IP Fundamentals – What Every CEO Should Know About IP in Biotechnology

2019 ◽  
Vol 24 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kathryn Doyle

This chapter addresses four essential components of Intellectual Property as it relates to patents: (1) patents and the patent process, (2) developing a strategy to maximize patent protection for a product or a process, (3) due diligence, and (4) issues of inventorship and ownership. By way of an overview, there are four basic types of Intellectual Property – Patents, Trademarks, Copyrights and Trade Secrets. Patents cover ideas that are novel, non‑obvious, have utility and satisfy the enablement and written description provisions of the U.S. patent Statute. Trademarks cover identification of goods and services. Copyrights protect tangible expression, including writings, computer code, websites and the like. A Trade Secret is a form of intellectual property where secrecy is maintained over a process or an ingredient of a product over a period of time. This chapter will focus almost exclusively on patents.

2014 ◽  
Vol 3 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Chinh H. Pham ◽  
Ross Spencer Garsson

AbstractThe America Invents Act (AIA) presents new challenges and strategy considerations for nanotechnology inventors and companies that seek to protect their intellectual property in the United States. Among the many notable changes, the AIA expands the “prior user rights” defense to infringement and broadens the classes of patents that are eligible for the new limited prior user rights defense. While this defense is limited in some instances, such as against universities, it could be invaluable in others, such as when a competitor independently discovers and patents the trade secret. In the world of nanotechnology, where inventions and products are increasingly complex, this protection can prove to be vitally important.


2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Anik Tri Haryani

Tight business competition requires creativity for entrepreneurs to stay competitive by seeking new breakthroughs in developing their businesses. Many franchise models are chosen to develop businesses. One of the criteria for franchising is the Intellectual Property Rights that have been registered including trade secrets. The purpose of this study is to examine the legal protection of trade secret owners in a franchise agreement, and legal consequences if there is a violation of trade secrets in the franchise agreement. The method used in this study is juridical normative with a law approach and conceptual approach. The results of the research show that the protection of trade secrets in the franchise agreement can be done by making an agreement which contains a confidential information, non disclosure agreement clause, a non compete agreement as well as a non solicitation agreement clause. Legal consequences in the event of a violation of trade secrets in the franchise agreement can be prosecuted civilly by paying compensation through a lawsuit to court or can be resolved through arbitration or alternative dispute resolution. In addition, it can also be prosecuted according to Article 17 paragraph (1) of Law Number 30 of 2000 concerning Trade Secrets with the penalty of imprisonment of a maximum of two years and a maximum fine of three hundred million rupiah.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Lemley

Rapid advances in digital and life sciences technology continue to spur theevolution of intellectual property law. As professors and practitioners inthis field know all too well, Congress and the courts continue to developintellectual property law and jurisprudence at a rapid pace. For thatreason, we have significantly augmented and revised "Intellectual Propertyin the New Technological Age.The 2016 Edition reflects the following principal developments:● Trade Secrets: Congress passed the Defend Trade Secrets Act of 2016, oneof the most momentous changes in the history of trade secret protection. Thenew law opens up the federal courts to trade secret cases, provides for exparte seizures of misappropriated trade secrets in “extraordinarycircumstances,” and establishes immunity for whistleblowers.● Patents: The past several years have witnessed some of the mostsignificant developments in U.S. patent history — from the establishment ofthe new administrative review proceedings at the Patent Office to importantshifts in patent-eligibility, claim indefiniteness, and enhanced damages atthe Supreme Court and means-plus-function claim interpretation andinfringement doctrine at the Federal Circuit. We have restructured thepatent chapter to illuminate these areas. We have also significantlyexpanded coverage of design patents in response to the growing importanceof this form of protection.● Copyrights: The Supreme Court issued important decisions addressing thepublic performance right and the first sale doctrine. The past few yearsalso witnessed important developments in the Online Service Provider safeharbor, fair use, and state protection for pre-1972 sound recordings. Wehave also integrated the digital copyright materials into a unifiedtreatment of copyright law and substantially revamped the fair use sectionto reflect the broadening landscape of this important doctrine.● Trademarks: We have integrated important cases on federal registrabilityof disparaging marks, merchandising rights, likelihood of confusion on theInternet, and remedies.● Other State Protections: We have updated material on the right ofpublicity, an active and growing area. We have also reorganized the chapterand focused it on IP regimes.


Author(s):  
Hideyasu Sasaki

In this chapter, we discuss the issues on patent and trade secret issues on digital libraries, especially patentable parameter-setting components which are implemented as computer-related inventions in digital libraries. In addition, we discuss the directions for embedding and protecting numerical parametric information as a trade secret in the patentable parameter-setting components performing retrieval operations of digital libraries with the future of intellectual property protection in the multimedia digital libraries. The scope of this chapter is restricted within the current standard of the U.S. laws and cases in transnational transaction and licensing of intellectual properties regarding the digital library.


1991 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-72 ◽  
Author(s):  
David D Friedman ◽  
William M Landes ◽  
Richard A Posner

Despite the practical importance of trade secrets to the business community, the law of trade secrets is a neglected orphan in economic analysis. This paper sketches an approach to the economics of trade secret law that connects it more closely both to other areas of intellectual property and to broader issues in the positive economic theory of the common law.


2021 ◽  
pp. 106-128
Author(s):  
Nari Lee

Trade secrets can encompass all forms of intellectual property subject matter, as well as other types of data, information, and knowledge that may not meet the threshold of eligibility for intellectual property rights. Trade secret protection may be used to prolong existing exclusivity or to hedge the balance of interests that the law aims to seek through restrictions to such exclusivity. Against this backdrop, this chapter asks whether, and to what extent, the law of trade secrets can be used privately to create a regime of property rules in an age of digitised trading, using the recently adopted EU Directive on trade secrets as an example. It asks whether the forms of protection and enforcement required under the EU Directive make it a de facto property right, hedging a liability regime into a proprietary regime, which is created unilaterally by ensuring secrecy and by imposing a duty of confidence.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Lemley

Trade secret law is a puzzle. Courts and scholars have struggled for over acentury to figure out why we protect trade secrets. The puzzle is not inunderstanding what trade secret law covers; there seems to be widespreadagreement on the basic contours of the law. Nor is the problem that peopleobject to the effects of the law. Rather, the puzzle is a theoretical one:no one can seem to agree where trade secret law comes from or how to fit itinto the broader framework of legal doctrine. Courts, lawyers, scholars,and treatise writers argue over whether trade secrets are a creature ofcontract, of tort, of property, or even of criminal law. None of thesedifferent justifications have proven entirely persuasive. Worse, they havecontributed to inconsistent treatment of the basic elements of a tradesecret cause of action, and uncertainty as to the relationship betweentrade secret laws and other causes of action. Robert Bone has gone so faras to suggest that this theoretical incoherence suggests that there is noneed for trade secret law as a separate doctrine at all.In this article, I suggest that trade secrets can be justified as a form,not of traditional property, but of intellectual property (IP). Theincentive justification for encouraging new inventions is straightforward.Granting legal protection for those new inventions not only encouragestheir creation, but enables an inventor to sell her idea. And while we haveother laws that encourage inventions, notably patent law, trade secrecyoffers some significant advantages for inventors over patent protection.It seems odd, though, for the law to encourage secrets, or to encourageonly those inventions that are kept secret. I argue that, paradoxically,trade secret law is actually designed to encourage disclosure, not secrecy.Without legal protection, companies in certain industries would invest toomuch in keeping secrets. Trade secret law develops as a substitute for thephysical and contractual restrictions those companies would otherwiseimpose in an effort to prevent a competitor from acquiring theirinformation.The puzzle then becomes why the law would require secrecy as an element ofthe cause of action if its goal is to reduce secrecy. I argue that thesecrecy requirement serves a channeling function. Only the developers ofsome kinds of inventions have the option to over-invest in physical secrecyin the absence of legal protection. For products that are inherentlyself-disclosing (the wheel, say, or the paper clip), trying to keep theidea secret is a lost cause. We don't need trade secret law to encouragedisclosure of inherently self-disclosing products - inventors of suchproducts will get patent protection or nothing. But if trade secret lawprevented the use of ideas whether or not they were secret, the resultwould be less, not more, diffusion of valuable information. The secrecyrequirement therefore serves a gatekeeper function, ensuring that the lawencourages disclosure of information that would otherwise be kept secret,while channeling inventors of self-disclosing products to the patentsystem.My argument has a number of implications for trade secret policy. First,the theory works only if we treat trade secrets as an IP right, requiringproof of secrecy as an element of protection. If we give the protection tothings that are public, we defeat the purpose and give windfalls to peoplewho may not be inventors (what we might call "trade secret trolls"). Courtsthat think of trade secret law as a common law tort rather than an IP rightare apt to overlook the secrecy requirement in their zeal to reach "badactors." Second, an IP theory of trade secrets also encourages preemptionof "unjust enrichment" theories and other common-law ways courts aretempted to give private parties legal control over information in thepublic domain. Thus, an IP theory of trade secrets is in part a "negative"one: the value of trade secret law lies in part in defining the boundariesof the cause of action and preempting others that might reach too far.Finally, treating trade secrets as IP rights helps secure their place inthe pantheon of legal protection for inventions. The traditional conceptionof the tradeoff between patents and trade secrets views the disclosurefunction of the patent system as one of its great advantages over tradesecret law. And indeed the law operates in various ways to encourageinventors to choose patent over trade secret protection where both arepossible. But for certain types of inventions we may actually get moreuseful "disclosure" at less cost from trade secret than from patent law.


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Svitlichnyj Oleksandr ◽  

The article describes the modern legislation of legal regulation of trade secrets, in particular the provisions of the Civil Code of Ukraine. It is noted that legal relations in the field of trade secrets are governed by the Criminal and Commercial Codes of Ukraine, the Code of Administrative Offenses, a number of laws, including the Laws of Ukraine: «On Information», «On Protection against Unfair Competition», «On Banks and banking activity», «On advocacy and advocacy activity», «On state secret» and by-laws, the resolution of the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine «On the list of information that does not constitute a trade secret». The study found that in Ukraine, as in many other countries, new technologies, intellectual property and other products are created that contain trade secrets that need legal protection. Due to new information achievements, state borders are practically transparent for the circulation of information. In this case, the more this industry is involved in commercial turnover, the greater the need to protect the interests of the owners of trade secrets. Keywords: legal regulation, information, trade secret, legal responsibility, owner of trade secret, intellectual property, economic activity


2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 113-138
Author(s):  
Jesse L. Silvernail

The commercial space industry is soon expected to explode into a trillion- dollar industry, but patent protection in NewSpace has been largely ignored by an industry that is driven by technological innovation and rapid develop- ment. There has been little disclosure of inventions as large commercial space companies rely on trade secrets that are almost impossible to independently invent or reverse engineer. The benefits of both invention disclosure and se- crecy are well known, but there has not been analysis on inventions in the space industry. This paper fills the gap in the literature by analyzing common intellectual property practices in the aerospace industry and applying intellec- tual property theory. I also review past government actions on intellectual property in the aerospace industry. I find that actors in the commercial space industry have little incentive to disclose their inventions. This lack of incentive may harm or slow the expansion of the commercial space industry. This Arti- cle may be useful to policymakers who wish to continue the expansion and innovation of the commercial space industry through intellectual property policy.


2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 215-224
Author(s):  
Idul Hanzah Alid ◽  
Lailasari Ekaningsih

Trade secret is a factor in the creation of innovation for a company to maintain its presence in the community. PT. CPM must identify information that is considered confidential trade before making attempts of legal protection of such information, because not all corporate information can be regarded as a trade secret. The identification is done by providing criteria for confidential information such as information that is not known by the public, has economic value, giving a loss if the information leaked and stolen. So PT. CPM has two attempts of legal protection of trade secrets. First, preventively is to have rules and regulations and written agreements between the parties relating to trade secret information PT. CPM. Second, repressive of protecting end to the measures for violations occurred. In case of violation, PT. CPM will solve the problem amicably. If it fails, then the next action to decide the employment of actors and reported to the authorities. Companies better make a written agreement between the parties in advance and posted to the Directorate General of Intellectual Property Rights in order to ensure the protection of the company's trade secrets.


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