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If You Want a Broad Patent Construction, Be Careful What You Ask For Image

If You Want a Broad Patent Construction, Be Careful What You Ask For

Charles W. Shifley

In a recent case, a patent owner claimed to have invented side impact airbag sensing. The patent enabled an embodiment; that was stipulated. In opposition to a motion for summary judgment of invalidity for lack of enablement, the owner asserted that enablement of a preferred embodiment satisfied the enablement requirement of the patent law. It didn't. The case is only one of several consistent cases. You should beware, and consider the matter in both patent prosecution and litigation. If you own a patent, and wish for a broad construction, be careful what you wish for.

Features

Online Pharmacy Ordered to Pay FTC $15.8 Million Image

Online Pharmacy Ordered to Pay FTC $15.8 Million

R. Robin McDonald

Saying they 'dispensed deception,' a federal judge in Atlanta has ordered the founders and operators of a now-defunct online pharmacy business to pay the FTC $15.8 million for fraudulent claims associated with the drugs they peddled. In his order, issued June 4, U.S. District Judge Charles A. Pannell also found Dr. Terrill Mark Wright, a physician associated with the online pharmacies, liable for $15.4 million to compensate consumers for false advertising claims.

Features

Business Crimes Hotline Image

Business Crimes Hotline

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

National rulings of interest.

Features

In the Courts Image

In the Courts

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Recent rulings of importance to your practice.

Features

Court of Appeals Affirms Owner Occupancy Rights Under Rent Stabilization Image

Court of Appeals Affirms Owner Occupancy Rights Under Rent Stabilization

Jeffrey Turkel

In its June 3, 2008, decision in <i>Pultz v. Economakis</i>, the New York State Court of Appeals unanimously ruled that there is no limit on the number of rent-stabilized units an owner can attempt to recover for owner occupancy. The ruling was a major victory for rent stabilized landlords, and a sharp rebuke to tenant advocates who claimed that multiple recovery for owner occupancy violated the letter and spirit of the Rent Stabilization Law. Indeed, the case continues a recent trend of favorable Court of Appeals decisions for landlords.

Features

<b>Net News</b> Ninth Circuit Text-message Ruling Could Impact Corporate Policies Image

<b>Net News</b> Ninth Circuit Text-message Ruling Could Impact Corporate Policies

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Most employees know that their bosses are usually within their rights snooping on workers' e-mail, but text messaging has been in murkier territory. A federal appeals court sought to clarify matters in a ruling last month by distinguishing between electronic communication that employers store on their servers, or pay someone to store, and communication that is contracted out to third parties.

Features

ANDA Litigation Discovery Image

ANDA Litigation Discovery

Paul A. Ragusa & Sandra Lee

Patent infringement litigation based on an Abbreviated New Drug Application ('ANDA') presents certain unique challenges to the discovery process. Unlike ordinary patent litigation, little if any information helpful to the patent owner is publicly available. Instead, the patent owner must rely on a well thought out discovery plan to obtain certain information from the ANDA applicant. Suggestions for designing such a plan are presented below.

Features

Redefining Prior Art Under Proposed Patent Reform Measures Image

Redefining Prior Art Under Proposed Patent Reform Measures

Andrei Iancu & Maclain Wells

This is the first installment of a two-part series on the proposed move from a patent system granting priority of patent rights based upon invention dates to a system in which priority is based primarily upon filing dates. This installment discusses the history behind the current first-to-invent system, the current patent reform movement, and the basic proposed change to the current system.

Features

Net News Image

Net News

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

You Tube Suit Threatens Online Communication<br>Yahoo Files Suit Against Lottery Spammers

Features

Problems with Causation Testimony Image

Problems with Causation Testimony

Eric J. Frisch

Recently, the Georgia Court of Appeals affirmed a directed verdict based on <i>Daubert</i> principles in a shoulder dystocia case. The court reasoned that the expert's testimony was 'unreliable' because of improper use of the 'differential diagnosis' method and the fact that he made unsupported leaps from assumed facts to conclusions without evidentiary or medical/scientific support. Here's an analysis of the court's thinking.

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