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Features

Takeda v. Mylan: High-Cost Generic Drugs from Baseless Paragraph IV Certifications Image

Takeda v. Mylan: High-Cost Generic Drugs from Baseless Paragraph IV Certifications

Gregory M. York

In <i>Takeda v. Mylan</i>, the Federal Circuit revisited attorney fees in the context of an ANDA application. In doing so, the court provided additional guidance regarding factual circumstances that may support such awards and addressed several of the unanswered questions from the <i>Yamanouchi v. Danbury</i> opinion.

Kubin and Permissibility of the 'Obvious to Try' Standard Image

Kubin and Permissibility of the 'Obvious to Try' Standard

Christopher P. Demas

Urged by the Supreme Court's opinion in <i>KSR</i>, the Federal Circuit has addressed its precedent regarding the obvious-to-try standard, positively stating a standard implied in its previous holdings.

July issue in PDF format Image

July issue in PDF format

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

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Patent Opinions, Willfulness and Inducement Image

Patent Opinions, Willfulness and Inducement

Bruce Barker & Frederick Hadidi

Recent decisions have begun to fill in the gaps left by <i>In re Seagate Technology, LLC.</i> They suggest that a competent opinion is still an effective defense to a willfulness charge, and that a jury may consider a defendant's failure to obtain an opinion when determining the defendant's intent for purposes of willfulness and inducement. Also, legitimate trial defenses may be sufficient to establish that a defendant's actions at the time of infringement were not "objectively reckless.

Features

Damage Calculations Post eBay: The Economic Considerations Image

Damage Calculations Post eBay: The Economic Considerations

Michael K. Milani & Trevor M. Blum

This article provides an overview of how various courts have dealt with the question of post-verdict compensation in the wake of the <i>eBay Inc. v. MercExchange L.L.C.</i> verdict.

Properly Name Inventors on Patents Image

Properly Name Inventors on Patents

Paul A. Ragusa & Jason Chumney

A patent can be held invalid for incorrect inventorship, and co-inventorship of one, even relatively insignificant, claim can entitle a co-inventor to an ownership stake in every claim of the patent. Moreover, failure to join all co-inventors/owners as plaintiffs can prevent the real party in interest from enforcing a patent. A recent decision by the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, <i>Nartron Corp. v. Schukra U.S.A., Inc.</i>, is illustrative of such risks

In re Kubin: Federal Circuit Ignores Principles of Structural Obviousness in Applying 'Obvious to Try' Test Image

In re Kubin: Federal Circuit Ignores Principles of Structural Obviousness in Applying 'Obvious to Try' Test

Warren D. Woessner & Tania A. Shapiro-Barr

<i>In re Kubin</i>, 2009 WL 877646 (Fed. Cir. April 3, 2009), now appears to be the first case in which a defined biochemical structure was found to be obvious despite the fact that the structure was previously unknown and unpredictable.

Hoping to Write a Happy Ending On Google Books Image

Hoping to Write a Happy Ending On Google Books

Eriq Gardner

In April, when the federal judge overseeing the settlement involving Google's online book search service gave authors four more months to opt in to, or out of, the deal, many copyright insiders were surprised. Not Allan Adler. For Adler, vice president for legal affairs at the Association of American Publishers ("AAP"), U.S. District Court judge Denny Chin's decision to delay what was a May deadline until September marked just another twist on a long, bumpy road.

Internet Child Porn Search Is 'Knowing Possession' in PA Image

Internet Child Porn Search Is 'Knowing Possession' in PA

Peter Hall

Searching for child pornography on the Internet and following links to make such images appear on a computer screen constitutes knowing possession or control of that material, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has ruled.

Features

Ninth Circuit Finds No First Amendment Violation in Teacher's Demotion over Blog Comments Image

Ninth Circuit Finds No First Amendment Violation in Teacher's Demotion over Blog Comments

Tresa Baldas

Delivering a blow to bloggers' rights, a federal appeals court has ruled that a Washington state teacher's blog attacking co-workers, the union and the school district was not protected speech, and therefore she was not unlawfully demoted over it.

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