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Articles 1 - 30 of 128
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Is The Prototypical Small Inventor At Risk Of Inadvertently Eliminating Their Traditional One-Year Grace Period Under The America Invents Act?, Eric A. Kelly
Eric A Kelly
This Comment interprets new statutory language appearing in the Leahy-Smith America Invents Act, effective March 16, 2013, regarding what may constitute prior art and how prior art triggers the new one-year grace period. If this interpretation is followed, the vitally necessary grace period will continue to be accessible to inventors, especially small inventors. Specifically, this Comment recommends interpreting “or otherwise available to the public” as a public accessibility condition precedent that must be satisfied in order for public use and on sale events to constitute prior art; which as prior art then triggers the one-year grace period in which to …
Standardized Terms And Conditions For Open Patenting, Mariateresa Maggiolino, Maria Lillà Montagnani
Standardized Terms And Conditions For Open Patenting, Mariateresa Maggiolino, Maria Lillà Montagnani
mariateresa maggiolino
Once given a legal characterization of the open patenting phenomenon and discussed many of the empirical and theoretical experiences dealing with both open innovation and defensive patenting, the paper suggests what standardized terms and conditions a patent license should encompass in order to foster both the free movement of patented knowledge and its business applications.
Secrets, Secrets Are No Fun! Balancing Patent Law & Trade Secret Law Under The America Invents Act, Stephen J. Elkind
Secrets, Secrets Are No Fun! Balancing Patent Law & Trade Secret Law Under The America Invents Act, Stephen J. Elkind
Stephen J Elkind
This Note seeks to understand the tension between trade secrecy law and patent law pointed out by Judge Hand. Further, this Note argues that the recently enacted America Invents Act (“AIA”) overrules the holding from Metallizing Engineering that secret prior commercial use by an inventor before the critical date renders an invention unpatentable. Part I discusses the different incentive structures behind patents and trade secrets. Patent law requires that an invention achieve certain higher standards than trade secret law; and in doing so provides incentivizes for a different sort of invention than trade secret law. For commercial uses that are …
Only Part Of The Picture: A Response To Rebecca Tushnet's Worth A Thousand Words: The Images Of Copyright (125 Harv. L. Rev. 683), Zahr K. Said
Zahr K Said
Only Part of the Picture: A Response to Rebecca Tushnet’s Worth a Thousand Words: The Images of Copyright 125 HARV. L. REV. 683
Zahr K. Said
Professor Rebecca Tushnet’s Article elucidates a number of difficulties in copyright that flow from judicial failures to treat images consistently and rigorously. She argues that courts both assess copyrightability and evaluate potential infringement in ways that rely on a naïve understanding of the way artists create, and indeed, the way viewers receive works of art. The problem is particularly pronounced with respect to what Tushnet calls non-textual works because copyright law’s default to textuality …
Keeping Secrets: An Alternative To The Economic Penalty Enhancement Act, Brittani N. Baldwin
Keeping Secrets: An Alternative To The Economic Penalty Enhancement Act, Brittani N. Baldwin
Brittani N. Baldwin
No abstract provided.
A Submission To The New Zealand Government On The Plain Packaging Of Tobacco Products, Matthew Rimmer
A Submission To The New Zealand Government On The Plain Packaging Of Tobacco Products, Matthew Rimmer
Matthew Rimmer
EXECUTIVE SUMMARYThis submission draws upon a number of pieces of research and policy papers on the plain packaging of tobacco products including:1. Becky Freeman, Simon Chapman, and Matthew Rimmer, 'The Case for the Plain Packaging of Tobacco Products' (2008) 103 (4) Addiction 580-590.2. Matthew Rimmer, 'A Submission to the Senate Legal and Constitutional Committee on the Trade Marks Amendment (Tobacco Plain Packaging) Bill (Cth)', September 2011, https://senate.aph.gov.au/submissions/comittees/viewdocument.aspx?id=dabfcd75-9807-493f-bc99-4a7506bf493b3A. Matthew Rimmer, 'Tobacco's Mad Men Threaten Public Health', The Conversation, 23 September 2011, http://theconversation.edu.au/tobaccos-mad-men-threaten-public-health-34503B. Matthew Rimmer, 'Big Tobacco's Box Fetish: Plain Packaging at the High Court', The Conversation, 20 April 2012, https://theconversation.edu.au/big-tobaccos-box-fetish-plain-packaging-at-the-high-court-65183C. Matthew …
What's The Problem Money Can't Solve? Why Determining The Validity Of A Copyright Application Is A Clear Precondition To Infringement Action, Jason Scott Duey
What's The Problem Money Can't Solve? Why Determining The Validity Of A Copyright Application Is A Clear Precondition To Infringement Action, Jason Scott Duey
Jason S Duey
No abstract provided.
Managing Content In Virtual Environments: From Music To Machinima, Tamiko R. Franklin
Managing Content In Virtual Environments: From Music To Machinima, Tamiko R. Franklin
Tamiko R Franklin
Developing an effective rights management strategy in virtual environments requires a close review of current case law especially with respect to ongoing clarifications of mentioned statutory provisions under copyright laws. It is also helpful to be aware of the peculiarities that involve copyright protected content created for use in virtual spaces such as issues involving publication and making available across multiple jurisdictions. There are differences in international systems of protection that affect the intellectual property rights in content; particularly so if the content in question is a work of visual art like a photograph or digital representation of a painting, …
Beyond Einstein And Edison: Claiming Space For Non-Faculty Inventors In Technology Transfer, Jennifer Carter-Johnson
Beyond Einstein And Edison: Claiming Space For Non-Faculty Inventors In Technology Transfer, Jennifer Carter-Johnson
Jennifer Carter-Johnson
The Bayh-Dole Act, often credited with the explosion of university technology transfer, requires universities to incentivize invention disclosure by sharing the royalties generated by licensing. Many scholars have debated the effectiveness of university implementation of this requirement, and indeed, the low rate of disclosure of inventions by academic researchers to the university is often a bottleneck in technology transfer process. Unfortunately, most discussions focusing on inventor compliance with Bayh-Dole requirements have explored faculty-inventor motivations. Similarly, many university intellectual property (IP) policies are drafted specifically toward incentivizing faculty-inventors to comply with invention disclosure requirements. However, in most cases, university inventions are …
Patenting Isolated Human Enhancer Elements And The Utility Requirement Problem, William B. Mcconnell
Patenting Isolated Human Enhancer Elements And The Utility Requirement Problem, William B. Mcconnell
William B. McConnell
No abstract provided.
Toward Cyber Peace: Managing Cyber Attacks Through Polycentric Governance, Scott Shackelford
Toward Cyber Peace: Managing Cyber Attacks Through Polycentric Governance, Scott Shackelford
Scott Shackelford
Views range widely about the seriousness of cyber attacks and the likelihood of cyber war. But even framing cyber attacks within the context of a loaded category like war can be an oversimplification that shifts focus away from enhancing cybersecurity against the full range of threats now facing companies, countries, and the international community. Current methods are proving ineffective at managing cyber attacks, and as cybersecurity legislation is being debated in the U.S. Congress and around the world the time is ripe for a fresh look at this critical topic. This Article searches for alternative avenues to foster cyber peace …
Intellectual Property Rights Of Nanotechnology (Challenges And Solutions) With Looking At Trade Related Aspects Of Intellectual Property Rights Agreement (Trips), Maryam Ahmadi, Leila Ahmadi, Abutaleb Koosha
Intellectual Property Rights Of Nanotechnology (Challenges And Solutions) With Looking At Trade Related Aspects Of Intellectual Property Rights Agreement (Trips), Maryam Ahmadi, Leila Ahmadi, Abutaleb Koosha
Maryam Ahmadi
Abstract:
With the emergence of any new technology, nanotechnology creates opportunities as well as challenges in adapting the patent regime to its particular context. There is some consensus that patenting nanotechnology innovations poses more problems than other technologies, owing to their multi-disciplinary character, cross-sectoral applications, broad claims as well as difficulties in fulfilling the patentability criteria. This is aggravated by the lack of a standardized terminology which impedes easy identification of nano-patents and also the fact that patent offices may not be well-equipped to handle nanotechnology. These problems are likely to be compounded for developing and least developed countries, which …
Search, Essential Facilities, And The Antitrust Duty To Deal, Marina Lao
Search, Essential Facilities, And The Antitrust Duty To Deal, Marina Lao
Marina Lao
The core of the gathering antitrust case against Google seems to be that it favors its own or its affiliates’ content over that of its competitors in ancillary markets in the unpaid search results. Seeking the competitive advantages inherent in integration, which is what preferential treatment of one’s own property is about, is usually not unlawful. This paper examines whether “essential facilities” and the duty-to-deal nonetheless provide a basis for prohibiting this practice, as some have suggested, and concludes that they do not.
On the threshold monopoly power issue, most assume, based on Google’s high percentage of general search queries, …
The Flaws Of Stem Cell Legislation: Sherley, Brustle, And Future Policy Challenges Posed By Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells, Nicholas J. Diamond
The Flaws Of Stem Cell Legislation: Sherley, Brustle, And Future Policy Challenges Posed By Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells, Nicholas J. Diamond
Nicholas J Diamond
In this article, I first contextualize the origins of disagreement over the nature and extent of human embryonic stem cell (hESC) research regulation. By analyzing two key pieces of hESC legislation as considered in two landmark court decisions—one from the United States and one from the European Union—I argue that current stem cell policies are deeply flawed. After surfacing the flaws of these policies, I examine novel challenges for policymakers posed by the newest advancement in stem cell science, induced pluripotent stem cells. In view of these novel challenges, I contend that current policies, which are hESC-focused and deeply flawed, …
Employee And Inventor Witnesses In Patent Trials: The Blurry Line Between Expert And Lay Testimony, Alex Reese
Employee And Inventor Witnesses In Patent Trials: The Blurry Line Between Expert And Lay Testimony, Alex Reese
Alex Reese
Parties in patent lawsuits that are going to trial face a crucial choice: who is the best witness to explain the often complex or scientific technology behind an invention or an accused product? Often, the parties will select an employee witness such as an engineer, scientist, or a named inventor of the patent-in-suit to offer this key testimony rather than a hired expert. Many litigants have found that there are benefits to choosing an employee witness who can testify based on first-hand experience with the technology in question rather than a hired expert, who must prepare an expert report and …
Patent Infringement In The Context Of Follow-On Biologics, Janet Freilich
Patent Infringement In The Context Of Follow-On Biologics, Janet Freilich
Janet Freilich
This article fills a gap in the literature by conducting a comprehensive analysis of patent infringement in the context of follow-on biologics. Patent infringement is an important topic because, like small molecule generic drugs, follow-on biologics are likely to begin their life facing infringement suits. Because it is tremendously expensive to develop a follow-on biologic, it is vital that there be consistency in how they are treated in the courts once the inevitable patent infringement suits arrive. If follow-on biologics companies cannot predict how their product will be received in court, they may decide it is not worth the risk …
The Paradox Of Legal Equivalents And Scientific Equivalence: Reconciling Patent Law’S Doctrine Of Equivalents With The Fda’S Bioequivalence Requirement, Janet Freilich
Janet Freilich
Contrary to popular perception, generic drugs often enter the market before the patents covering their brand-name counterparts have expired by making slight changes the drug to avoid the brand-name patent. These generics face a paradox: the FDA requires that the generic “not show a significant difference” from the reference product while patent law requires that the generic have “substantial differences” as compared to the reference product. The generic must be bioequivalent but not legally equivalent to the brand-name drug. This paradox occurs frequently in the courts but has never been discussed in the literature. This article analyzes every case involving …
Forging Towards Coexistence, Laurie J. Beyranevand
Forging Towards Coexistence, Laurie J. Beyranevand
Laurie J Beyranevand
Abstract: For better or worse, the United States has demonstrated a long history of support for agricultural biotechnology. Justified as necessary to meet the growing demands of our nation’s food demand, federal policies addressing genetic engineering have attempted to balance of set of competing interests to ensure health and safety while also encouraging further innovation and development of technology. The unfortunate effects of these policies are suffered disproportionately by organic and non-GE farmers, as there has been little consideration of how the products of genetic engineering impact this sector. In the midst of regulating biotechnology, the federal government has lost …
Prometheus And The Natural Phenomenon Doctrine: Let’S Not Lose Sight Of The Forest For The Trees, Samantak Ghosh
Prometheus And The Natural Phenomenon Doctrine: Let’S Not Lose Sight Of The Forest For The Trees, Samantak Ghosh
Samantak Ghosh
The Supreme Court’s recent decision on patentable subject matter, Mayo Collaborative Services. v. Prometheus Laboratories, has come in for a lot of criticism from the biotechnology industry. Whenever the Supreme Court renders a judgment that is a significant departure from the past and arguably gets it wrong, the voices questioning the underlying principle behind the decision become stronger. Unfortunately, Prometheus was a poor vehicle for recalibrating a doctrine that has been untouched for the past three decades. However, it is important to dissociate the specific opinion from the principle animating the opinion, the natural phenomenon doctrine. If the natural phenomenon …
Search, Essential Facilities, And The Antitrust Duty To Deal, Marina Lao
Search, Essential Facilities, And The Antitrust Duty To Deal, Marina Lao
Marina Lao
The core of the gathering antitrust case against Google seems to be that it favors its own or its affiliates’ content over that of its competitors in ancillary markets in the unpaid search results. Seeking the competitive advantages inherent in integration, which is what preferential treatment of one’s own property is about, is usually not unlawful. This paper examines whether “essential facilities” and the duty-to-deal nonetheless provide a basis for prohibiting this practice, as some have suggested, and concludes that they do not.
On the threshold monopoly power issue, most assume, based on Google’s high percentage of general search queries, …
Reexamining Two Pesos, Qualitex, & Wal-Mart: A Different Approach…Or Perhaps Just Old Abercrombie Wine In A New Bottle?, Russ Versteeg
Reexamining Two Pesos, Qualitex, & Wal-Mart: A Different Approach…Or Perhaps Just Old Abercrombie Wine In A New Bottle?, Russ Versteeg
Russ VerSteeg
Abstract of VerSteeg, Reexaming Two Pesos, Qualitex, & Wal-Mart
In Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Samara Bros., Inc., 529 U.S. 205 (2000), the United States Supreme Court held that, in order for a product design to be protectable under § 43(a) of the Lanham Act, the product design must first acquire a secondary meaning. Writing for the Court, Justice Scalia, reasoned that consumers, as a rule, do not expect a product’s design to serve as an indicator of source. The Court stated that product designs, like colors, do not ordinarily operate as source indicators, and that is why the Court established …
Search, Essential Facilities, And The Antitrust Duty To Deal, Marina Lao
Search, Essential Facilities, And The Antitrust Duty To Deal, Marina Lao
Marina Lao
The core of the gathering antitrust case against Google seems to be that it favors its own or its affiliates’ content over that of its competitors in ancillary markets in the unpaid search results. Seeking the competitive advantages inherent in integration, which is what preferential treatment of one’s own property is about, is usually not unlawful. This paper examines whether “essential facilities” and the duty-to-deal nonetheless provide a basis for prohibiting this practice, as some have suggested, and concludes that they do not.
On the threshold monopoly power issue, most assume, based on Google’s high percentage of general search queries, …
Will Fda Data Exclusivity Make Biologic Patents Passé?, Vincent J. Roth Esq
Will Fda Data Exclusivity Make Biologic Patents Passé?, Vincent J. Roth Esq
Vincent J Roth Esq
Much controversy has ensued over the current 12 year data exclusivity period afforded biosimilars pursuant to the Biologics Price Competition and Innovation Act of 2009 (the “BPCI”) that was recently enacted in March 2010, as part of President Obama’s Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (the “PPACA”), to create a biosimilar market in the US. In fact, the BPCI, itself, has been controversial and just barely survived judicial scrutiny when the US Supreme Court upheld the PPACA on June 28, 2012 in a 5-4 vote. Many commentators speculate whether data exclusivity will overtake patents as the preferred method of intellectual …
Valuation & Assessment Of Intangible Assets, And How The America Invents Act Will Affect Patent Valuations, Andrew J. Maas
Valuation & Assessment Of Intangible Assets, And How The America Invents Act Will Affect Patent Valuations, Andrew J. Maas
Andrew J. Maas
Intangible assets have created value for hundreds of years. Valuation of intangible assets regularly applies to patents, copyrights, trademarks, and tradesecrets. A few current case studies included in the article cover current patents, copyrights, trademarks, and trade secrets. In 2011 the America Invents Act was signed into law by President Obama and will have a significant affect on patent valuation. The America Invents Act will require some adjustments to how current patent valuation analysts approach early stage patent valuation. Specifically, analysts will need to understand: 1)inventorship, 2) potential undermining of patent value because of the prior commercial user defense, 3) …
Will Fda Data Exclusivity Make Biologic Patents Passé?, Vincent J. Roth Esq
Will Fda Data Exclusivity Make Biologic Patents Passé?, Vincent J. Roth Esq
Vincent J Roth Esq
Much controversy has ensued over the current 12 year data exclusivity period afforded biosimilars pursuant to the Biologics Price Competition and Innovation Act of 2009 (the “BPCI”) that was recently enacted in March 2010, as part of President Obama’s Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (the “PPACA”), to create a biosimilar market in the US. In fact, the BPCI, itself, has been controversial and just barely survived judicial scrutiny when the US Supreme Court upheld the PPACA on June 28, 2012 in a 5-4 vote. Many commentators speculate whether data exclusivity will overtake patents as the preferred method of intellectual …
Beyond Patents: The Supreme Court’S Evolving Relationship With The Federal Circuit, Daniel Kazhdan
Beyond Patents: The Supreme Court’S Evolving Relationship With The Federal Circuit, Daniel Kazhdan
Daniel Kazhdan
Federal Circuit scholars have begun to notice a shift in the way the Supreme Court interacts with the Federal Circuit when it comes to patent questions. Scholars point to the fact that in recent years the Supreme Court reviews the Federal Circuit more frequently and more harshly. The Court also criticizes the Federal Circuit for being too formalistic and too eager to expand its jurisdiction. What scholars have failed to note is that these trends are occurring across the entirety of the Federal Circuit’s decisions, and not just with regards to patent questions. This suggests that there is something about …
Uncertainty As Enforcement Mechanism: The New Expansion Of Secondary Copyright Liability To Internet Platforms, John Blevins
Uncertainty As Enforcement Mechanism: The New Expansion Of Secondary Copyright Liability To Internet Platforms, John Blevins
John F. Blevins
This article examines the role that legal uncertainty plays as a copyright enforcement mechanism against Internet platforms. In recent years, Internet platforms have faced a new wave of copyright enforcement actions arising from their users’ activity. These actions include both civil secondary liability claims and public enforcement actions such as domain name seizures and criminal prosecution. Critically, copyright owners and the government do not necessarily need to prevail in these actions. Instead, the proceedings can be effective so long as they impose sufficient costs upon Internet platforms. In this respect, prevailing is less important than obtaining statutory and doctrinal constructions …
The Troubling Role Of Federal Registration In Proving Intellectual Property Crimes, Susan M. Richey
The Troubling Role Of Federal Registration In Proving Intellectual Property Crimes, Susan M. Richey
Susan M Richey
No abstract provided.
The Troubling Role Of Federal Registration In Proving Intellectual Property Crimes, Susan M. Richey
The Troubling Role Of Federal Registration In Proving Intellectual Property Crimes, Susan M. Richey
Susan M Richey
No abstract provided.
Outlawed Art: Finding A Home For Graffiti In Copyright Law, Nicole A. Grant
Outlawed Art: Finding A Home For Graffiti In Copyright Law, Nicole A. Grant
Nicole A Grant
An intractable tension exists between the existence of graffiti as iconoclastic youth expression and the emergence of its recognition as an art form, and the boundaries of American copyright law. As graffiti gains more traction in the mainstream art world, copyright law has come to frame much of the discussion surrounding the rights that stem from (and that are overlooked by) the creation of these works. While graffiti is heralded for its uniqueness, it also thrives in a culture of appropriation that encourages dialogue among graffiti artists, in addition to establishing as the norm the pilfering of everyday cultural referents …