Overview of IP Protection Mechanisms in the United States Presented by: Daniel Waymel UT Dallas – August 2013.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Intellectual Property Basics for Business Owners David M. Knasel, Esq. Dominion Business Law PLC Tysons Corner | Leesburg, VA
Advertisements

Office of International Relations U.S. Patent and Trademark Office
Intellectual Property
Peter D. Aufrichtig, Esq..  Intellectual Property clients look and sound like all other clients.
Now you’ve got a product… what next? Next steps in IP.
OBTAINING INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY PROTECTION FOR YOUR NEW INVENTION By: Pasco Gasbarro William Loginov William Loginov Amy B. Spagnole Amy B. Spagnole October.
Chapter 7.5 Intellectual Property Content, Law and Practice.
Click your mouse anywhere on the screen to advance the text in each slide. After the starburst appears, click a blue triangle to move to the next slide.
Intellectual Property OBE 118 Fall 2004 Professor McKinsey Some property, very valuable property, exists only in our minds, in our imagination. It is intangible.
You’ve Built a Better Mousetrap...Now what? How to Protect Your Intellectual Property Using Patents and Trademarks Elizabeth Dougherty Acting Deputy Director.
P A R T P A R T Crimes & Torts Crimes Intentional Torts Negligence & Strict Liability Intellectual Property & Unfair Competition 2 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Business.
Copyright vs. trademark
1 Intellectual Property Patents, Trademarks and Copyrights.
3-1 Patent, Trademark, and Copyright Patent, trademark, service marks, and copyrights provide a mean to promote new ideas and inventions and at the same.
INTRODUCTION TO INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW Professor Fischer Class 1: Introduction August 20, 2009.
IP=Increased Profits How to Make Your IP Work For You Rachel Lerner COSE Fall 2006.
T5-1ENT Tools for Innovation: Intro to Intellectual Property Jonathan Weaver UDM Mechanical Engineering Department
Protecting Your Ideas and Inventions: Patents, Trademarks, Servicemarks and Copyrights.
© 2010 Hodgson Russ LLP IEEE Southern Area Entrepreneur’s Day Overview Of The Patent Process R. Kent Roberts Hodgson Russ LLP (716)
Trademarks, Copyrights & Patents. What do you already know?
Protecting Your Idea Stephen R. Cook, Esq. Assistant Clinical Professor of Law University of Akron School of Law University of Akron School of Law
Chapter 25 Intellectual Property Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written.
Stage 8 Protecting Your Idea
Patent and Intellectual Property
Intro to Intellectual Property 05/13/2015. Exponential Inventor Intro to Intellectual Property 05/13/2015 Why is IP Important? Everyone makes a big deal.
I DENTIFYING AND P ROTECTING I NTELLECTUAL P ROPERTY Tyson Benson
LAW for Business and Personal Use © 2012 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible.
1 Intellectual Property Patents, Trademarks and Copyrights.
Intellectual Property By Wilmer Arellano Summer 2008.
What is Intellectual Property ? Patents- protection of technology Trademarks- protection of domain names and product identity Copyrights- protection of.
By Richard A. Mann & Barry S. Roberts
5020 Montrose Blvd., Suite 750 Houston, TX (fax) (mobile) WHAT IN-HOUSE COUNSEL NEEDS TO KNOW ABOUT IP August.
Intellectual Property Part 2: Trademarks, Patents & Piracy Mr. Garfinkel, 2/21/14 An illustration from U.S. patent # 5,375,430, a 'gravity- powered shoe.
Preparing a Provisional Patent Application Hay Yeung Cheung, Ph.D. Myers Wolin, LLC March 16, 2013 Trenton Computer Festival 1.
Intellectual Property Intellectual Property. Intellectual Property Intellectual effort, not by physical labor Intangible property Lawsuits involve infringement.
Copyright Basics. Intellectual Property Intellectual Property is a unique product or idea created by an individual or organization. Common types of protection.
Protecting your product What is Intellectual Property (IP)? Legal rights that result from intellectual activity in the industrial, scientific, literary.
An Overview of Intellectual Property Law, Policy, and Controversy Michael J. Madison University of Pittsburgh School of Law February 16, 2006.
Chapter 08.  Describes property that is developed through an intellectual and creative process  Inventions, writings, trademarks that are a business’s.
Zheng Liu January 18, 2015 Intellectual Property Law For Startups.
Class Seven: Intellectual Property Patents, Trademarks and Copyrights.
Intellectual Property Laws and Fair Use Guidelines for Educational Multimedia.
On your piece of paper, write down 5 things you already know about copyright. Then write why you care or don't care about copyright.
The Basics of Intellectual Property Law Understanding IP by A. David Spevack, Office of Naval Research.
Data Governance Patents, Security and Privacy Duke University, November 9, 2015 Ryan Vinelli.
Intellectual Property 101 Ideas and Dollars. Ophir Marko Patent Attorney Physicist Investor Joined 1 st start-up at age of 14 2 nd one at 15, Nasdaq IPO.
Chapter 10 Intellectual Property Rights Twomey, Business Law and the Regulatory Environment (14th Ed.)
Lecture 27 Intellectual Property. Intellectual Property simply defined is any form of knowledge or expression created with one's intellect. It includes.
An Overview of Intellectual Property by John Slaughter September 26, 2009 © John Slaughter All Rights Reserved.
Intellectual Property (IP) Overview: “Tools You Can Use” Christopher D. McKinney Director Office of Technology Transfer Vanderbilt University September,
Slide Set Eleven: Intellectual Property Patents, Trademarks and Copyrights 1.
Copyright By: Team 2. What Is Copyright?  Copyright is a form of protection provided by the laws, to the authors of “original works of authorship,” including.
Intellectual Property. An original (creative) work, invention or information protected by law through a trademark, patent, copyright or trade secret.
Entrepreneurship CHAPTER 8 SECTION 1.  When you develop a new product or service, you create an asset that must be protected.  Intellectual property.
Intellectual Property. An original (creative) work, invention or information protected by law through a trademark, patent, copyright or trade secret.
Protecting Innovation
Intellectual Property Basics for Business Owners David M. Knasel, Esq. Dominion Business Law PLC Tysons Corner | Leesburg, VA
Chapter 06: LEGAL ISSUES FOR THE ENTREPRENEUR
Intellectual Property
INTELECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS
Overview of IP Protection Mechanisms in the United States
Protecting Your Idea.
Patents, Trademarks and Copyrights
Protecting your product
What You Didn’t Know That You Didn’t Know About Patents
Trademark, Patent, or Copyright?
Presentation transcript:

Overview of IP Protection Mechanisms in the United States Presented by: Daniel Waymel UT Dallas – August 2013

Outline Patents – Overview – Types Copyrights Trademarks and Servicemarks Trade Secrets

Patents - Overview A Patent is “to exclude others from making, using, offering for sale, or selling the invention throughout the United States or importing the invention into the United States" [1] Requirements: – Invention must be: new, nonobvious, and useful[1] – Description must be adequate, clear, and in definite terms[1]

Patents - Overview Steps to Acquisition: (Optional) File for a Provisional Patent Allows for “patent pending” mark and time to file for a non-provisional patent[4] Expires 12 months after submission File for a Non-Provisional Patent

Patents - Overview Patents are held in the name(s) of the original inventors, but the rights may be owned by an individual or company Patents must be enforced by the patent holder without aid of the USPTO

Patents - Types Utility Patents “invention [or composition or new and useful improvement] of a new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter”[2] Typically last for 20 years after grant Design Patents “new, original, and ornamental design for an article of manufacture”[2] Typically last for 14 years after grant

Patents - Types Plant Patents “new and distinct, invented or discovered asexually reproduced plant including cultivated sports, mutants, hybrids, and newly found seedlings, other than a tuber propagated plant or a plant found in an uncultivated state”[2] Typically last for 20 years after grant Reissue Patents – “correct an error in an already issued utility, design, or plant patent”[2]

Patents - Types Defensive Publication Issues in place of a normal patent this “offers limited protection, defensive in nature, to prevent others from patenting an invention, design, or plant”[2] Statutory Invention Registration Introduced in to replace the Defensive Publication and offers similar protection

Copyrights “A form of protection provided to the authors of ―original works of authorship ‖ including literary, dramatic, musical, artistic, and certain other intellectual works, both published and unpublished”[4] Grants “the owner of copyright the exclusive right to reproduce the copyrighted work, to prepare derivative works, to distribute copies or phonorecords of the copyrighted work, to perform the copyrighted work publicly, or to display the copyrighted work publicly”[4]

Copyrights For works created on or after January 1, 1978, they are automatically protected for the lifetime of the creator plus an additional 70 years. For joint works, the duration is through 70 years after the last surviving creator's death.[5] For commissioned works, the duration is either “95 years from publication or 120 years from creation, whichever is shorter”[5]

Copyrights No registration or application is required for copyright protection, protection is automatic from the time of creation. – Registration is encouraged for ease of enforcing copyrights however.

Trademarks and Servicemarks A trademark is a word, name, symbol, or device that is used in trade with goods to indicate the source of the goods and to distinguish them from the goods of others.[3] A servicemark is the same as a trademark except that it identifies and distinguishes the source of a service rather than a product.[3]

Trademarks and Servicemarks Registration with the federal government is not required but is encouraged as it grants several benefits:[3] Public notice of the holder's claim to the trademark Presumption of ownership nationwide Exclusive rights to use the trademark in conjunction with the good/services listed in the registration

Trade Secrets Protects any IP Lasts until the information is divulged No formal steps to obtain this protection – don't tell Any company or individual can implement this protection No enforcement of this protection (excepting laws governing actions that might be taken to obtain another's trade secret, such as theft)

References [1] [2] tm [3] [4] cerning_patents.pdf [5] [6]

Contact Daniel Waymel