Prof. Laura Schultz has a brief article at Nanotechnology Now in which she views nanotechnology developments by way of patent records. Her article gives a quick breakdown of the industrial areas patenting nanotechnology in 1990 and in 2009.
Archive for the ‘I.P.’ Category
Patent window into nanotech
Thursday, July 29th, 2010Patents and startups
Thursday, July 22nd, 2010Robert Merges and Pamela Samuelson (UC Berkeley School of Law) along with Ted Sichelman (University of San Diego School of Law) have just published a series of three posts over at PatentlyO. These concern patenting by entreprenuers, startups, and early stage high tech companies, basically trying to understand how important patents are to these entities and why they pursue them or not.
An interesting finding is that investors might be more interested than the scientists, engineers and managers, that the entity acquire patent protection.
Knowledge-of-Patent Element Satisfied by “Deliberate Indifference”
Friday, April 2nd, 2010Under 35 U.S.C. 271(b) “[w]hoever actively induces infringement of a patent shall be liable as an infringer.” Previously, in order to meet the requirement that one “actively induces”, one generally must have knowledge of the patent in question.
The Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit recently found (SEB S.A. v. Montgomery Ward & Co., PDF) that deliberate indifference to potential patent rights is equivalent of actual knowledge. To quote:
…a claim for inducement is viable even where the patentee has not produced direct evidence that the accused infringer actually knew of the patent-in-suit. This case shows such an instance. The record contains adequate evidence to support a conclusion that [one of the defendants] deliberately disregarded a known risk that SEB had a protective patent.
I wonder what this means if a company deliberately shields employees from knowledge of pre-existing patents.
[For further discussions see, for example, this link to IPWatchdog.]