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Features

Recent Court Decisions Regarding Actual Notice of Patent Infringement Image

Recent Court Decisions Regarding Actual Notice of Patent Infringement

Patrick Fay & Anita Chang

Consider the following hypothetical situation. Mr. Jones, an engineer with your Company XYZ, informs you that a supplier for XYZ saw a rival company's Product X, which appeared quite similar to the one currently in development at XYZ. Mr. Jones tells you that representatives of XYZ had mentioned that Product X is patented. Should you (a) disregard what Mr. Jones has told you, (b) await word from attorneys for Product X, (c) contact attorneys for Product X to discuss possible infringement issues, or (d) request a formal opinion from outside counsel?

Features

A Bow to Innovation: The Supreme Court's Decision in MGM v. Grokster Image

A Bow to Innovation: The Supreme Court's Decision in MGM v. Grokster

Michael R. Graif

The Supreme Court's recent decision in <i>Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc. v. Grokster, Ltd.</i>, ___ U.S. ___, 125 S.Ct. 2764, 75 U.S.P.Q.2d 1001 (2005) is noteworthy for the Court's decision to sidestep modifying the standard that the Court set in the <i>Sony</i> case in 1984 as to when a product distributor can be liable for infringing uses of its product. Although the Supreme Court was faced with compelling arguments from copyright owners and the technology industry alike both for and against modifying the standard in <i>Sony Corp. v. Universal City Studios</i>, 464 U.S. 417 (1984), it ultimately found that Grokster and its co-defendant StreamCast could be liable for infringing downloads, not because they distributed a product that was used to infringe copyrights, but because they took the additional step of actively inducing their users to download copyrighted material. In so doing, the Supreme Court avoided deciding whether it was appropriate that a mere distributor of a product "capable of substantial noninfringing use" should avoid liability even when its product is being used for massive copyright infringement.

August issue in PDF format Image

August issue in PDF format

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

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Features

National Litigation Hotline Image

National Litigation Hotline

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Recent rulings for your review.

Features

Can You Fire an Employee for Blogging? Image

Can You Fire an Employee for Blogging?

Jonathan A. Segal

What employees do on their own time is their own business, right? Except when you think it may adversely impact your business. It's one thing for an employee to harbor extreme political views. It's another thing to blog them to the world. An employee's private sex life is, well, private. But what if an employee blogs his or her sexual fantasies to the world? Does an employer have the right to take action against an employee for off-duty blogging it finds offensive or otherwise problematic?

Recent Developments from Around the States Image

Recent Developments from Around the States

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

National rulings you need to know.

Domestic Violence in the Workplace Image

Domestic Violence in the Workplace

Susan L. Pollet

It seems that we read news stories almost daily about estranged husbands and boyfriends hunting down women at work, and ultimately killing these women before committing suicide. The "spillover" of domestic violence into the workplace is a widespread phenomenon and one that employers must acknowledge and deal with. It is not simply a private family issue. It cannot be minimized or ignored. The workplace is an easy place to find someone, which enables estranged partners to harass, stalk and sometimes kill their victims at work.

IP News Image

IP News

Compiled by Eric Agovino

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

Merck KGaA v. Integra Lifesciences I, LTD Uncertainty in the Scope of the Section 271(e)(1) Exemption Image

Merck KGaA v. Integra Lifesciences I, LTD Uncertainty in the Scope of the Section 271(e)(1) Exemption

Gary H. Levin, Patrick J. Farley & Chad Ziegler

On June 13, 2005, the Supreme Court in <i>Merck KGaA v. Integra Lifesciences I, Ltd.</i>, 545 U.S. ___, 2005 WL 1383624 (2005) ruled that the safe-harbor infringement exemption of 35 U.S.C. '271(e)(1) may apply to non-clinical research on a patented compound as long as there is a reasonable basis to believe that the compound tested could itself be the subject of an FDA submission or that experiments with the compound will produce the kinds of information relevant to an Investigational New Drug Application ("IND") or a New Drug Application ("NDA"); the exemption may apply even though the patented compound never itself becomes the subject of an FDA submission or the experimental results arising from its use never reported in a submission. The decision reversed the holding of the Federal Circuit (331 F.3d 860 (Fed. Cir. 2003)) that the exemption applies only to research used to obtain information that is submitted to the FDA as part of an application for regulatory approval. The Court expressly refused, however, to consider whether '271(e)(1) might exempt "research tools" from infringement liability. Although the Court interpreted the reach of the '271(e)(1) exemption broadly, the issue of whether use of patented research tools falls within it remains unresolved.

Features

MGM v. Grokster: Inducement Theory Leaves Unanswered Questions Image

MGM v. Grokster: Inducement Theory Leaves Unanswered Questions

Howard J. Shire, Michael Kelly & Daniel P. Margolis

In <i>MGM Studios, Inc. v. Grokster, Ltd.</i>, No. 04-480 (June 27, 2005), the Supreme Court decided that the defendants could be held liable for copyright infringement perpetrated by the users of their respective software. Rather than clarifying the "significant noninfringing use" standard from <i>Sony Corp. of America v. Universal City Studios, Inc.</i>, 464 U.S. 417 (1984), to determine whether the defendants could be held liable for distributing a product with knowledge that it could be used to infringe, the Court utilized an alternative approach of finding liability. Turning to common law precedent and patent law, the unanimous Court held that liability may be based on purposeful, culpable expression under an inducement theory of secondary infringement. While some of the potential implications of this decision can be predicted, the full effect will not likely be clear for some time.

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