Inventors' Bill of Rights unveiled at AUTM conference

As tech transfer managers from around the world convened at the Association of University Technology Managers (AUTM) annual meeting in New Orleans, a commercialization expert and an inventor came together to propose an “Academic Inventors’ Bill of Rights.” Read more about it at the Tech Transfer Blog at the link in the blue headline above.

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Doing Away with Interference Proceedings & First to Invent

One of the proposals in the pending patent reform legislation is a change from first to invent to a first to file system. Gene Quinn at IP Watchdog says, " I think it is safe to say that the United States is the only country that has a first to invent system, whereby an inventor who claims they are the first to invent but second to file a patent application could prevail and receive a patent over the first to file a patent application. This has historically been viewed as a benefit to independent inventors and small businesses, and in theory it is. The trouble is..."

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Chicago IP Colloquium

The annual Chicago IP Colloquium continues this Tuesday, March 30, 2010. The Chicago IP Colloquium is jointly sponsored by Chicago-Kent College of Law and Loyola University Chicago School of Law to discuss a range of issues in intellectual property and cyberspace law based upon papers by six nationally renowned intellectual property scholars.

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Director of the USPTO, David Kappos, to Speak at New York Law School on the Future of the Patent Office

David Kappos, Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property and Director of the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), will give a talk titled “Vision for the USPTO in the 21st Century: Ensuring America’s Innovation Future,” on Friday, March 26 at 1 p.m. at New York Law School, located at 185 West Broadway. The event is presented by the Law School’s Center for Patent Innovations (CPI) and the Institute for Information Law & Policy.

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Protecting Your Intellectual Property with Patent Alternatives

How do you prevent competitors from obtaining patents that could block you from using your own innovative ideas in your products and services? Click on the link in the headline above to read the full article in IndustryWeek outlining the Pros and Cons of Patents, Trade Secrets, and Defensive Publications.

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Is Defensive Publishing Appropriate for Small Businesses?

IBM has announced its plans to expand "defensive publishing" rather than patenting as a means to protect its intellectual property. A patent prevents others from practicing the specifics that are covered by the patent, but opens up a Pandora's box of potential work-arounds and litigation. Defensive Publishing is in essence placing IP into the public domain, rendering it thereby unpatentable by anyone, even the inventor.

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International Women's Day

Blawg Review #254 features links with information about International Women's Day, National Women's History Month and the 30th anniversary of the National Women's History Project.

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Steal business trade secrets: Go to jail

Confidential business and trade secret information is more than the stuff of corporate espionage. It is the competitive edge of any business, regardless of size, and deserves protection. Set up the proper safeguards to protect you confidential and trade secret information and you’ll be able to pursue your legal remedies the way Home Depot recently did.

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Public Patent Foundation Releases Free Claim Construction Dictionaries

Public Patent Foundation ("PUBPAT") announced that it has released claim construction dictionaries authored by Dr. David Garrod (PUBPAT Senior Litigation Counsel) free of charge to the public.

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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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Nokia withdraws patent complaint against IPCom at EU

Note: IPCom GmbH & Co KG is not to be confused with IP.com, an unrelated corporation. Nokia Oyj, the world’s biggest maker of mobile phones, withdrew an antitrust complaint at the European Commission after German patent licensing company IPCom GmbH & Co KG said it’s committed to licensing its technology under fair terms.Nokia said in a statement today that it has achieved its “main objective” in the complaint, which was to make sure that IPCom offers its mobile-phone patents under fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory terms.

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Genius is misunderstood as a bolt of lightning

"Genius is the act of solving a problem in a way no one has solved it before. It has nothing to do with winning a Nobel prize in physics or certain levels of schooling," says Seth Godin. "It's about using human insight and initiative to find original solutions that matter."

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