Duncan Bucknell's IP ThinkTank Gobal Week in Review

Click on the link above to see this week's selection of top intellectual property news breaking in the blogosphere and on the internet.

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Pharma & BioTech Review

Click on the link above to check out IP Think Tank’s weekly selection of top Pharma & Biotech intellectual property news breaking in the blogosphere and internet.

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Gene Quinn: Tech Doesn't Want to Stop Patent Trolls

"More and more schemes that will be completely unsuccessful at dealing with the perceived problem of patent trolls are being hatched," writes Gene Quinn on the Practising Law Institute's Patent Briefs blog, where he discusses the recent launch of Article One Partners and RPX Corp.

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Rewarding Breakthrough Innovation

Professor Dennis Crouch at Patently-O says, "Another way of interpreting the Egyptian Goddess test is that the scope of infringement varies inversely with the scope of prior art. When a patented design is in a field crowded with similar prior designs, the only infringing designs will be those that are strikingly similar to the patented design yet different from the prior art. Alternatively, when the patented design stands alone as a breakthrough design, the potential variety of infringing activity actually increases."

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No Prior Art for My Invention

US Patent Attorney Gene Quinn at IP Watchdog says, "While there are many reasons for not finding prior art, just because you do not find prior art does not mean that there is no prior art that needs to be considered. In fact, it would be extremely rare (if not completely impossible) for there to be an invention that does not have any relevant prior art."

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Intellectual Property Colloquium Podcast on Bilski

Professor Rob Merges (Berkeley), Professor John Duffy (George Washington), and Professor Doug Lichtman (UCLA), recently recorded a one-hour audio podcast about the In re Bilski decision. The participants are prominent patent academics and have interesting perspectives on the case. Indeed, Professor Duffy was one of the four lawyers invited to present oral argument in Bilski. The podcast is freely available on the Internet and can be picked up via the link above.

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How To Go To China For Innovation

China and India are catching up quickly with Western nations in providing homegrown talent as well as heavy investment in R&D.

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Duncan Bucknell's IP ThinkTank Gobal Week in Review

Click on the link above to see this week's selection of top intellectual property news breaking in the blogosphere and on the internet.

Tags:

Pharma & BioTech Review

Click on the link above to check out IP Think Tank’s weekly selection of top Pharma & Biotech intellectual property news breaking in the blogosphere and internet.

Tags:

Open Innovation: Procter & Gamble

"Today we were allowed into the once ‘super-secretive’ headquarters of Procter & Gamble to learn about their famous and much lauded Connect & Develop programme," writes Gordie at The Innovation Diaries.

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Patent Searching Semantics

Stephen Albainy-Jenei at the Patent Baristas blog has a review of a new patent search site. Stephen reports, "There are a number of patent search sites available today. A new one is a semantic patent search — searching by meaning or interpretation of terms — called Setrue Semantic Patent Search Engine by Transformer. Setrue touts itself as an answer to the growing need of patent search market to a search engine with semantic capabilities that will enhance the precision of search results as contrast to the current FTS engines (full text search engine)." More at the link above.

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Tech Predictions 2009

"Trust" is the new version of "Control". When using applications or services in the Cloud and you incorporated them in your business processes you already made the decision that control isn't everything anymore and trust is more important. The decision of putting trust above control (or perhaps even instead of control) will be one of the big decision to be made in 2009. The matter of control on solutions was something that was probably vital some years ago, however in the last few years it is not control that is important, it is trust that matters.

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Duncan Bucknell's IP ThinkTank Gobal Week in Review

Click on the link above to see this week's selection of top intellectual property news breaking in the blogosphere and on the internet.

Tags:

Pharma & BioTech Review

Click on the link above to check out IP Think Tank’s weekly selection of top Pharma & Biotech intellectual property news breaking in the blogosphere and internet.

Tags:

Scoble on Corporate Blogging

In an interview with CIO Insight, Robert Scoble, who took corporate blogging mainstream, explains the potential for Web 2.0 tools in the enterprise, and why too many companies haven't figured them out. Catch the interview at the link.

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CEOs take on Social Media

Many CEOs use social media sites like Facebook, MySpace, YouTube and Twitter personally, but few use them to communicate with stakeholders. And while 29% say social media can be a very or extremely effective way for companies to communicate, just as many find it ineffective. These are some of the findings of a September survey of 200 chief executives by public relations firm Burson-Marsteller and PRWeek. More at the link above.

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Emerging green innovation

There is speculation that companies in countries like India and China will take the lead in terms of green innovation.

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Innovation: Twitter and Current TV founders discuss the future of news at the Web 2.0 Summit

At the link above there's a video and summary from Chris O’Brien of “The Media Business: New Approaches.” panel at the Web 2.o summit, which was moderated by Ken Auletta of the New Yorker and included Evan Williams of Twitter and Joel Hyatt of Current TV.

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Faster horses in the age of co-creation

Henry Ford is credited with saying something along the lines of “If I’d asked people what they wanted, they’d have said ‘faster horses’ “. That particular quotation gets trotted out fairly religiously every time the issue of the innovator’s dilemma comes up, helping to point out the apparent perils of listening to the customer. -- JP Rangaswami at Confused of Calcutta has more, at the link above.

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You Call That Innovation?

It's comforting to think that we and our competitors can just hunker down to ride out this economic tsunami and land roughly where we were when it began. But as everyone struggles just to stay above water, now is exactly the time to redistribute your resources to develop unique products that deliver a new consumer experience and create a franchise capable of long-term, significant growth. -- Barry Curewitz in Advertising Age.

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Innovation through Collaboration: Addressing Flat World Challenges in the Hi-Tech Industry

Chandra Shekar Kakal at the Infosys-Oracle Blog writes, "The global business scenario has changed dramatically in the last year. Rising costs continue to put pressure on margins; globalization and the power of emerging economies are increasing the complexity of the business environment, and customer expectations from vendors and service providers has multiplied exponentially. The economic slowdown, collapse of the housing market and unexpected exchange rate fluctuations have made the business environment even more difficult. C-Level executives can no longer rely on conventional approaches to create a competitive advantage and have to look at innovation through collaboration to steer their organizations through turbulent times." Read the blog post and view a slide presentation at the link above.

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Global Trends in Innovation

The Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) that regroups the world’s most developed countries has recently published 3 interesting books dealing with the current trends in innovation and R&D; both at macro/general and at enterprise level. Aryana Petrova has book reviews at the link above.

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Year in Review: Pro IP Act

In October 2008 President Bush signed the PRO IP Act – Prioritizing Resources and Organization for Intellectual Property (S3325) and the legislation became law in the United States after nearly 12 months of consideration. The Act under went significant changes along the way with a number of the original provisions being removed or redrafted. PhD candidate Sally Hawkins, of Open Content Australia (OCA), has a review of the law at the link above.

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Global IP Blawg Review

Intellectual Property Strategist Duncan Bucknell, at IP ThinkTank, is hosting Blawg Review #185 in recognition of Inventor's Day.

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Encyclopaedia Britannica revives notorious multimedia patent, attacks GPS manufacturers

Encyclopaedia Britannica has had a singular role in the history of knowledge," writes Joe Mullin at The Prior Art. "A product of the Scottish Enlightenment, the first U.S. volumes were published in Philadelphia in 1790—a pirated edition. Those books were bought by some early infringers of Britannica's intellectual property, including George Washington, Alexander Hamilton, and Thomas Jefferson. (The "infringement lobby" was well-connected in the 18th century.) Britannica is struggling in the digital age. For every page viewed on Britannica.com, 184 pages are viewed on Wikipedia. The company continues to push ahead two more lawsuits against the GPS companies. Its two child-patents live on, bizarre and troubling descendants of a wondrous human project."

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Duncan Bucknell's IP ThinkTank Gobal Week in Review

Click on the link above to see this week's selection of top intellectual property news breaking in the blogosphere and on the internet.

Tags:

Pharma & BioTech Review

Click on the link above to check out IP Think Tank’s weekly selection of top Pharma & Biotech intellectual property news breaking in the blogosphere and internet.

Tags:

What Will The New Administration Bring to Patents and Technology?

Now that Barack Obama is the President-elect of the United States, what does this mean for patents and technology? According to the agenda and philosophies posted on the Obama website, the new administration should pursue mostly a pro-patent/pro-technology agenda.

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Barack Obama and Blogging

Blogging, especially when combined with a social publishing platform that bridges across multiple social networks, is far too powerful a medium to only be dragged out onto the national political stage once every four years. If, as has been so often stated, this is a "change election" here in the United States, then we hope that one change we'll come to see not just at the national level but at a state and local level, is that our government is expected to make better use of the web.

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Applying Bilski to Biotechnology and the Life Sciences

Professor Christopher M. Holman (University of Missouri at Kansas City School of Law and author of Holman's Biotech IP Blog) has an interesting guest post at Dennis Crouch's Patently-O.

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Divining Bilski

"Bilski was nothing short of a jurisprudential obscenity, horrendous in its incoherence. To the degree it was coherent, it was ludicrous," writes Patent Hawk. Tell us what you really think.

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