intellectual property and internet law chapter 5
TRANSCRIPT
Intellectual Property and Internet Law
Chapter 5
Intellectual Property• Property resulting from intellectual, creative
processes—the products of an individual’s mind.
• Laws protecting patents, trademarks, and copyrights are designed explicitly to protect, nurture, and reward inventive and artistic creativity.
• The owner of the intellectual property typically will be paid a royalty on all sales of goods manufactured or sold pursuant to the license.
Trademarks• A distinctive mark, motto, or device that a
manufacturer stamps, prints, or otherwise affixes to goods so that they may be identified on the market.
• Federal law protects infringement as well as dilution.
• Owners may register a mark with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office pursuant to the Lanham Act or with one or more states.
TrademarksVarious marks have been protected: • Coca-Cola• Kleenex
Other items have lost protection due to becoming generic terms:
• Aspirin• Thermos• Escalator
Cyber MarksTrade marks also have protection on the
Internet: • Holders of registered trademarks now have
protection in usage as domain names• Prohibition of “cybersquatting” in 1999
amendments to Lanham ActUse of trademarks as meta tags on websites
can be OK as nominative use.
Patents• An inventor’s right to make, use, or sell his
or her invention for a period of time.• Obtained for a product, process, or design.• Inventor must convince the U.S. Patent and
Trademark Office that it is genuine, novel, useful, and not obvious in light of current technology.
Patents• The patent owner may grant exclusive or non-
exclusive licenses to others to enable them to make, use, or sell the patented product, process, or design.
Copyrights• The exclusive right of an author to publish,
print, or sell a product of his or her intellect for a certain period of time.
• A copyright grants its holder the same monopolistic control over his or her creation as a patent or trademark.
• May be registered with the U.S. Copyright Office.
Copyrights• “Fair Use” Doctrine - statutory defense to
claim of infringement– criticism,– commentary, – news reporting, – teaching, – scholarship, or – research.
Copyrights• Copyright protection also extends to
computer software.– Software code is deemed a “literary work”– Courts generally do not protect “look and feel”
of various programs
Trade Secrets• A trade secret is information or a process
that gives a person or business an advantage over competitors who do not have access to the information or process.
• Trade secret protection is almost exclusively a matter of common law - not a matter of any state or federal agency.
Trade Secrets• Examples:
– customer lists, – pricing information, – marketing techniques, – research and development, – production methods,– etc.
Intellectual Property and Internet Law
Chapter 5