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Intellectual Property for the Entrepreneur (BMA 347) Jonathan LA Phillips Shay Kepple Phillips, Ltd. 456 Fulton St., Ste. 255 Peoria, Illinois 61602 309.494.6155 jphillips@skplawyers.com jphillips@skplawyers.com creativecommons|attribution-noncommercial-sharealike 3.0
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Why? The basis for intellectual property is to help the country, not individuals. Incentivize R&D or creativity and prevent consumer confusion. Intellectual Property has become one of the most valuable assets of today’s business. A major factor in securing capital. Missteps on either side (not protecting or infringing) can be more devastating than things like a breach of contract
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What Will Be Covered Basic law and practical applications and ideas for the entrepreneur regarding: Patents Trademarks Copyright Trade Secret Protection and what you should do to protect your fledgling business
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Patents Provided for in the Constitution (Art. I §8(8)) Novel, non-obvious, invention, having utility. Anything “under the sun” made by man Not laws of nature Terms of art Trade trade secret protection (indefinite, like Coke) for a 20 year monopoly “Best” of intellectual property rights, and you pay for it You get what you pay for. Recent quote on a moderately complex mechanical invention was $15,000.00 Retainers for enforcement ~$300,000
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Patents (cont.) What I see as typical patentability issues Subject matter – not yet an invention Novelty – not new Obviousness – combining of obvious ideas KSR International v. Teleflex Usefulness – not having the use thought out, or it being a non-final product
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Patents (cont.) Incentive theory – You will research because you get a 20 year monopoly then share with the world. You won’t be ripped off Is this the case? See, High Technology Entrepreneurs and the Patent System. Available athttp://www.btlj.org/data/articles/24_feature.pdfhttp://www.btlj.org/data/articles/24_feature.pdf Biotech still values monopoly but not predominant incentive Capitalization First mover advantage - software
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Patents (cont.) What should you do as an entrepreneur? Utilize provisional patents Do not cut out patent searches DO NOT TELL ANYONE UNTIL YOU HAVE CONSULTED WITH COUNSEL Make use of Non-Disclosure Agreements Ensure that you have assignments for any employees or others Keep track of everyone working on a project and their contributions Truly examine your reasons for protection and see if worth cost. Am not covering software/business methods as patentable in detail. See, e.g. Bilski
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Trademarks (includes servicemarks) A word, logo, or phrase that identifies the source of goods or services. Protect your brand and in turn, most importantly, protect consumers from confusion Levels of protection Federal State Common Law ( §43(a) of Lanham Act)
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Trademarks (cont.) Prosecution Use “in commerce” Word marks v. logos v. trade dress What should the entrepreneur do? Common law search as part of branding strategy Use mark in commerce as soon as possible Secure rights as soon as possible – or risk wasting great amounts of capital in re-branding Lock up all domains & accounts possible, because UDRP cannot save you Police your mark – including in licensing
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Uniform Dispute Resolution Process ICANN forced UDRP upon all domain sellers Process for resolving registration of domain names (not social media accounts) Kick a “squatter” off of your domain Identical or confusingly similar to your mark Other side has no interest or legitimate interest Registered in bad faith
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Copyright Protects the expression of an idea, not the idea The idea is that of a hobbit and dwarves, the expression is the Hobbit. Once fixed, now creates a set of exclusive rights for the creator Modicum of creativity, but no sweat of the brow doctrine Duplicate, develop derivative works, distribute, perform publicly No moral rights in the USA From artistic works to computer code Not functional design though, that’s patents or design patents.
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Copyright (cont.) Works for hire Community for Non-Violence v. Reid Employee? Done w/in scope of employment? Commissioned? Has own tools? Makes own rules? Joint Works Joint ownership First sale doctrine (§109), Fair use (§107), parody (Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music, Inc.)
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Copyright (cont.) What should you, the aspiring entrepreneur do? Switching gears from the usual idea Don’t worry about registering at first, as soon as fixed, protection in place DO NOT INFRINGE, I repeat, do not infringe It doesn’t need a © You almost certainly will not be engaging in fair use Ensure your agents are not infringing Secure assignments If web-based and user generated content DMCA concerns
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Trade Secrets Anything that gives you a business advantage by being secret that you try to keep secret This versus patents – think Coke But also, ability to reverse engineer This versus copyrights – facts can be protected Common & Famous trade secrets Recipes – Coke Customer lists & pricing formulas Software – e.g. Google algorithm This is the cheapest, easiest to procure, and in most instances, most essential form of IP, even if not well- regarded
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Trade Secrets What should you do? Think big to determine what your secrets are You must take reasonable steps to secure rights The courts will only take your fence, and make it higher Reasonableness is determined by the value and difficulty of procuring the secret Common steps Employee handbooks Non-disclosure agreements Enforce in courts Limit access Page 526 of your book is a great list
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General Tips Work for Hire Doctrine Automatic in copyright; Inventorship in patents Hash out all IP matters in employment agreements Along with everything else Illinois Employee Patent Act Use a lawyer who practices in the area Check out as much as possible before utilizing a picture, an invention, or branding anything
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Questions? Feel free to email me at jphillips@skplawyers.comjphillips@skplawyers.com
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