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Creating Positive Visibility Within Your Organization Image

Creating Positive Visibility Within Your Organization

Jane DiRenzo Pigott

As you become more senior in an organization, the quality of your professional network becomes a more significant factor in determining success than your substantive skills. Consequently, your career game plan should include strategic avenues for creating positive visibility within your organization.

Features

Sustaining the Ethical Law Firm Image

Sustaining the Ethical Law Firm

William C. Cobb

This article discusses the key issues in establishing and maintaining a culture of ethical behavior through governance, leadership, and strategic direction.

Responding to Claims Against Your Law Firm Image

Responding to Claims Against Your Law Firm

Richard M. Zielinski

No matter how good a loss prevention program your firm has in place, it is a sad but inevitable fact of life that you will have claims. Your goal as a firm manager, therefore, is not to reduce claims incidence to zero, but rather to have a sound program in place to identify and respond to claims in a manner that minimizes your losses. Here are some thoughts on how to do that from the perspective of a trial lawyer who has spent much of the past 30 years defending law firms against such claims.

Selecting Experts in Patent Cases: A Few Simple Considerations Image

Selecting Experts in Patent Cases: A Few Simple Considerations

Benjamin Hershkowitz & Bradley W. Micsky

This article discusses several simple considerations that confront a litigant when selecting experts in a typical patent case.

Features

Who Cares About Japan? Image

Who Cares About Japan?

Andrew W. Carter, Suzue Fujimori & Mark S. Rollins

In the first article in this series, we established that the Japanese government has taken a keen interest in rebuilding its regulatory foundation to help strengthen the country's intellectual property rights ('IPR'). The second installment explored the evolving strategies Japanese corporations have and are beginning to employ to leverage their intellectual capital. This final installment focuses on Japan's leading role in developing and enforcing international IPR, specifically within Asia.

Features

Patents and Open Source Software: New Issues Raised in the GNU General Public License v3.0 Image

Patents and Open Source Software: New Issues Raised in the GNU General Public License v3.0

Paul A. Ragusa & Edward R. Tempesta

Version 3.0 of the GPL, published on June 29, 2007, contains several new provisions regarding patents prompted by a recent agreement between Microsoft and Novell.

IP News Image

IP News

Matt Berkowitz & Hany Rizkalla

Highlights of the latest intellectual property news from around the country.

Incorporating a Disclosure Made Difficult: Zenon Environmental, Inc. v. United States Filter Corp. Image

Incorporating a Disclosure Made Difficult: Zenon Environmental, Inc. v. United States Filter Corp.

John M. Cone

Incorporating a disclosure from an earlier document by reference would not appear to be a difficult task, but a recent decision from the Federal Circuit suggests otherwise.

Features

Famous Marks Doctrine: A Defeat in New York State Image

Famous Marks Doctrine: A Defeat in New York State

Kyle-Beth Hilfer

In <i>ITC Limited v. Punchgini, et al.,</i> the New York Court of Appeals declined to recognize the 'famous marks' doctrine, but it did confirm the possibility of protection under existing common law theories of misappropriation in certain limited circumstances.

Bone of Fido Parody: <i>Louis Vuitton v. Chewy Vuiton</i> Image

Bone of Fido Parody: <i>Louis Vuitton v. Chewy Vuiton</i>

Jonathan Moskin

A biting satire it may not have been, but <i>Louis Vuitton Malletier S.A. v. Haute Diggity Dog, LLC</i> nonetheless concluded that canine chew toys fashioned after Louis Vuitton handbags were a permitted parody that did not infringe or dilute Louis Vuitton's admittedly well-known marks. Although the decision scratches little new ground in the trademark jurisprudence of parody and infringement, it was a first opportunity for an appellate court to assess parody under the new Trademark Dilution Revision Act.

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