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    Course Information

1025  A Penny for Your Thoughts and a Dollar for Your Intellectual Property Rights


No cost or obligation  
Course Length    83  minutes
Course Price    $ 119.00

Volume discounts and subscriptions are available; for more information, contact Cognistar Sales.

    Accreditation Information


Click on jurisdiction below for more details.
>>  1.00  credit    PA  VA
>>  1.20  credits    GA
>>  1.25  credits    IL  NC  OH  TX
>>  1.30  credits    DE  NH
>>  1.50  credits    CA  CO  NJ  NY  RI  WA

    About the Instructor(s)



 
Alan Kasper

Sughrue Mion, PLLC
Alan Kasper is based in Sughrue Mion’s Washington office, where his practice includes domestic and international patent law. He represents clients in litigation, renders opinions on patentability, validity and infringement, and provides counseling on matters involving licensing proprietary rights protection, contracting and export control. He advises clients engaged electrical, semiconductor, network software/computer-based and mechanical technologies and provides counsel on business method patents inventions. Previously, Mr. Kasper was the resident partner in Sughrue Mion’s Tokyo office. Before joining the firm, he was chief patent counsel for Communications Satellite Corp. and he also served as patent examiner for the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.

In 1964, Mr. Kasper received a B.S. in Electronics Engineering from the State University of New York at Buffalo. He earned his J.D. from Georgetown University Law Center in 1968. He is admitted to the bar of the District of Columbia and is also admitted to practice before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia and Federal Circuits, the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, and the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.

In addition to serving on the board of directors for the AIPLA, Mr. Kasper is also a member of the American Bar Association, the District of Columbia Bar Association, the International Federation of Industrial Property Attorneys, and several other professional organizations.

  Daniel Ilan
Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP

Daniel Ilan is an associate based in the New York office of Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP.

Mr. Ilan’s practice focuses on intellectual property law. He has experience in counseling clients regarding the creation and protection of intellectual property, as well as intellectual property licensing and intellectual property and information technology issues arising in mergers and acquisitions, joint ventures and research and development collaborations.

Mr. Ilan also has experience in counseling clients on European law issues, particularly in relation to intellectual property and antitrust, and on issues relating to technology standardization. He has particular experience in the information technology, telecommunications, media and entertainment, chemicals, and pharmaceutical industries.

Mr. Ilan earned an LL.B., magna cum laude, in 1997 from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and graduated with a LL.M. from the College of Europe, Bruges, in 2000. He is a member of the bar in New York and the Israel Bar, and is also a solicitor of the Supreme Court of England and Wales.



  Kenneth Seddon
Numonyx

Kenneth M. Seddon is chief intellectual property counsel for Numonyx. Prior to his current position, Mr. Seddon was senior IP counsel at Intel. He is in-house director of all IP operations, and is responsible for patent prosecution and strategy, patent and IP licensing, litigation and business unit support.

In 1999, Mr. Seddon earned his J.D from Arizona State University College of Law. He earned an M.S.E.E. from Arizona State University in 1995 and a B.S.E.E. in 1990 from the Georgia Institute of Technology.



    Outline + Synopsis

Outline Synopsis
A Penny for Your Thoughts and a Dollar for Your Intellectual Property Rights
    I. Patent Indemnity
        A. Overview
        B. Risk and Obligations
        C. Party Interests
        D. Clauses and Their Source
        E. Sample Clause
        F. Manufacturer/Indemnitor
            1. Manufacturer Obligations
            2. Issues
                a. Damages
                b. Avoiding Injuction
                c. Coverage
    II. Intellectual Property Licensing Strategies
        A. Quanta Case
            1. Exhaustion Issues
            2. Effect on Patent Licensing
        B. Licensing Post-Quanta
            1. Assumptions
            2. More Assumptions
        C. Options Post-Quanta
            1. Restrict the Scope of the License
            2. Authorized Buyers
            3. License Grant
            4. Group Patents
        D. Closing Thoughts on Licensing Strategies
    III. Trademark Licensing in Mergers & Acquisitions
        A. Background on Trademarks
        B. What to License
        C. Exploitation Rights
        D. Trademark Issues
            1. Exclusive Trademarks
            2. Shared Trademarks
        E. How To License
            1. In the Mergers and Acquisitions Context
            2. Exclusivity
        F. Product Evolution
        G. Trademark Evolution
        H. Termination
    AfterWords®
    How to Obtain a Certificate


This course is divided into three parts, each addressing some very important intellectual property issues. The first section deals with patent indemnity, followed by a section on licensing strategies, which includes an in-depth discussion of the effects Quanta Computer, Inc. v. LG Electronics, Inc., and a final section that addresses trademark licensing in mergers and acquisitions.




    Content Provided By

 

The American Intellectual Property Law Association (AIPLA) is a 16,000-member, national bar association constituted primarily of lawyers in private and corporate practice, in government service, and in the academic community. The AIPLA represents a wide and diverse spectrum of individuals, companies and institutions involved directly or indirectly in the practice of patent, trademark, copyright and unfair competition law, as well as other fields of law affecting intellectual property. Members represent both owners and users of intellectual property.

AIPLA was formed in 1897 in order to maintain a high standard of professional ethics, to aid in the improvements in laws relating to intellectual property and in their proper interpretation by the courts, and to provide legal education to the public and to its members on intellectual property issues.

To qualify for membership, applicants must be members in good standing of the bar of a court of record of the United States or any state. Foreign affiliate members must be able to practice in a court of general jurisdiction in their countries to be considered for membership, or be registered to practice with the Patent and/or Trademark Office of their country of citizenship. AIPLA also has student memberships available for those regularly enrolled in a law school approved by the Association of American Law Schools. Approximately 70% of the active members are in private practice, 30% in corporate practice, with the remainder in the government or academia.

AIPLA holds three regularly scheduled conferences a year, Mid-Winter, Spring and Fall, at which the association offers educational seminars on the latest developments in intellectual property law. In addition, AIPLA holds many stand-alone seminars on specialized areas of intellectual property law at varying times of the year in locations around the United States. The association also produces a number of informative publications including the AIPLA Quarterly Journal (a scholarly law journal published four times a year), the AIPLA Bulletin (an overview of AIPLA meetings published online three times a year), and CD-ROMs and tapes which include papers or speeches presented by speakers at the meetings. The AIPLA also publishes the Report of the Economic Survey biennially.

Furthermore, the AIPLA is actively involved in shaping U.S. intellectual property policy through its work on legislation and federal regulations affecting intellectual property cases in the U.S. courts. Internationally, the AIPLA has spearheaded a worldwide campaign to reduce the costs of procurement and enforcement of patents, regularly participates in meetings of the World Intellectual Property Organization, and maintains close relations with foreign IP officials and practitioners.




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1025  A Penny for Your Thoughts and a Dollar for Your Intellectual Property Rights

Course Price     $ 119.00


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