Patent strategy for researchers and research managers /
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Chichester, West sussex, United Kingdom :
Wiley,
2013.
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Edición: | Third ed. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo (Requiere registro previo con correo institucional) |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Machine generated contents note: 1. Basic Intellectual Property Concepts
- 1.1. Introduction
- 1.2. Basic Patent Law Concepts
- 1.3. Patent Office Operations
- 1.4. Requirements for Obtaining a Patent
- 1.5. Types of Patents
- 1.6. Parts of a Patent
- 1.7. The Term of a Patent
- 1.8. Provisional Protection
- 1.9. Definitions of Commonly Used Terms
- 1.10. International Treaties
- 1.11. The Paris Convention
- 1.12. The Patent Cooperation Treaty
- 1.13. The European Patent Convention
- 1.14. The African Intellectual Property Organization
- 1.15. The African Regional Intellectual Property Organization
- 1.16. Eurasian Patent Convention
- 1.17. Copyrights, Trademarks, and Trade Secrets
- 1.18. Other Resources
- 2. The Value of Patents
- 2.1. Exclusivity
- The Desired Goal
- 2.2. The Mechanics of Achieving Exclusivity in a Technology Area
- 2.3. Traps and Misconceptions
- What Patents Can't Do
- 2.4. The Informational Value of Patents
- 2.5. Assigning Value to Patents
- 2.6. Licensing of Patents
- 3. Developing a Strategy
- 3.1. Professional Help
- 3.2. Determining Whether or Not an Invention is Patentable
- 3.3. Defining Strategy
- 3.4. The Principles Behind the Strategy
- The Military Model
- 3.5. Developing a Patent Strategy Model
- 3.6. Developing a Patent Strategy for an Invention
- 3.7. Developing a Patent Strategy for a Series of Inventions
- 3.8. Developing a Strategy for an Existing Product
- 3.9. Developing a Strategy for Licensing Patents
- 3.10. Developing a Strategy for Handling a Potentially Adverse Patent
- 3.11. Developing a Strategy for Oddball Inventions
- 3.12. Dealing with Inventors When Patent Applications are Not Filed
- 3.13. Coordination of Other Strategies and Patent Strategy
- 4. Researching with Intellectual Property in Mind
- 4.1. Introduction
- 4.2. Characteristics of Prolific Inventors
- 4.3. Characteristics of Casual Inventors
- 4.4. The Inventive Process
- 4.5. Fostering Inventive Activity
- 4.6. Suggestions on How to Conduct Research for Stronger Patents
- 5. Infringement and Freedom to Operate
- 5.1. Types of Infringement
- 5.2. Avoiding Patent Infringement
- 5.3. Dealing with Infringers
- 5.4. Research Disclosures and Journal Articles
- 5.5. Published Patent Applications and Provisional Patent Coverage
- 6. Working with Attorneys, Agents, and Patent Liaisons
- 6.1. Introduction
- 6.2. Preparing for the Legal World
- 6.3. Actions to Take before Meeting with the Agent
- 6.4. Typical Working Arrangements with Agents
- 6.5. The Researcher's Responsibility for Technical Details
- 6.6. Aloofness
- 6.7. Experimentation for the Patent Application
- 6.8. Patent Liaisons and Other Intellectual Property Professionals
- 7. Disclosure and Filing Decisions
- 7.1. Introduction
- 7.2. Controlling the Disclosure of Technology
- 7.3. The Filing Decision
- 7.4. Filing Globally
- 7.5.Compulsory Licensing
- 7.6. The Cost of Broadly Filed Patent Applications
- 7.7. The Legal Systems of Individual Countries
- 7.8. Techniques for Determining Which Countries will be of Value
- 7.9. World Growth and Economic Power
- 7.10. Templates
- 7.11. Timing of Application Filings
- 7.12. Global Experts
- 7.13. Agreement with Strategy
- 8. After the Filing
- 8.1. Introduction
- 8.2. Anticipating the First Response from a Patent office
- 8.3. Modification of Claims
- 8.4. Research After the Filing
- 8.5. Maintaining Cohesion
- 8.6. Issuance and Maintenance of Patents
- 9. The Future of Intellectual Property Efforts.