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Features

Supreme Court May Preserve EDTX Grip on Patent Cases Image

Supreme Court May Preserve EDTX Grip on Patent Cases

Tony Mauro

The U.S. Supreme Court did not appear eager to upset the patent litigation landscape by drastically limiting where infringement lawsuits can be filed.

Features

Extraterritorial Jurisdiction of IP Laws Image

Extraterritorial Jurisdiction of IP Laws

Andrew P. MacArthur & Ralph A. Dengler

Recent U.S. cases have created benchmarks of patent, trademark, copyright, and trade secret liability for foreign activity, and businesses should take heed.

Features

Untangling the Mystery of Cybersecurity Insurance Image

Untangling the Mystery of Cybersecurity Insurance

Sean B. Cooney

IT security professionals used to warn that only two types of businesses exist: those that have been hacked, and those that will be. Now, many are even more pessimistic, and divide the world's businesses into companies that know that they have been hacked, and those that don't. Law firms are juicy targets with all the personal identifiable information (PII) contained in client files. Intellectual property practices are especially attractive to cyber thieves because of the value of patent, trademark and trade secret information.

Features

Supreme Court Ends Laches Defense in Patent Cases Image

Supreme Court Ends Laches Defense in Patent Cases

Scott Graham

<b><i>SCA Hygiene Products v. First Quality Baby Products</i></b><p>The U.S. Supreme Court on March 21 ruled laches is not a defense to patent infringement suits that are brought within the Patent Act's limitations period.

Features

Supreme Court Limits Patent Liability for Component Makers in Global Supply Chain Image

Supreme Court Limits Patent Liability for Component Makers in Global Supply Chain

Scott Graham

<b><i>Life Technologies v. Promega</b></i><br>In a decision that should please American manufacturers that feed into the global supply chain, the U.S. Supreme Court has narrowly interpreted a 33-year-old law that imposes patent liability on components made in the U.S. for assembly overseas.

Features

The Joke is in the Bag! Parody at the Federal and TTAB Levels Image

The Joke is in the Bag! Parody at the Federal and TTAB Levels

Jennifer Ashton & Erin Hennessy

On Feb. 13, 2017, the eve of Valentine's Day, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals extended no love to Louis Vuitton, effectively asserting that it would not rehear the infringement suit against My Other Bag, Inc., denying the en banc request in a brief order.

Features

Where Does Judge Gorsuch Fall on IP? Image

Where Does Judge Gorsuch Fall on IP?

Howard S. Hogan & Lucas C. Townsend

<b><i>The SCOTUS Nominee's Opinions Don't Appear to Favor Alleged Intellectual Property Infringers or Owners</b></i><br>Over the 10 years that he has served on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit, Gorsuch's decisions in intellectual property disputes have reflected a close attention to statutory text and a preference for narrow results that hew closely to precedent.

Columns & Departments

IP News Image

IP News

Jeffrey S. Ginsberg & Abhishek Bapna

Federal Circuit Affirms Grant of a Preliminary Injunction Despite PTAB's Final Written Decision<br>Federal Circuit: Proving Derivation Requires a Showing That All Limitations Were Conceived and Communicated

Features

How Much Did the Federal Circuit Narrow Eligibility for Covered Business Method Review? Image

How Much Did the Federal Circuit Narrow Eligibility for Covered Business Method Review?

Diek Van Nort & Matthew Kreeger

In November of last year, the Federal Circuit narrowed the types of patents eligible for covered business method review in <i>Unwired Planet, LLC v. Google Inc.</i> The court's decision narrowed what patents are eligible for CBM review, and provided some guidance for future cases.

Features

Amending Patent Claims in Post-Grant Trial Proceedings Image

Amending Patent Claims in Post-Grant Trial Proceedings

Cynthia Lambert Hardman

<b><i>What You Need to Know</i></b><br>The America Invents Act gave patent owners the right to move to amend their patent claims. To date, however, this right has been more illusory than real. Given their dismal success rate so far, many hope that the tide will turn in favor of granting more motions to amend.

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