Presentation on INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY by Legal trends

SrividyaD1 8 views 32 slides Aug 16, 2024
Slide 1
Slide 1 of 32
Slide 1
1
Slide 2
2
Slide 3
3
Slide 4
4
Slide 5
5
Slide 6
6
Slide 7
7
Slide 8
8
Slide 9
9
Slide 10
10
Slide 11
11
Slide 12
12
Slide 13
13
Slide 14
14
Slide 15
15
Slide 16
16
Slide 17
17
Slide 18
18
Slide 19
19
Slide 20
20
Slide 21
21
Slide 22
22
Slide 23
23
Slide 24
24
Slide 25
25
Slide 26
26
Slide 27
27
Slide 28
28
Slide 29
29
Slide 30
30
Slide 31
31
Slide 32
32

About This Presentation

Intellectual property


Slide Content

MSE602
ENGINEERING INNOVATION MANAGEMENT

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
PATENTS
TRADE SECRETS
COPYRIGHTS
TRADEMARKS

BASIC FORMS OF PROTECTION
(UNITED STATES)
FORM OF PROTECTION
PATENT
- UTILITY
- DESIGN
TRADE SECRET
COPYRIGHT
TRADEMARK
WHAT IT PROTECTS
INVENTIONS
DESIGNS
INFORMATION
EXPRESIONS IN TANGIBLE
MEDIA
IDENTIFYING SYMBOLS

PUBLIC POLICY PERSPECTIVE
(UNITED STATES)

LEGAL TRENDS
(UNITED STATES)
1.Federal Courts Improvement Act (1982)
2.National Cooperative Research Act (1984)
3.Semiconductor Chip Protection Act (1984)
4.Trademark Law Revision Act (1988)
5.Berne Convention Implementation Act (1988)
6.Intellectual Property Antitrust Protection Act (1989)

INTERNATIONAL LEGAL
APPROACHES
UNILATERAL STEPS
BILATERAL AGREEMENTS
MULTILATERAL APPROACHES

MAJOR MULTILATERAL
AGREEMENTS
PATENTS
Paris Convention
Patent Cooperation Treaty
European Patent Convention
Patent Harmonization Treaty
COPYRIGHTS
Universal Copyright Convention
Berne Convention
(1)

MAJOR MULTILATERAL
AGREEMENTS
TRADEMARKS
Paris Convention
Madrid Arrangement
Madrid Protocol
COMPREHENSIVE
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
Treaty of Rome and Maastricht Treaty
North American Free Trade Agreement
(2)

BASIC FORMS OF PROTECTION
(UNITED STATES)
FORM OF PROTECTION
PATENT
- UTILITY
- DESIGN
TRADE SECRET
COPYRIGHT
TRADEMARK
WHAT IT PROTECTS
INVENTIONS
DESIGNS
INFORMATION
EXPRESIONS IN TANGIBLE
MEDIA
IDENTIFYING SYMBOLS

FUNDAMENTAL CONDITIONS
FOR PATENT PROTECTION
NOVELTY
•Knowledge not publicly available at time of
invention
•First-to-apply priority (major change)
•Timely filing of application
NONOBVIOUS
•Not obvious to one skilled in the art
(United States-1)

FUNDAMENTAL CONDITIONS
FOR PATENT PROTECTION
UTILITY PATENTS
•Useful
•Human ingenuity
•Not “naturally occurring elements”
DESIGN PATENTS
•Primarily ornamental
(United States-2)
APPROPRIATE SUBJECT MATTER

IMPORTANT COMPONENTS
OF PATENT APPLICATION
1.Description of invention, which is sufficient to enable
one skilled in the art to practice it
2.Illustration of the best mode of carrying out the
invention known to the inventor at the time of filing the
application
3.All information known to the inventor that may bear on
the patentability of the invention, such as pertaining to
its novelty or its obviousness
4.The precise aspects of the invention claimed for
patent protection

UTILITY PATENT

UTILITY PATENT

UTILITY PATENT

UTILITY PATENT

DESIGN PATENT

DESIGN PATENT

DESIGN PATENT

RECENT PATENT LAW CHANGES
1.First to file application has priority
2.Novelty based on filing, rather than invention, date
3.Good faith use or sale of invention before filing date
4.Application open to public 18 months after filing
5.Use between application and issue requires royalty
6.Utility patent term of 20 years from filing date
7.Design patent term of 14 years from issue date

TRADE SECRETS
ATTRIBUTES
Secret Information
Economic Value
Reasonable Security
STATE LAWS
Restatement of Torts
Uniform Trade Secrets Act

TRADE SECRET MISAPROPRIATION
OFFENSE
Improper acquisition
Disclosure or use
EVIDENCE
High investment
Access
Fast development
REMEDIES
Injunctions
Criminal

COPYRIGHT
ORIGINAL
Not copied
Creative (minimal standard)
TANGIBLE MEDIUM
EXPRESSION
Not an idea, procedure, process,
system, method of operation, concept,
principle, or discovery
(1)

COPYRIGHT
WORK OF AUTHORSHIP
Literary
Musical
Dramatic
Pantomime, choreography
Pictorial, graphic, sculptural
Motion pictures, audiovisual
Sound recordings
Architectural
(2)

PLAGIARISM COMPARISON
PLAGIARIZE
•To steal and pass off the ideas or words of
another as one’s own
•Use a created production without crediting the
source
•To commit literary theft; present as new and
original an idea or product derived from an
existing source

RIGHTS AND OWNERSHIP
FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS
Reproduce
Derive
Distribute
Perform
Display
MORAL RIGHTS
FAIR USE
OWNERSHIP
Author
Works made for hire
Joint works

OBTAINING COPYRIGHT PROTECTION
NO ACTION REQUIRED
REASONS FOR REGISTRATION
Prima facie evidence
Statutory damages
Attorney’s fees and costs
REASONS FOR INCLUDING NOTICE
No innocent infringement
DURATION OF COPYRIGHT PROTECTION
Lengthy

COPYRIGHT APPLICATION

COPYRIGHT APPLICATION

COPYRIGHTS
TECHNOLOGY APPLICATION CONTROVERSIES
COMPUTER PROGRAMS
DATA BASES
PRODUCT DESIGN
SHRINK-WRAP LICENSES
DIGITAL AUDIO SAMPLING
DIGITAL IMAGING
MULTIMEDIA WORKS

TRADEMARK
REGISTRATION PURPOSES
COMBAT UNETHICAL MARKETING
PRACTICES
Deter “palming off”
PROTECT GOODWILL
Reward investments in quality
ENHANCE DISTRIBUTIONAL EFFICIENCY
Reduce consumer search costs
Consider potential negative effects on
competition (e.g., generic marks)

TRADEMARK REGISTRATIONS