Twitter Becoming 'Incredibly Mainstream for Lawyers'

Cleveland intellectual property lawyer Wayne Serra is among the devoted. He has used Twitter to write about intellectual property cases and issues and new technology. He also likes the service because it helps him keep in touch with other patent lawyers and technology experts.

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China: What Does The Third Amendment To China´s Patent Law Mean To You?

Since its enactment in 1984, China's Patent Law ("the Patent Law") has been amended three times: first in 1992, then in 2000, and most recently in 2008. The first amendment added pharmaceutical compositions to the list of patentable subject matter and inaugurated China's membership in the Patent Cooperation Treaty. The second amendment was intended to bring the Patent Law into compliance with the Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights Agreement ("TRIPS"). The widely expected and long-awaited third amendment to the Patent Law was passed by the National People's Congress on December 27, 2008, and will go into effect on October 1, 2009.

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USPTO and KIPO to Implement Patent Prosecution Highway

The Commerce Department’s United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) and the Korean Intellectual Property Office (KIPO) today announced that they will implement the Patent Prosecution Highway (PPH) on a full-time basis, beginning January 29, 2009.

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Study: Experienced Examiners Allow More, Cite Less

Peter Zura points to "Examiner Characteristics and the Patent Grant Rate, a paper by professors Mark Lemley and Bhaven Sampat. With regard to examiner experience, the paper pulls no punches, he says, quoting the study: "[W]e find that more experienced examiners are significantly more likely to grant, and, conditional on experience, examiners that conduct more intensive prior art searches are least likely to grant." Read the post and get a copy of the study at the link above.

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Patent Cluster Search Engine

PatentCluster, a free clustering based patent search engine, provides a different way to search patents. PatentCluster was founded after observing that existing patent search engines did not make it easy to understand the context of the patent search results and did not articulate the “big picture” of the overall concept of the search.

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Happy Australia Day!

Peter Black, a lecturer at the Queensland University of Technology (QUT) in Brisbane, Australia, where he teaches Intellectual Property, Australian Federal Constitutional Law and Legal Regulation of the Internet, and researches within the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Creative Industries and Innovation, is hosting Blawg Review #196 on Australia Day.

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10 reasons why a law blog does not belong inside your law firm website

7. Public relations success. 75% of reporters use blogs to identify experts and gain insight on stories they're writing. Public relations is no longer about press releases. It's about demonstrating yourself as a thought leader by entering into a dialogue.

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Comparing Government Copyright on the Web

One feature of US President Barack Obama's relaunched whitehouse.gov website was the inclusion in the copyright notice the provision that all third-party content on the site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.

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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.

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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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Bawahahahahhaha... Introducing the BlueBerry L900i

If imitation is the highest form of flattery, then the good folks at Research in Motion should feel real honored right now. What you'll see at the link above is the BlueBerry L900i, which is a knock-off of our beloved BlackBerry Bold.

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Introducing the BarackBerry

It looks like the National Security Agency added some security software to a BlackBerry phone to satisfy President Barack Obama’s need for his Research in Motion smartphone.

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Trademarks In China. A Whole Lotta Ways To Go.

Foreign companies contemplating doing business in China are getting more sophisticated about the need to register their trademarks in China.

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Revised Chinese Patent Law Aims At Quality, Compulsory Licensing

China’s newly revised patent law could create a more favourable environment for foreign companies to do research in the country, though measures are still needed to implement the law more effectively, according to some legal experts. The updated law also strengthens the government’s ability to use compulsory licences to produce patented products without permission and to protect the nation’s genetic resources from piracy.

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New patent databases on the web to help UK business

The Intellectual Property Office has launched two new patents databases on its web site this weekend (17/18 January 2009). One contains all patents in force in the UK which are endorsed Licence of Right, and are therefore open for licensing. The other contains all UK patents which are no longer in force, and therefore contains inventions which are no longer protected there. Both the new databases will help businesses identify opportunities they might otherwise not have found.

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Brands that Tweet

There has been a lot of discussion lately about whether or not brands should be on Twitter.

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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.

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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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Twittersquat The Top 100 Brands

Of the top 100 global brands, 93% have had their Twitter usernames taken by somebody else (i.e. Twittersquatted). Twittersquatting, like cybersquatting, is when somebody registers a company's trademark (or a famous person's name) as a Twitter username with the intent of profiting or causing confusion. Other possible names for this practice include username squatting, usernamesquatting, squitting, usersquatting, and brandsquatting.

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Great Mall of China

If the Mall of America is a suburban shrine to our national consumer excess, what would a Chinese version look like?

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SPICY IP: Perspectives on the Promotion of Innovation

The link between traditional IP protection and innovation has been coming under greater scrutiny.

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Saving Your Intellectual Property

Patents, trade secrets and confidentiality agreements are mere words on paper to the scientist, engineer or executive intent on deception and theft.

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IAM blog's IP personalities of 2008

It was a busy year for IP in 2008 with a whole host of people saying and/or doing a lot of very interesting things. However, as far as the IAM blog is concerned a few individuals stood out from the crowd – not necessarily because we agreed with them or supported their actions, but because they had a real impact. So, in alphabetical order, here are the people concerned.

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History of the Internet

"History of the Internet" is an animated documentary explaining the inventions from time-sharing to filesharing, from Arpanet to Internet.

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Ten Things You Did Not Know About Patents

Misinformation abounds when it comes to patents. While facts about patents would fill volumes, here are few interesting facts about patents you can use to regale your geeky relatives over the holidays.

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PTO Director Jon Dudas Announces Resignation

On January 12, 2008, Jon Dudas will complete four years as Director of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.

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Interview with Guy Kawasaki

"You’ve completely kicked butt in your career, from being the original Apple evangelist to becoming a successful author and founder of Truemors and Alltop…and about a zillion other things that folks can read about in your bio. Yet after all your success, you’re still innovating new projects and ideas. What motivates you to keep at it instead of kicking back on a nice tropical island somewhere?"

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Happy Public Domain Day

January 1 is Public Domain Day--the day when new works around the world come into the public domain. Some countries, the term of copyright is life of the author + seventy years, and in others it remains life of the author + fifty.

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China mulls national security scrutiny for patent applications

Chinese inventors who wish to apply patents for their innovations in foreign countries must first go through government scrutinies to find out if such innovations should be made national secrets, according to a draft amendment to the country's patent law.

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