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Counter-Ip Conspiracies: Patent Alienability And The Sherman Antitrust Act, Hannibal Travis
Counter-Ip Conspiracies: Patent Alienability And The Sherman Antitrust Act, Hannibal Travis
University of Miami Law Review
Anticompetitive collusion by intellectual property owners frequently triggered antitrust enforcement during the twentieth century. An emerging area of litigation and scholarship, however, involves conspiracies by potential licensees of intellectual property to reduce or eliminate opportunities by a property’s holders to profit from it, or even to recoup their investments in creating and protecting it. The danger is that potential licensees will collude with one another to suppress royalties or sale prices. This Article traces the history of such litigation, provides an overview of the scholarly and theoretical arguments against monopsonistic or oligopsonistic collusion against licensors of intellectual property, and summarizes …
Fixing Forum Selling, Brian L. Frye, Christopher J. Ryan Jr.
Fixing Forum Selling, Brian L. Frye, Christopher J. Ryan Jr.
University of Miami Business Law Review
“Forum selling” is jurisdictional competition intended to attract litigants. While consensual forum selling may be beneficial, non-consensual forum selling is harmful because it encourages jurisdictions to adopt an inefficient pro-plaintiff bias. In the last 20 years, the Eastern District of Texas has adopted an aggressive and remarkably successful policy of non-consensual forum selling in patent infringement actions. In 2016, 44% of all patent infringement actions were filed in the Eastern District of Texas, and 93% of them were filed by patent assertion entities or “patent trolls.”
In December 2016, the Supreme Court granted certiorari in TC Heartland v. Kraft, …
Tc Heartland: The Patent Venue Question Is Informed By Personal Jurisdiction Issues, Richard Samp
Tc Heartland: The Patent Venue Question Is Informed By Personal Jurisdiction Issues, Richard Samp
University of Miami Business Law Review
No abstract provided.
Patent Venue Exceptionalism After Tc Heartland V. Kraft, Ana Santos Rutschman
Patent Venue Exceptionalism After Tc Heartland V. Kraft, Ana Santos Rutschman
University of Miami Business Law Review
No abstract provided.