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SelectedWorks

Lisa A Dolak

Selected Works

2008

Patent

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Law

Inequitable Conduct: A Flawed Doctrine Worth Saving, Lisa A. Dolak Jan 2008

Inequitable Conduct: A Flawed Doctrine Worth Saving, Lisa A. Dolak

Lisa A Dolak

A growing chorus of voices is calling for reform or even elimination of the doctrine of inequitable conduct. Critics argue that innocent or even irrelevant prosecution mistakes can be met with the ultimate penalty: unenforceability of the entire patent.

There is no question the doctrine is in need of repair. Patent owners are subject to different materiality standards in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and the courts. Inequitable conduct charges can be based on information completely immaterial to patentability. Findings of deceptive intent are increasingly based on inference and not evidence. And the one-size-fits-all remedy of total unenforceability deprives …


Ebay And The Blackberry®: A Media Coverage Case Study, Lisa A. Dolak, Blaine T. Bettinger Jan 2008

Ebay And The Blackberry®: A Media Coverage Case Study, Lisa A. Dolak, Blaine T. Bettinger

Lisa A Dolak

Patent owners, potential infringers, and the courts will continue to work through the implications of the Supreme Court’s 2006 decision in eBay Inc. v. MercExchange, L.L.C. for some time. We look back, however, at media coverage relating to injunctions, “trolls,” and the U.S. patent system generally, in the months preceding the Court’s decision. We show that although eBay featured prominently in news and editorial coverage while it was pending at the Court, it could not compete in the media with another patent case pending at the same time: the case that threatened to darken the Blackberry®. Further, we note that …


The United States Patent System In The Media Mirror, Lisa A. Dolak, Blaine T. Bettinger Jan 2008

The United States Patent System In The Media Mirror, Lisa A. Dolak, Blaine T. Bettinger

Lisa A Dolak

The last several years have witnessed a flurry of transformative patent reform activity. The Supreme Court has issued key rulings affecting the availability of injunctive and declaratory relief, revised the law of obviousness, and limited the extraterritorial reach of the patent act. Now Congress stands poised to ratify the most significant and far-reaching overhaul of the patent system in at least 45 years.

In this study, we analyzed major newspaper coverage of the patent system from January 1, 2005 through June 30, 2007 to systematically assess how the press portrayed the U.S. patent system. Our examination revealed a negative overall …