Legal Articles, Intellectual Property

Publication, Nonpublication, and Early Publication of Patent Application-The Strategy

Patent application will be published after 18 months from the earliest filing date. Publication will make the invention to the public's knowledge. If the application fails to mature into a patent, the public will be able to use the knowledge of the invention without infringement. How to prevent it?

reedom to Operate Opinions: The Value of a Bold Patent Landscape Study

http://www.boldip.com/bold-blog/bold-update-freedom-to-operate-opinions-the-value-of-a-bold-patent-landscape-study

Federal Trademark Protection and the Likelihood of Confusion Test

http://www.boldip.com/bold-blog/-federal-trademark-protection-and-the-likelihood-of-confusion-test

Software Patents are Not Dead

http://www.boldip.com/bold-blog/bold-news-software-patents-are-not-dead

Trademark Litigation as Business Strategy!

http://www.boldip.com/bold-blog/bold-move-trademark-litigation-as-a-business-strategy-how-when-where

What You Should Be Working on Now

Entrepreneurs often hear they need to work ON their business, not merely IN it. This five part series: What You Should Be Working On Now provides insight and a framework making it easier to focus yourself and your people on your business while performing the myriad tasks and projects present.

Sports Licensing in College Athletics

While a student-athlete is prohibited by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) from receiving any compensation for the use of the student’s name, image and likeness, the same prohibition does not apply to the university.

Blurred Lines in Copyright Law

Copyright law protects original works and any derivative works that are created from the original. But copyright law is based on tangible work—not a sound or feel.

Grey Market: Protecting Your Work From Unauthorized Parties Who Sell It For Less?

Grey Market: Protecting Your Work From Unauthorized Parties Who Sell It For Less?

Trade Secrets, Trademarks and Service Marks — What’s the Big Difference?

Trade Secrets, Trademarks and Service Marks — What’s the Big Difference?

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