Account

Sign in to access your account and subscription

LJN Newsletters

  • Leadership programs can range from a collection of specific training programs to a more comprehensive approach, including an organized curriculum, senior advisers, individual coaching, development plans and formal feedback. If your firm is interested in starting a comprehensive program, here are some factors to consider.

    November 25, 2008Michele Bendekovic and Diane Costigan
  • Who's doing what; who's moving where.

    November 25, 2008ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |
  • If you have read, or even heard about, Thomas Friedman's The World Is Flat or Fareed Zakaria's The Post-American World, you will recognize a theme in common with what patent attorneys do every day. We write for one-fifth of a century later. Our words, building fences around ideas, are likely expressions of intellectual property grants by governments still in place 20 years hence.

    November 25, 2008John H. Hornickel
  • This is the first in a series of articles designed to provide researchers and marketers with tools to gain a degree of clarity and insight into how the economy will affect their firms.

    November 25, 2008Shannon Sankstone
  • Lawyers who find ways to provide clients with incentives to hire the firm ought to be rewarded accordingly. The principle seems sound enough but, as usual, the devil is in the proverbial details.

    November 25, 2008Allan Colman
  • To avoid declaratory judgment actions, patent holders may opt to sue or threaten the purchasers of an allegedly infringing product, without threatening suit against the manufacturer. In effect, the patent holder coerces the manufacturing company to give up the right to manufacture or distribute the accused product by scaring off its customers.

    November 25, 2008Patrick Fay and Aaron Marx
  • Part One of a Two-Part Article

    In high-technology disputes, a patentee must secure a thorough understanding of often complex and subtle technologies in accused devices to prove patent infringement. Despite a patentee's best efforts to obtain proof of infringement, very often the most convincing evidence of patent infringement ' for example, proprietary design documents of the accused device ' lies within the possession of the alleged infringer itself.

    November 25, 2008James W. Soong and Y.T. Chen