IP.com CEO on Got Invention Radio

Thursday, April 14th at 8:00 p.m. EST, Tom Colson, CEO of IP.com will be talking live on GOT INVENTION RADIO. Listeners may call or email questions to host Brian Fried during the show at 877-474-3302 or brian@gotinvention.com.

Among the topics Tom will be addressing are:

  • Patents defined. (What a patent is and is not; different types; rights and protections of a patent; ways to get around a patent.)
  • Assessing the need for a patent. (When/under what circumstances should an individual inventor be going out and be spending money on a patent?)
  • Alternatives to patenting. (Covering defensive publishing, trade secrets, use of Non-Disclosure Agreements, or NDA, in advance of patent application, and use of search to determine validity.)
  • International filing. (How to protect in other countries. And... Manufacturing in China and what that means with respect to an inventor's patent rights.)

Please help spread the word on your blogs and Twitter. And don't forget to tune in at 8pm EST on Thursday, April 14.

How to tune in? Just go to http://www.gotinvention.com and click on the "Live" tab.

Inventors, Entrepreneurs, Pitch Mark Cuban

Mark Cuban joins the second season of Shark Tank which premieres tonight on ABC. Mark was an entrepreneur from the early age of 12, when he sold garbage bags door-to-door, so he knows what it's like to start from the ground up.

Today, Mark Cuban is the highly successful entrepreneur and investor who founded HDNet, Broadcast.com and MicroSolutions. He has also been an investor in startups, including Mahalo, JungleCents.com, motionloft.com, Filesanywhere.com, Naked Pizza and 140Fire.com.

When he's not busy owning the Dallas Mavericks, Mark is the owner and chairman of HDNet HDNet and its sister network, HDNet Movies, are one of the few remaining independently owned and operated TV Networks in the U.S. and the first in the world to be programmed exclusively in high definition. Mark takes personal responsibility for the programming on both networks, creating a unique schedule of creative and original programs.

On the second season of the Shark Tank, Mark Cuban joins another new shark, Jeff Foxworthy, and veteran sharks Barbara Corcoran, Daymond John, Kevin Harrington, Kevin O'Leary, and Robert Herjavec.

What else is new for Season 2?

Intellectual Property attorneys affiliated with the Shark Tank Season 2 production contacted IP.com in 2010 to perform FTO/Clearance searching on the innovations and products being marketed by the contestants of the Shark Tank Season 2 cast.

Freedom to operate searches identify potential patent barriers to the commercialization of products or technologies.

IP.com conducted over 60 freedom to operate research projects on various aspects of the products being marketed by the contestants in order to provide the attorneys affiliated with the show the information necessary to perform due diligence analysis of the intellectual property associated with the contestants' inventions, products and services. Based on the results of that research and analysis, the producers of the show were able to make informed decisions on IP risks.

Find out more about the products and services pitched on the Shark Tank tv show.

We'll be watching.

Troll the Archives for Patent Stories

Browsing the archives, you can find some of the most interesting posts here on Securing Innovation.

According to our blog traffic monitor, recent visitors have enjoyed our look at the best inventions of the year, as determined by Time magazine, and the 50 most innovative companies for 2008, presented in a BusinessWeek video.

Many readers have looked at Tom Petrocelli's post about the end of life for IP. Others have shown interest in MIT's technology licensing office.

And a lot of readers have checked out the post about rating USPTO examiners anonymously.

But the story that continues to get the most attention here on Securing Innovation is our disclaimer that IP.com is NOT suing Nokia for $17.7 Billion. Yeah, that's a lot of money even as patent infringement lawsuits go these days.

When the story first broke, back in February, we thought there might be more than a possibility of confusion of our company name, IP.com with the unrelated German IP licensing company IPCom GmbH & Co. KG that is demanding billions in patent licensing fees from Nokia and many other well-known brands. Hopefully, there's no confusion now, especially as the story continues to make news and is featured in the October 2008 issue of IP Law & Business article headlined: Crossing the Bridge to Europe.