
Tuesday, September 27, 2005

Last night's guest speakers in Innovation Teams were Sam "Bo" Pasternack, an IP partner at Choate, Hall & Stewart and Charles Cooney, Faculty Director of the Deshpande Center. They led a very interesting discussion on patents and other intellectual property (IP) issues.
Notes from the talk:
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The patent does not give you the right to sell but the right to exclude others from selling or from producing. For example, if you are not awarded with a patent in Japan you can still sell in Japan as long as no one is excluding you from the marketplace
- If there's a conflict of patent, the first inventor gets the patent not the first to file
- In order to get a patent, the invention has to have novelty, usefulness, and non-obviousness (prior use or documentation).
- Patents are issued for four types of inventions: machines, process, man-made products, and compositions of matter
- In U.S., you get 20 years of patent rights from the day of filing, not the day of patent grant
- The best approach to filing a patent is file first and then disclose
- There's other instruments other than patent to protect and extend IP
- Trade secret is one of them as long as the IP is kept a secret
- Obviously, the biggest risk to trade secret is that the secret gets out. For example, some disgruntled employee decides to steal the trade secret
- Worse, this disgruntled employee can file for a patent on the trade secret and prevent a company from using the trade secret
- Someone in the class asked "But this case seems to violate the statute of granting patent to first person who invited the idea." Sam's response was: "The statute stands only if the inventor doesn't actively abandon and conceal the invention"
| 9/27/2005 8:20:52 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00) |
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