements, or the use of a logo, but the core assumptions and beliefs that are conjured up when one thinks of the brand. The best brands were those who could generate a certain psychological feeling about the product. Thus, the "brand essence" moved away from a focus on the product and toward a psychological association of the brand with a certain identity. Today, firms undertake "mega-branding" strategy, in which firms devote a substantial portion of their income towards placing their logo on a variety of different products and events, further amplifying the link between psychological, cultural and corporate association. In this way manufacturers control both supply and demand by manipulating consumer trends through the skilful promotion of the brand.

Brand Plan - A Valuable Management Tool

Brand plan is a crucial step in charting a business route to success. A good brand plan provides an overview of where the brand is, how it plans to position or reposition itself, and how it seeks to achieve its business objectives. A well-prepared and regularly updated brand plan is a valuable management tool that serves variety of purposes. It helps examine the feasibility of taking a brand idea to the market. A written brand plan forces a firm to think through all the key issues - such as the potential demand, the nature of the competition, entry barriers, the unique selling proposition, key employees, relevant technologies and strategic partners, raising funds, projected start-up costs, and the like.

A brand plan is a reference document that provides management with an objective basis for determining whether the brand is on track to meet its goals and objectives with the available resources in a set timeframe. Innovation is very important and critical to the future of the brands. Context, Leadership and core values of the brands are the drivers of innovation. One needs to address "What is the current situation of the brand? What threats for survival might exist?", "What is the leadership passionate about? What drives the choices, decisions and behaviour in the organisation? How innovation and creativity improve brand? How this can be strengthened to be considered as a global brand? Customer analysis and brainstorming help generate ideas for innovation. Internal sources and customers are the best sources of ideas.

The World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) has initiated and promoted the Madrid Protocol, which establishes a system for the international registration of trademarks to reduce this cost due to multiple registrations in different countries. This protocol is termed as the Intellectual Property Rights. Intellectual Property Rights cover Patents, Trade-marks, Industrial designs, Copy rights & related rights, Geographical indications and Trade secrets & Undisclosed information. Trademarks have become more than a means of protecting market share. They have become an invaluable tool in claiming and creating markets. From just being a trade mark, they become trust marks as brands. According to the author and journalist Naomi Klein, "branded world where the logo is a common language understood by everyone" leading to a shift in corporate marketing strategies: from promoting commodities based on the needs of the marketplace, to promoting a brand to represent a lifestyle thereby create needs in the marketplace. The branding strategy makes the trademark and the socio-cultural identities associated with the mark including the product itself.

Intellectual property in a brand plan becomes critical as business incubator or investors need to understand and accept the coherence of the brand idea including its protection. New or original knowledge and/or creative expression of ideas, protectable by the system of intellectual property (IP), underpin their competitive advantage and success. Therefore, a brand plan should cogently reflect how the firm plans to protect, manage and leverage its intellectual property assets for brand success. Patents for Brands provide exclusivity for the commercialization of inventions and often play a crucial role in convincing investors or lenders. One or more patents along with industrial design registrations reflect as a proof of brands ability to dissuade competitors using original or aesthetically attractive features of the brand. Therefore, a brand plan should integrate intellectual property and reflect the steps that are planned to develop, register and effective use of intangible assets to win and retain market share from competitors.

While integrating intellectual property, operational elements that make the brand innovative like, Challenge, customer focus, creativity, communication, collaboration, completion and contemplation should also be considered.

Issues

The possibility of inadvertently infringing a third party's intellectual property rights is high in high-tech sectors. Confidential information such as details of production, inventions, and technical, financial and marketing know-how is often the source of competitive advantage. Intellectual Property can be a highly valuable asset. Managing and ascribing a value on the balance sheet of the brand will make it more attractive to potential investors. The more the position in the market place is exploited, more the value will be of the property while licensing it or selling the brand.

Conclusion

Administering Intellectual Property is an arduous task for approaching investors and considering the market opportunities for the brand. As the Intellectual Property provides the brand with competitive advantages and increases its value, it is necessary to let the investors know that the intellectual property integrates with the brand plan. Reference to the assets of the brand and its market opportunities should list both the tangible and intangible assets, as the latter are often the key to success of the brand. The growing emphasis on the brand has been paralleled by a massive expansion of property rights in trade symbols. In the past, the law's major emphasis focused on protecting a mark in order to avoid the danger of consumer confusion, or piracy between goods which used similar marks. However, today, the focus has shifted towards trademark protection. In other words, in order to protect their trade marks used in advertisements and logos, firms turn to trademark law, and copyright law. As per the trademarks, 1999, the term mark includes a device, brand, heading, label, ticket, name signature, word, letter or numeral or any combination thereof. The new Trade Marks Act, 1999 has made far reaching changes in the act considering the liberalisation and globalisation of economy. They include particularly the following:

a. Registration of Service Marks

b. Collective marks provided

c. Two parts A & B abolished

d. Well known trademarks protected even if not registered

e. Shape of words can also be registered

Hence, intellectual property law should form a key part of every aspect of a good brand plan.








J. Solomon Prabakar


Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Intellectual Property Protection: Legal Right Protection


Intellectual property, although intangible, is still ownable and your intellectual property rights should be protected. Modern business, especially since the rise of the internet has seen a rise in the creation of intellectual property. However the internet makes it even easier for someone to steal your ideas and work. An intellectual property lawyer who is trained to help reclaim patent, trademark, copyright and trade secret rights can help protect your intellectual property.

Types of intellectual property include patents, trademarks and trade dress, copyrights, and trade secrets.

Patents

A patent is granted by the government allowing a (usually) 20 year monopoly on an invention previously "not generally known." Patents are intended to encourage investment in research and development. If you create a new useful process for doing something, a machine, manufacture, or even an improvement on something already in existence, you can patent your invention and prohibit others from "making, using, offering for sale, or selling...or importing" the invention in the U.S. Your right to patent your invention is a constitutional right (Article I, section 8).

Patents are subdivided into three groups: design, utility, and plant. Design patents protect innovations in the appearance (although not the structure or function) of an item. Utility patents are for wholly new inventions including machines, industrial processes, compositions of matter, and articles of manufacture. Plant patents cover innovations in plant-life, such as new species of plant created from the reproduction of cuttings and grafts of existing plants.

Patent lawyers will research previously granted patents for you to see if a similar product has already been patented or whether you should apply for a patent for your invention. A patent attorney will also tell you if your idea is not patentable because it is a law of nature, a physical phenomena, or abstract. You should find a specialized patent or intellectual property attorney because in order to prosecute a client's patent application, he or she must be registered with the U.S. patent office. A patent lawyer will also have to have passed a science and engineering exam to better understand and serve clients.

Trademarks

Trademarks are granted for words, names, symbols, or devices which separate and distinguish businesses and services. These include arbitrary names such as Kodak, suggestive names such as Caterpillar (tractors), descriptive names which indicated the business' products or services, and generic names which are descriptive. Generic and some descriptive names cannot be protected, so a trademark or intellectual property lawyer should be consulted to see if your name qualifies for trademark rights.

You can also file an intent-to-use application to reserve a name that will later be trademarked. (This is especially important with the expansion of business on the internet.)

Trademark lawyers can also be sought to make sure that your new business isn't using a registered mark. The consequences for using a registered mark, even though you may have put money and advertising into promoting your business, include being sued for infringement.

Copyrights

Copyrights protect the individual's expression of an idea, but do not protect the idea itself (see patent). Copyrights are intended to promote scientific progress. You can copyright your writing, performance (music, dance), art, sound, compilations. You cannot copyright ideas or uncompiled facts, words, or phrases (these could be registered as trademarks, though, so consult an intellectual property lawyer). If you come up with an idea or invention while working for a company, it is able to be patented or trademarked by the company you work for, but copyrightable work belongs to you, the employee, not the company employing you. However, there are loopholes, and an intellectual property lawyer will help you both with the process of getting your expression copyrighted but will also save you trouble and time in getting over road blocks.

If you are a company, you need an intellectual property lawyer who specializes in copyrights because especially with internet businesses, you will need to make sure that contractually your web site design can be copyrighted to your company and will not belong to the employee or independent contractor who created it. This also applies to software.

Trade Secrets

It is important to protect your business' trade secrets so they will not be misappropriated. Whereas patents have a limited time of coverage and after 20 years are released, trade secrets are always protected. To qualify as a trade secret, it must have independent economic value to the company. For example, the recipe for Coca-Cola is a trade secret, not a patent, and therefore will never be released because without maintaining the secrecy of the recipe, the business would not be able to compete by offering an individual product.








Contact an experienced Intellectual Property Lawyer today.

Find an Intellectual Property Lawyer associated with a major Intellectual Property Law Firm today at huge settlements


Strict Laws and Skilled Attorneys Protect Intellectual Property Rights


If you created it, you own it... except when you don't.

Both national and international laws control who owns "intellectual property," the products of your creative genius. Copyright laws govern written works, the narratives in movies and television broadcasts, and most photographic and cinematographic images and icons. Trademarks, service marks, and the little "r" sign protect corporation's logos and advertising art; in some cases, they even protect the font in the corporation's advertising. Patents protect inventions.

In the age of the internet, however, everything seems to have gone up for grabs, and violations of intellectual property rights happen a million times every minute. The internet has become "The Wild West" of intellectual property rights: Go ahead and stake your claim to your own idea, but watch every black-hat in the known world claim it as his own. Blogs constantly are raided for their good ideas, and "tweets" are re-tweeted with no regard for the original "poet's" rights. Every unauthorized download steals somebody's good idea; every copy of a good design appropriates someone's precious work of art.

If you're still in school, your teachers or professors probably have serious cautions about and severe penalties for plagiarism, by far the most common violation of intellectual property rights. Especially in a college or university, where careers and fortunes depend on the quality of a scholar's ideas, theft of intellectual property represents an extremely serious offense. In the workplace, these rights turn to serious business. Consider, as prime examples, the formulae for popular colas. Their brands depend on their distinctive flavors, and a tiny paper fortress of property protections and safeguards guards those soft drink recipes. In a more quirky example, Harry Caray, longtime voice of the Chicago Cubs, took steps to protect his signature exclamation "Holy Cow!" as his intellectual property, preventing other sportscasters from imitating it without crediting him. Very technically, garage bands should pay for the rights to the songs they cover just as theater producers must pay for the rights to put on new productions of old plays.

Industrial espionage takes questions of intellectual property to their furthest extreme. If the Acme Anvil Company is developing a new carbon-composite anvil guaranteed to fall on the roadrunner every time, Universal Anvil Works certainly wants to see what their chemicals and designs look like-of course, so that Universal can copy and improve upon Acme's product. Even the first hair-brained notion of the new anvil is Acme's intellectual property, and using it without paying for it constitutes theft. In a competitive market, though, free enterprise and warfare have a lot in common.

So, what does an attorney do when he or she specializes in intellectual property? The practice consists of protecting original works and making certain that people pay for "fair use" of a creator's original inventions. Yes, you may Xerox the entire biochemistry textbook...after you pay the copyright holder for the right to copy it. If the publisher catches you bootlegging copies of his biochemistry masterpiece, he can collect both compensatory and punitive damages, because everything about that book right down to the color of the ink and the photo on page 237 belongs to that publisher. The publisher's attorney secured the copyrights, and now the attorney comes after the bootlegger with full force of the law on the publisher's side.

If you are a creative artist of any kind, learn how to protect your intellectual property. If you are a law student, consider specializing in intellectual property rights, because it promises to remain one of the hot areas for all of the twenty-first century.








The intellectual property rights and concerned issues are under hot discussion nowadays, especially in connection with the Internet. Read more about it at our website.


Tuesday, October 5, 2010

What is Intellectual Property


As a general rule, intellectual property rights are those intangible and tangible bundle of rights of a particular intellectual property asset. Accordingly, the legal system seeks to establish enforceable property rights for the creators of new works. Specifically, intellectual property law grants rights to inventors and innovators so they can profit from their creations.

Generally, intellectual property is broken into different categories which include, but are not limited to, trade secrets, confidential information, patents, trademarks, and copyrights. According to Dallas intellectual property attorneys, intellectual property law conveys different types of rights depending on the type of intellectual property that is developed. For example, with respect to trade secrets, intellectual property law protects the trade secrets and other types of valuable information created by a business.

This would include customer lists and other types of sensitive business information. With respect to trademarks, intellectual property law protects the mark of a business so there is little likelihood of confusion as to a business' particular goods or services. According to attorneys, intellectual property law protects the unauthorized reproduction and distribution of the creation of an authors work.

Pursuant to the current intellectual property law framework, patents basically protect the inventions of inventors. Confidential information is that type of sensitive information that is compiled by businesses. Confidential information is very much like trade secrets.

Of note, in terms of litigation, most defendants accused of misappropriating confidential information such as customer lists often claim that the customer lists can be generated by combing through the phone book. However, there is a distinction between those vendors that can be compiled by looking through the phone book versus those customer lists that have the actual name and number of the vendor who is able to make a decision with respect to a particular purchase.








If you need more information, you should contact a qualified Dallas intellectual property attorney to help navigate through your intellectual property needs.
James Bell


Safeguarding Intellectual Property in the Republic of Panama


Panamanian Intellectual Property Law No. 35 of May 10, 1996, replaced the obsolete legal provisions on Intellectual Property, which were in existence for more than sixty years. This law simplifies the process of registering trademarks and allows for renewal of a trademark for ten-year periods. The law's most important feature is the granting of ex-officio authority to government agencies to conduct investigations and to seize materials suspected of being counterfeited.

This new legislation introduced modem concepts recommended by the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), consistent with the policies of the World Trade Organization (WTO), thus bringing Panama into line with international developments on industrial property, which has reduced the infringement of foreign trademark rights in Panama.

In addition, Panama is party to the following international agreements:

(a) The Trade Related Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) contained in the Marrakech Treaty, approved by means of Law No. 23 of 1997;

(b) The Berna Convention approved by means of Law No. 3 of January 3 1996;

(c) World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO) Treaty approved by means of Law No. 93 of 15 December 1998;

(d) The General Inter-American Convention for Trademark and Commercial Protection approved by means of Law No. 64 of 1934; and

(e) The Paris Convention, approved by means of Law No. 41 of 1995.

In Panama, differing from other jurisdictions where cases of industrial property are of administrative nature, since 1997, the IP jurisdiction has been removed from the Ministry of Commerce and Industry and given to special courts with exclusive competence to handle IP conflicts (ie, oppositions, cancellations, infringement of trademarks and copyrights, etc). Also, the District Attorneys' office is specialized in the prosecution of IP rights. Since the creation of this specialized jurisdiction within the court system, the proceedings regarding these subjects have been more expedite and owners are allowed to get a better protection of their IP rights in Panama.

The creation of specialized prosecutors for intellectual property-related cases has strengthened the protection and enforcement of intellectual property rights (IPR) in Panama.

Panamanian Intellectual Property Law also includes criminal enforcement and criminal penalties such as prison, which are the most effective methods and procedures in the fight against infringement of intellectual property rights.

Another major difference from foreign jurisdictions is that in Panama custom authorities and administrative authorities from the Colon Free Zone, which have their own special brand register, are empowered by law to retain, inspect and even seize counterfeit goods; in some cases, these institutions may proceed even without the need of a claim or process in case of suspicion of counterfeited goods.

On the other hand, Panama's 1994 copyright law modernized copyright protection and its 2004 update created a special Copyright Office with anti-piracy enforcement powers.

The Republic of Panama is signatory to the WIPO Copyright Treaty and the WIPO Performances and Phonographs Treaty. The copyright office has enhanced border measures and established new punishable offenses, such as for Internet-based copyright violations which have significantly reduced the rate of VHS piracy.

Panama worked through the FTA negotiations with the United States of America to establish a legal regime to combat piracy of audiovisual products over the Internet, including notice and take down provisions and clearly defined Internet Service Provider (ISP) liabilities and copy protection measures.

At the international level, Panamanian government has reinforced the legal framework and institutional arrangements to comply with the existing international treaties, including more effective methods and procedures to all intellectual property matters, such as:

? Administrative enforcement, such as seizure of infringing goods by a customs office;

? Criminal enforcement against the infringer;

? Civil enforcement, in which the right holder, or someone in possession of valid rights, such as an assignee or licensee, takes prescribed legal action, such as in court by filing a civil action against an infringer, and perhaps seeking an injunction;

? Technological enforcement, in which producers of products and services employ technological means to protect IP rights against infringement (for example, encryption of digital copyright works).

? Border measures before the Customs Office and the Colon Free Zone Authority. In order to enforce IP rights, Panamanian Intellectual Property Law grants discretionary powers and faculties to Customs and The Colon Free Zone authorities to conduct investigations and retain any goods suspected of being imitations, including the confiscation of equipment used to manufacture fake goods.

The Attorney General's Office and the Customs Bureau are officially empowered to initiate investigations on Intellectual Property matters.

The Customs Bureau and the Free Zone Administration are duly empowered to keep records of the Panamanian Intellectual Property Registrations for companies willing to protect their intellectual property through barrier measures. GALINDO, ARIAS & LOPEZ offers the service of registering a Panamanian Trademark Registration before the Customs Bureau and the Colon Free Zone.

With the information in the register, the authorities can control and even seize merchandise more effectively at the Colon Free Zone and Customs. These measures take importance because allowing an infringing product to remain on the market will hurt the right-holder's sales and lead to a risk of market confusion.

Some complexities involved in establishing or enforcing IP rights on a cross border/international scale, are time factor and expertise on the part of the authorities. In view of the seriousness of the sanctions involved, which require that decisions be taken as quickly as possible, time is of the essence.

Demanding cessation of infringement only makes sense if a court order can be issued quickly. For this reason, preliminary injunctions play a major part in enforcing IP rights, since these measures are intended to prevent further infringement until the court has decided on the merits of the case.

On the other hand, the demand for a quick procedure, leading to a very tough sanction, requires expertise on the part of the judges. Only judges fully versed in intellectual property matters are prepared to make speedy use of this prohibitory instrument. It is also necessary to ensure the participation of well-trained legal practitioners and attorneys.

Finally, costs are an issue of major practical importance in establishing or enforcing IP rights on a cross border/international scale. With the complexity of these matters, retaining the services of experts, and of specialized legal practitioners in addition to attorneys, imposes a heavy financial burden on the parties. Measures such as taking evidence and carrying out tests and investigations on the infringing goods also involve further costs. In some cases, in Intellectual Property infringement proceedings, the financially weaker party is always in disadvantage.

The United States concluded free trade negotiations with Panama on 2006. This trade agreement will eliminate tariffs and other barriers to goods and services, promote economic growth, and enhance trade between the United States and Panama.

This trade agreement includes a chapter on Intellectual Property. Conventions such as the Madrid Arrangement concerning the International Registration of Marks, and the Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT) will be mandatory in the Republic of Panama.

The agreement provides for improved standards for the protection and enforcement of a broad range of intellectual property rights, which are consistent with both U.S. standards of protection and enforcement, and with emerging international standards. Such improvements include protections for digital products such as U.S. software, music, text, and videos and; stronger protection for patents, trademarks and test data, including an electronic system for the registration and maintenance of trademarks.

Strengthening and improving Panama's overall regime for the protection and enforcement of intellectual property rights in a broad range of areas was an important objective of the FTA negotiations.

In Panama's climate, businesses are often looking for a way of putting themselves ahead of competitors; many companies lack a clear understanding of exactly what their intellectual property is or what it's worth. Many businesses are unaware of the extent of their intellectual property and the consequences of failing to protect it properly.

Therefore, businesses are realizing the importance of an effective protection and use of intellectual property and companies are seeking expert legal advice to find out the best way to protect their intellectual property and also to understand how best to enforce it.

Some companies are tending to implement measures in order to have an inventory of their intellectual property to determine what the company's intellectual property is, where it is, and what it is worth; and also to understand that managing the company's intellectual property is more than just registering patents and trademarks.

Companies are starting to implement processes to identify intellectual property that belongs to others - such as knowledge and trade secrets of competitors that may accidentally come into their business with new personnel.

Between in-house resources and outside advisors, companies are making sure to cover intellectual property licensing, strategic alliance structuring, counterfeit and grey market tracking, due diligence on partners and employees, registration of patents, copyrights, trademarks and trade secrets, intellectual property valuation and royalty and revenue recovery.








REBECA HERRERA graduated in 1994 from Panama's Universidad Santa Mar?a La Antigua (USMA) with a degree in Law and Political Sciences; she also holds a Master's degree in Law with a focus on private law, earned from the University of Chile (with Honors, 1999).

Rebeca Herrera specializes in the areas of mercantile law, corporate law, mergers and acquisitions, unfair trade practices, public bids and contracts, intellectual and industrial property, and administrative law.

She has worked with a particular focus in the area of intellectual and industrial property, legally representing multinational companies-such as banks, commercial businesses, insurance companies-in judicial and administrative processes before the customs authority of Colon's Free Zone, and legal representations regarding health where such matters have concerned violations of sanitary registry regulations. She has participated in the process of mergers and acquisitions involving the principal banking companies in Panama, as well as insurance companies, and also the execution of legal corporate audits. She is in charge of the firm's intellectual property department.

Rebeca Herrera has held the position of Director of AFP Horizonte - Peru (1997 - 1998), Director and Secretary of Techolit, S.A. (1999 - 2001) and Director and secretary of Fibropan Inc. (1999 - 2001).

She has authored various publications, including "Judicial Intervention in Corporations", "The Judicial and Administrative citation for shareholders' meetings in corporations (comparative analysis of the Panamanian and Chilean legislation)", "Modifications to the Code of Commerce", "Important Issues Regarding Industrial Property in the Republic of Panama", "Customs and Colon's Free Zone Regime on Intellectual and Industrial Property Issues", and "New Panamanian Legislation of Electronic Commerce".

She is a member of the Panamanian Intellectual Property Law Association; International Trademark Association (INTA); Interamerican Intellectual Property Association (ASIPI); ASIPI Trademark Comitte (2007).


Monday, October 4, 2010

Intellectual Property Law


Intellectual Property Law can be quite confusing at times. Copyrights, trademarks and patents all have a role in protecting your hard earned content and knowing their role is half the battle.

Intellectual property in itself refers to the creations of the mind, including such things as: artistic works, literary works, inventions, names, images, symbols, and designs used in commerce. In other words, the intellect that is the possession of an organization or an individual is considered intellectual property.

Intellectual property is divided into two categories, copyrights and industrial property.

Copyrights give the authors of an exclusive work, exclusive rights to that work for a limited amount of time. Copyrights cover such literary and artistic works as novels, poems, plays, films, songs and other musical works, artistic works (drawings, paintings, sculptures and photographs) and architectural designs. Copyrights, which must be renewed periodically, allow the creators of a piece of work, the opportunity to benefit from that piece of work.

Industrial property includes patents, trademarks, industrial designs and geographic indications of source.

Patents give the inventors of a new product, a certain (limited) amount of time in which he/she may prevent others from making, selling or using the invention without authorization.

A trademark is an intellectual property protection which is used to protect the distinctive features that distinguish one product from another. Those features can include such things as: symbols, colors, brands, names, sounds, smells, shapes, and signs.

Fortunately, Intellectual property laws benefit the creator of a property, by rewarding that creator for his/her innovation and creativity. Also, society as a whole benefits from intellectual property laws, by the fact, that these laws encourage creativity, therefore allowing the rest of us to benefit from the wide range of products and services that are produced.

Any violation of a trademark, patent or copyright could constitute the grounds for an intellectual property lawsuit. If you feel that you have been victimized it would be wise to consult a qualified attorney in your area. Find an attorney or law firm, which specializes in intellectual property law. Know your rights and protect them accordingly.








You are welcome to reproduce this article: Intellectual Property Law as long as a live link to www.hugesettlements.com is provided.


Sunday, October 3, 2010

The Intellectual Property Audit - Finding What You Have (Part II of V)


One traditional definition of an intellectual property audit is "a cataloging of a organization's intellectual property assets." It is required for an organization to meet its due-diligence requirements for mergers, acquisitions, or other transfers. Today, organizations see an intellectual property audit not only as a balance sheet for intangible assets but also, more importantly, as a self-evaluation that the organization constantly and consistently engages in to determine the value of its own assets, determine how to best capitalize on those assets, and keep abreast of the changing values of its assets in the face of the ever-changing economic and legal ecosphere.

Who Should Conduct an Intellectual Property Audit?

"Intellectual property audit" is perhaps something of a misnomer. It indicates that the audit is a mere counting up of assets, and the person conducting the audit merely adds up the intellectual property found in the organization and reports the value. Nothing could be further from the truth. An intellectual property audit is an inherently legal undertaking , and should therefore be performed by a team consisting of at least an attorney with expertise in the law of intellectual property, either in-house or outside counsel, or by the in-house personnel of the organization, if they have sufficient knowledge of the organization's intellectual property to perform the activities required for an intellectual property audit of the organization. An intellectual property audit is not an accounting function. The intellectual property audit is an assessment of the legal status and value of an organization's intellectual property, especially targeting those areas where the marketing and management goals of the organization and the existing protection of the organization's intellectual property are somehow not well suited to each other. The attorney or attorneys and other team members (the team might consist of the intellectual property attorney and at least one representative from each of the management, marketing and technology areas ; because of the inherent legal significance of the intellectual property audit, at least one member of the team must be an intellectual property attorney) selected to perform the audit should therefore have some expertise with the organization's technology, the marketing and management goals of the organization, and have some familiarity with what is involved in intellectual property protection: prosecution of the registration application, maintenance of the property, and on through defense of the intellectual property through litigation and the appellate process.

When to Conduct an Intellectual Property Audit

When should an organization consider conducting an intellectual property audit? Attorney Leslie J. Lott has identified several appropriate times in the life of an organization for intellectual property audits ; in this subsection, I borrow heavily from her listing and commentary.

New Intellectual Property Management

If the organization has new intellectual property management, the new intellectual property manager should have a thorough intellectual property audit performed to become familiar with the status of the portfolio.

Merger, Acquisition, Significant Stock Purchase

A significant corporate change (merger, acquisition, significant stock purchase) can impact intellectual property ownership; this is another signal for an intellectual property audit.

Transfer or Assignment of Interest in Intellectual Property

A transfer or assignment of intellectual property from one organization to another calls for an intellectual property audit of both organizations' intellectual property. Here, the intellectual property audit allows the organizations to be sure the transfer or assignment meets the interests of both by ensuring that the intellectual property is properly protected and enhances the acquiring organization's existing intellectual property interests, and that the intellectual property does not leave any unplanned vulnerabilities for the organization transferring the interests.

Licensing Program

An intellectual property audit should be performed when an organization sets up an intellectual property license or licensing program, and on a regular basis thereafter. This is important whether the organization is the licensor or the licensee.

If the organization licenses its intellectual property to others, it must of course actually own the intellectual property that it is licensing. Also, there must be no existing licenses that would interfere with the proposed new license.

If the organization is the licensee, obtaining the intellectual property rights of another, the audit determines that the scope and extent of the license to be obtained is adequate for its purposes.

Significant Change in Law

A significant change in case or statutory law may require an organization to re-evaluate its intellectual property.

One such change in statutory law occurred when Congress passed the federal anti-dilution statute. This change in the law significantly impacts the analysis of the potential liability of an organization for infringement of the trademarks of others and also affects the analysis of whether or not others are infringing the organization's rights.

Four examples of case law which arouse the need for an intellectual property audit are the Qualitex case (which deals with the protection of color as a trademark), the Sony case (which deals with the question of whether a device that can be used for copyright infringement is itself an infringement of copyright), the Festo case (which deals with the Doctrine of Equivalents in patent prosecution), and the KSR case (which deals with the concept of obviousness in patent law).

Financial Transactions Involving Intellectual Property

Financial transactions involving intellectual property might include loans, public offerings, private placements, or any other transaction which directly involves an organization's intellectual property, or in which the intellectual property of the organization is or could be significant.

New Client Program or Policy

An organization should conduct an intellectual property audit in connection with new programs or policies, such as an aggressive foreign filing program, new marketing approach or direction, expansion of a product line or services, corporate reorganization, or any other corporate change that could affect the interaction between the organization's intellectual property and the marketplace.

Continued in Part III.

Copyright 2003, 2007, Nancy Baum Delain. All rights reserved.








Nancy Baum Delain, a registered patent attorney, is the managing member of Delain Law Office, PLLC, an intellectual property and business law firm located in Clifton Park, NY. Nancy's expertise lies in patent, trademark and copyright prosecution, contract, licensing, and general business matters. She answers her own phone. Find out more at http://www.ipattorneyfirm.com


Intellectual Property Assignment and License Agreements


An Intellectual Property Assignment and License Agreement is a unique agreement whereby one party, the assignor, transfers to another party, the assignee, rights to their intellectual property, be it in a copyright, trademark, or patent, in exchange for valuable consideration, and in exchange for the assignee assigning back to the assignor a license to use the intellectual property. Thus, in such an arrangement, ownership to the intellectual property rights has been transferred, but the assigning party is still able to use the copyright, trademark, or patent, subject to the terms and conditions of the agreement. Unless stated otherwise, the rights, for the duration of the license at least, are thus non-exclusive, as both parties have the right to use property.

Because the arrangement is so unique, a drafter of an IP Assignment and License Agreement must be sure to carefully state the rights and obligations of each party. The following are the most important areas to address:

1. Assignment - The agreement must first address the parameters of the assignment. This generally involves a full and irrevocable transfer, assign, conveying, and delivering of all proprietary ownership and all other right, title, and interest in and to the property. The assignee should also require further assurances that the assignor will execute all documents and do all other things deemed necessary to perfect, establish, protect, prosecute, defend, and enforce assignee's right to the property, which could include things like filing certain documents with the Federal Government.

2. Compensation - This section must address what the assignee is giving up in exchange for the intellectual property rights. It could be a cash payment, a stock payment, a mixture of both, or some other form of payment altogether. If it is an agreement with a subsidiary company, there may not be any consideration at all. Generally though, the purchase price is substantial for valuable intellectual property rights, as it is not unusual to see hundreds of thousands, if not millions, shares of stock in play.

3. Rights - The actual rights being assigned by Assignor to Assignee must be described here. Intellectual Property rights fall into the categories of copyrights, trademarks, or patents. Many times a company will have a trademark to a name and as well as a patent to that service.

4. License to Assignor - Here the terms of the "license back" to the Assignor should be addressed. For example, this paragraph could state: "In further consideration for the assignment, the assignee will grant to Assignor a worldwide, exclusive, royalty-free right and license for the purposes of making, using, selling, offering for sale, and importing products." The key is to outline the scope of the license, whether it is exclusive or non-exclusive, what territory it covers, and whether there are any limitations on the Assignor's right to use the intellectual property. The agreement must also state the term, i.e. length, of the license.

5. General Provisions - The agreement should address the rules governing the Assignor/Licensee's right to sublicense the property or obligation to refrain from sublicensing the property. The agreement should also address issues such as assignment, waiver, and governing law.

These are the most important provisions involved in an Intellectual Property Assignment and License Agreement. For further information, or to read and download actual Intellectual Property Agreements, please see the Agreements section of this website.








Mark Warner is an Intellectual Property Assignment and License Agreement Research Analyst for RealDealDocs.com. RealDealDocs gives you insider access to millions of legal documents online drafted by the top law firms in the US that you can download, edit and print. Search For Free at RealDealDocs.com.


Saturday, October 2, 2010

How to Work With Your Intellectual Property Lawyer


In many small businesses, intellectual property is an overlooked asset. The goodwill from your company name, computer programs you have written, articles, manuals, or books that you have written, logos, advertising copy, methods you have used or processes to create your products or services, all should be closely examined in conjunction with a qualified intellectual property attorney, to decide how much value they are to your business, and how they should be properly protected.

There are many different disciplines under which your intellectual property can be protected. These include copyright, trademark, trade secret, method patents, design patents, product patents, and others. You can also consult with your intellectual property attorney to decide whether or not to extend your intellectual property protection world wide, or just keep it national.

If your business could be impacted by competitors copying your name, your logo, your products, your services, or anything else integral to your business' success, you owe it to yourself, your employees and your shareholders to protect it in the strongest way possible. Fine yourself a good intellectual property attorney with specific knowledge of your particular business genre who can help you "lock down" your investment.

What Should You Look For in an Intellectual Property Attorney?

Intellectual property is a field in which an attorney has to know not only the law, but must also have a sense about the potential client's business goals, practices, and ethical stance. These elements are not always obvious, so it is in the client's best interest to inquire in an initial interview not only how long s/he has been practicing this particular type of law, but also what type of businesses the intellectual property attorney has had experience with, as well as how "gung ho" the attorney is. For example, if your business wishes to take a balanced view of protection, going after only infringers that you feel are causing serious damage, if your intellectual property attorney delights in dropping nuclear bomb style threat letters on indigent college students and little old ladies, perhaps you would do better with an attorney more in line with your personal ethical structure.

Other things to look for in an attorney include whether or not your personal communications style meshes with that of the intellectual property lawyer. A good example is email communication. Email, for many business owners, is a much more efficient and usually cheaper method of communication. As an added bonus, you have a written record of the exchange in case of later misunderstanding. If your business runs on email contact and your attorney uses pen and paper, this may not work out in your best interests.

Once You Find an Intellectual Property Attorney, Then What?

What do you do once you've found your intellectual property attorney? Communicate clearly what your objectives are and let the attorney make suggestions to you as to how to reach those objectives. Intellectual property law is often highly complex and legally technical. If you have questions, ask the intellectual property attorney. If they don't communicate with you, their client, in clear English terms, ask them to. Oftentimes, lawyers forget that they are dealing with non-lawyers and may fall back on legal jargon. If they can't explain concepts to you in a way you understand, perhaps you should find an attorney who will.

On the other hand, you should not expect your intellectual property lawyer to boil 3 years of law school and decades of experience into a fifteen minute "Cliff Notes" summary. As with all things, finding a balance where both of you are comfortable is of great importance.

As a legal client, do not forget that you are in the driver's seat. Your intellectual property attorney can't make business decisions for you. You must weigh his or her advice carefully, then make your decisions as an informed consumer of legal services. Your decisions should feel "right" to you. Insist that your intellectual property lawyer lay out the scenario to you and give you appropriate cost estimates, time estimates, and how the attorney thinks that this action (or inaction) will be of benefit to your business.