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9781587789021

Patent Law

by ;
  • ISBN13:

    9781587789021

  • ISBN10:

    1587789027

  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2007-12-13
  • Publisher: West Academic

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Summary

This Concepts and Inisghts title offers an unusual mix of approaches to explaining the modern patent system. It combines both a comprehensive view of the law itself with key academic insights that illuminates the manypolicy challenges in the area today. The book is theoretical, yet grounded in the realities of the legal system - drawing from a range of original works across the field. As such, the book will be useful to the scholar, the student, and the practitioner - anyone who needs a compact, yet sophisticated overview of patent law.

Table of Contents

What is a Patent and Why Do We Have a Patent System?p. 1
What is a Patent?p. 1
Parts of a Patentp. 2
The Philosophy of Patent Lawp. 6
The Economics of Patent Lawp. 9
Trends and Challenges to the Modern Patent Systemp. 13
Trends of the Modern Patent Systemp. 13
Increasing Patenting Activityp. 13
Increasing Enforcement Activityp. 15
A Changing Role for Patents?p. 17
The Policy Challenges of the Modern Patent Systemp. 19
Patent Law and Social Welfare: An Evolving Relationshipp. 19
Operational Challenges: Administrative and Judicialp. 22
The Boundaries of the Patent Systemp. 23
Trade Secret Lawp. 24
Copyright Lawp. 27
Trademark Lawp. 28
Channeling Towards Patent Lawp. 29
The Federal Circuit and The Patent Systemp. 31
Introductionp. 31
Federal Circuit: Facts and Figuresp. 31
Caseloadp. 31
Judgesp. 32
Judicial "Camps"p. 32
The Theory of the Federal Circuitp. 33
Managers versus Decision Makers: Two Views of the Federal Circuitp. 36
The Future of the Federal Circuitp. 37
An Overview of Patent Prosecutionp. 39
Introductionp. 39
The U.S. Patent and Trademark Officep. 43
Prosecution Rules, Regulation, and Proceduresp. 43
Drafting the Applicationp. 44
Submission, Classification and Initial Proceedingsp. 45
Examination Proceedingsp. 46
Continuation Practicep. 46
Post-Grant Practice: Maintenance, Reissues and Re-examinationsp. 47
Challenges at the Patent Officep. 48
Responding to the Rise in Patenting Activityp. 49
Resolving a Regulatory Rolep. 50
Defining the Constituencyp. 52
Disclosure Requirementsp. 53
Enablementp. 54
Enablement and "Undue Experimentation"p. 54
Enablement and Claim Scopep. 56
Written Descriptionp. 58
Best Modep. 61
Definitenessp. 65
Novelty and Statutory Barsp. 67
Noveltyp. 67
Date of Inventionp. 68
"Known or Used"p. 70
"Printed Publication"p. 74
Novelty Under §§ 102(e) and 102(g)(2)p. 76
Section 102(e) Prior Artp. 76
Section 102(g)(2) Prior Artp. 79
Prior User Rightsp. 81
Patent-Obtaining v. Patent-Defeating Activityp. 84
Statutory Bars: Public Use and On-Sale Activityp. 85
On-Sale Barp. 86
Public Usep. 89
Experimental Usep. 91
Third-Party Activityp. 95
Priority of Inventionp. 97
Abandonment, Suppression, and Concealmentp. 98
Diligencep. 99
Comparative Perspective: First-to-Invent versus First-to-Filep. 100
Non-Obviousnessp. 102
The Graham Frameworkp. 102
The Non-Obviousness Testp. 102
Scope and Content of the Prior Artp. 104
Analogous and Non-Analogous Artp. 105
Suggestion in the Art and Reasonable Expectation of Successp. 106
The Person Having Ordinary Skill in the Artp. 117
Objective Indicia of Non-Obviousness: Secondary Considerationsp. 118
Commercial Successp. 118
Long-Felt Need and Failure of Othersp. 119
Licensing and Acquiescencep. 120
The Importance of Non-Obviousness as a Policy Toolp. 120
Eligible Subject Matter And Utilityp. 122
Introductionp. 122
The Subject Matter Requirementp. 123
The Subject Matter Requirement and Biotechnologyp. 124
The Subject Matter Requirement and Computer Softwarep. 128
The Utility Requirementp. 133
Practical Utilityp. 135
Beneficial Utilityp. 141
Operable Utilityp. 142
Claim Constructionp. 143
Introductionp. 143
The Institutional Design of Claim Constructionp. 145
Interpreting Patent Claimsp. 150
Infringementp. 157
Introductionp. 157
Literal Infringementp. 159
The Doctrine of Equivalentsp. 161
Foundational Casesp. 162
Graver Tank v. Linde Air Prods. Cop. 162
Warner-Jenkinson Company, Inc. v. Hilton Davis Chemical, Inc.p. 163
The DOE and After-Arising Technologiesp. 167
Limitations on the Doctrine of Equivalentsp. 168
Prosecution History Estoppelp. 169
The Festo Doctrinep. 169
Rebutting Festo's Presumptionp. 174
Public Dedication Rulep. 175
All-Limitations and Specific Exclusion Rulep. 178
Indirect Infringementp. 181
Active Inducementp. 181
Contributory Infringementp. 183
Defenses to Patent Infringementp. 185
Introduction: The High Stakes of Patent Litigationp. 185
Inequitable Conductp. 186
The Doctrine of Inequitable Conductp. 186
The Policy of Inequitable Conductp. 188
Prosecution Lachesp. 189
Patent Misuse and Antitrust Violationsp. 190
The Complexities of Patents and Competition Policyp. 190
Analyzing Market Power and the Scope of the Claimsp. 191
Tying Arrangementsp. 192
Refusals to Licensep. 193
Temporal Limitationsp. 194
Patent Poolsp. 195
Reverse Paymentsp. 196
Grant-Back Licensesp. 196
Exhaustion of Patent Rights: First Sale and Repairp. 197
The Reverse Doctrine of Equivalentsp. 199
Inventorship and Ownershipp. 200
Attributes of an Inventorp. 200
Inventorship, Ownership and Rights of the Employeep. 202
Remediesp. 204
Introductionp. 204
Injunctive Reliefp. 205
Damagesp. 209
Lost Profitsp. 210
Measuring Harm: The Panduit Standardp. 210
The Scope of Harm: The Rite-Hite Analysisp. 211
Non-Infringing Substitutesp. 213
Reasonable Royalty Damagesp. 214
Enhanced Damages, Willfulness, and Attorneys' Feesp. 215
Table of Casesp. 219
Indexp. 227
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

Supplemental Materials

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The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

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