Apple Wins Strategic Multitouch & Music Tempo Workout Patents

Patently Apple: The US Patent and Trademark Office officially published a series of twelve newly granted patents for Apple Inc. today. The two notables within this group includes one that relates to controlling the tempo of music on an iPod to motivate users while jogging or working out - while the other is a major multitouch gesturing patent that includes virtual keyboards and/or larger surface computers.

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Inventors of Post-it notes and GPS, 14 others, inducted into Inventors Hall of Fame

The inventors of Post-it notes and the technologies that led to video games, modern scuba diving equipment and GPS technology are among the 16 new members of the National Inventors Hall of Fame.

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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, compiled on Duncan Bucknell Company's intellectual property blog, IP Think Tank.

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Trade Secret Litigation and Protection in California (Second Edition 2009)

This 2009 twenty five chapter treatise provides a comprehensive review and analysis of California trade secret law. Written by California practitioners, this treatise explains the fundamentals and intricacies of California trade secret law. The treatise is a resource for anyone working with trade secrets prior to or during litigation.

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Google Now Using Site Speed In Web Search Ranking

Amit Singhal, Google Fellow and Matt Cutts, Principal Engineer, Google Search Quality Team, write on the Official Google Webmaster Central Blog:  "You may have heard that here at Google we're obsessed with speed, in our products and on the web. As part of that effort, today we're including a new signal in our search ranking algorithms: site speed. Site speed reflects how quickly a website responds to web requests." Click on the link in the headline above to learn more.

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Inventors Wanted. Cool Tools Provided. TechShop

Article in New York Times Business: Should this revolution take place as planned by Mr. Hatch, much of it will happen at TechShop, a chain of do-it-yourself workshops. Mr. Hatch is chief executive of the company, which has three locations and plans to set up about 10 more over the next 20 months. “Making things is core to who we are as Americans,” Mr. Hatch says. “We are inventors. We are creators. Once you give people access to the tools, there will be a resurgence of creativity and innovation.”  Click on the link in the headline to read the article and view a multimedia slide show about TechShop.

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Does the Patent Office Snub Inventors Who File without an Attorney?

Editor’s note from Inventors Digest, the magazine for idea people: "The independent inventor community is an industrious American subculture that has produced everything from the Segway to Snuggies. Yet according to a recent study by Auburn University business professor Paul Swamidass, the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office can be hostile to those who file patent applications pro se, that is, without an attorney. Officials at the USPTO have seen his study." Click on the link in the headline above to read the article from Inventors Digest.

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If Google paid us every time we clicked...

From the 1709 Copyright Blog: "Last week photographers, illustrators, graphic artists and photo libraries launched a suit against Google, centred on Book Search and the Book Settlement. It alleges that Google reproduced visual works (scanning more than 12 million books), distributing and publicly displaying them. Google, it says, has posted them on its website and stated its intention to exploit them via the Settlement’s book sales and subscriptions." Read more at the link in the headline above.

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Alice on the iPad: Is This the Future of Books?

Mathew Ingram reports that, "The Alice app brings an interactive element to the pages of this children’s classic, with features that are based on the original illustrations and allow readers to stretch Alice’s body when she comes to the table with the “Drink Me” bottle, to throw tarts at the Queen of Hearts and watch them bounce off her, and to rock the baby that turns into a pig."

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USPTO's New LegalZoom Killer?

Check out the USPTO’s new “Trademark Information Network” where “you can view news broadcast-style videos that cover important topics and critical application filing tips.” Basically, the site (once all the videos are “live”) will provide video walk-throughs of the entire trademark application process, including videos.

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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, including a link to one of our blog posts on Securing Innovation.

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10 blogs that are essential reading for creative entrepreneurs

They will fuel your creativity, sharpen your business skills, connect you with others on the same path, and sustain you through the ups and downs of your entrepreneurial journey.

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Judge Orders Artist and His Lawyers to Disclose Deleted Files and the Persons Responsible

A federal judge has ordered artist Shepard Fairey and his new lawyers in a copyright suit to disclose records that were destroyed, when it happened, and the persons responsible. U.S. District Judge Alvin Hellerstein ordered the disclosure on Monday in a copyright dispute over Fairey’s right to use an Associated Press photo for his famous Hope poster of Barack Obama, the Associated Press reports.

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