Lec 9 - The Importance of Intellectual Property
Lec 9 - The Importance of Intellectual Property
Lec 9 - The Importance of Intellectual Property
THE IMPORTANCE OF
INTELLECTUAL
PROPERTY
1-1
BUS 360: Leading Innovation
M Wahidul Islam
THE IMPORTANCE OF INTELLECTUAL
PROPERTY
Intellectual Property
Is any product of human intellect that is intangible but
has value in the marketplace.
It is called “intellectual” property because it is the
product of human imagination, creativity, and
inventiveness.
Importance
Traditionally,businesses have thought of their
physical assets, such as land, buildings, and
equipment as the most important.
Increasingly, however, a company’s intellectual assets 12-2
are the most important.
DETERMINING WHAT INTELLECTUAL
PROPERTY TO PROTECT
Criteria 1 Criteria 2
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COMMON MISTAKES FIRMS MAKE IN REGARD TO
PROTECTING THEIR INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
Patents Trademarks
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PATENTS
Patents
A patent is a grant from the federal government conferring
the rights to exclude others from making, selling, or using
an invention for the term of the patent.
Increasing Interest in Patents
There is increasing interest in patents.
Since Patent #1 was granted in 1790, the U.S. Patent and Trademark
Office has granted over six million patents.
The patent office is strained. It now takes an average of 29.1 months
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PROPER UNDERSTANDING FOR
WHAT A PATENT MEANS
A patent does not give its owner the right to make, use, or sell an invention: rather,
the right granted is only to exclude others from doing so.
As a result, if an inventor obtains a patent for a new kind of computer chip, and the
chip would infringe on a prior patent owned by Intel, the inventor has no right to
make, use, or sell the chip.
To do so, the inventor would need to obtain permission from Intel. Intel may refuse
permission, or ask that a licensing fee be paid for the rights to infringe on its patent.
While this system may seem odd, it is really the only way the system could work.
Many inventions are improvements on existing inventions, and the system allows the
improvements to be (patented) and sold, but only with the permission of the original
inventors, who usually benefit by obtaining licensing income in exchange for their
consent.
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GROWTH IN PATENT APPLICATIONS IN
THE UNITED STATES
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THREE BASIC REQUIREMENTS FOR
OBTAINING A PATENT
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TYPES OF PATENTS
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PATENT INFRINGEMENT
Patent Infringement
Takes place when one party engages in the
unauthorized use of another party’s patent.
The tough part (particularly from a small
entrepreneurial firm’s point of view) is that patent
infringement cases are costly to litigate.
A typical patent infringement case costs each side at least
$500,000 to litigate.
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TRADEMARKS
Trademark
A trademark is any word, name, symbol, or device
used to identify the source or origin of products or
services and to distinguish those products or services
from others.
Trademarks also provide consumers with useful
information.
For example, consumers know what to expect when they see
an Abercrombie & Fitch store.
Think how confusing it would be if any retail store could use
Name is trademarked
Symbol is trademarked
Slogan is trademarked
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TYPES OF TRADEMARKS
(1 OF 2)
Words Fragrances
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COPYRIGHTS
Copyrights
A copyright is a form of intellectual property
protection that grants to the owner of a work of
authorship the legal right to determine how the work
is used and to obtain the economic benefits from the
work.
A work does not have to have artistic merit to be
eligible for copyright protection.
As a result, things such as operating manuals and sales
brochures are eligible for copyright protection.
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WHAT IS PROTECTED BY A
COPYRIGHT?
SUBJECT TO CERTAIN RESTRICTIONS
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EXCLUSIONS FROM COPYRIGHT
PROTECTION
The Idea-Expression Dichotomy
Themain exclusion is that copyright laws cannot
protect ideas.
For example, an entrepreneur may have the idea to open a
soccer-themed restaurant. The idea itself is not eligible for
copyright protection. However, if the entrepreneur writes
down specifically what his or her soccer-themed restaurant
will look like and how it will operate, that description is
copyrightable.
The legal principle describing this concept is called the idea-
Copyright Infringement
Copyright infringement occurs when one work derives from
another or is an exact copy or shows substantial similarity to
the original work.
To prove infringement, a copyright owner is required to
show that the alleged infringer had prior access to the
copyrighted work and that the work is substantially similar
to the owner’s.
Copyright infringement costs the owners of copywritten
material an estimated $20 billion per year.
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TRADE SECRETS
Trade Secrets
A trade secret is any formula, pattern, physical device,
idea, process, or other information that provides the
owner of the information with a competitive
advantage in the marketplace.
Trade secrets include marketing plans, product
formulas, financial forecasts, employee rosters, logs
of sales calls, and similar types of proprietary
information.
The Federal Economic Espionage Act, passed in
1996, criminalizes the theft of trade secrets.
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WHAT QUALIFIES FOR TRADE SECRET
PROTECTION?
Trade Secret Protection
Not all information qualifies for trade secret
protection.
In general, information that is known to the public or that
competitors can discover through legal means doesn’t qualify
for trade secret protection.
The strongest case for trade secret protection is
information that is characterized by the following:
Is not known outside the company.
Is known inside the company on a “need-to-know” basis only.
secret.
Is valuable and provides the company a competitive edge.
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CONDUCTING AN INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
AUDIT
(1 OF 2)
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REFERENCES