Inflation Reduction Act
Protecting Yourself Against Data Breach: Don't Be a Target
To listen to the podcast, please click here . On May 5, 2014, Target Corporation Chief Executive Officer Gregg Steinhafel resigned after having been with the company for 35 years, another casualty of the massive data breach that continues to...
Court Rules That Patent Infringement Can Violate Antitrust Laws
Patent infringement can be considered anticompetitive conduct under federal antitrust law, according to a recent ruling issued by the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas. This ruling arose out of a dispute between Retractable Technologies, Inc. (Retractable)...
Bad Faith Patent Litigation Is Bad News For Plaintiffs
Affirming a $1.6 million dollar award for attorney fees against a non-practicing entity (NPE) for pursuing and maintaining patent litigation in bad faith, the Federal Circuit has served notice that patent litigants "must continually assess the soundness of pending infringement...
Beyond Trolling the Trolls: White House Acts to Curb Abuse by Patent Assertion Entities
Earlier this year, President Obama addressed frivolous patent suits in a Google+ hangout session, commenting that Patent Assertion Entities (PAEs) "don't actually produce anything themselves" and assert patents "to essentially leverage and hijack somebody else's idea and see if they...
Texas Puts its Lone-Star Spin on Trade Secret Protection
Effective on September 1, 2013, trade secret owners in Texas will have a statutory framework for litigation in an actual or threatened misappropriation of trade secrets. 1 Texas recently joined the other forty-seven states 2 in implementing a version of...
Stripped of Controversial Provisions, Lame-Duck Patent Reform Heads to Obama's Desk
On January 1, 2013—immediately after passing the fiscal crisis bill—the House of Representatives agreed by voice vote (at 11:13 PM) to approve the Senate's Amendments to H.R. 6621. A controversial provision that would have eroded the patent term of approximately...
Lame-Duck Patent Reform Goes Almost Entirely Unnoticed
With most lawmakers focused on the so called "fiscal cliff" during the current lame duck session of Congress, Representative Lamar Smith (R-TX) has quietly once again proposed legislation to reform the United States patent system. This time, few seem to...
New USPTO Dallas-Fort Worth Regional Satellite Office Finds Home in Downtown Dallas Location
The US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) recently announced that downtown Dallas will serve as the site for its Dallas-Fort Worth regional satellite office. The office is expected to be a place where small businesses and entrepreneurs can learn how...
New America Invents Act Provisions Set to Become Effective in September 2012
The switch to a modified first-inventor-to-file system will not take place until March 16, 2013, but notably several provisions of the Leahy-Smith America Invents Act (AIA) will take effect in one month, on September 16, 2012. The U.S. Patent and...
USPTO Opens a Satellite Patent Office in Dallas
On July 2, 2012, the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) announced the selection of Dallas, Texas as the location for one of its satellite patent offices, and it was the sole southern city chosen. The Dallas satellite office...
Federal Circuit Passes Torch From Juries to Judges for Willful Infringement Determinations
Just in time for the London 2012 Summer Olympics, the Federal Circuit, in Bard Peripheral Vascular v. W.L. Gore & Assocs., 1 passes the torch from juries to judges on willful infringement determinations in patent litigation. With an en banc...
'Round the Turn They're A-Comin'! The Wild Patent Enforcement Ride of Marine Polymer v. HemCon
Problems arise when you suddenly realize that you have prepared for one type of race and you find yourself in the middle of a completely different type of competition. Those involved in patent infringement cases analogize the process to running...
USPTO Preliminary Guidelines Spread Mayo on Patent-Eligibility
A day after the United States Supreme Court delivered its decision in Mayo Collaborative Services v. Prometheus Laboratories, Inc. , 1 the United States Patent and Trademark Office issued preliminary guidance 2 instructing examiners to reject process claims that invoke...
Can't Touch This - Supreme Court Finds Personalized Medicine Patent Claims Invalid
In Mayo Collaborative Services v. Prometheus Laboratories, Inc., the Supreme Court of the United States held unanimously that claims directed to a method of altering a drug dose based on levels of the drug’s metabolite are ineligible for patent protection...