1.
Too Late To Start Filing U.S. and International Patent Application
Unfortunately for many good technology companies, it may be too late to file for
patent
protection. The current U.S. rule generally provides applicants with a 1-year
grace period during which a patent application must be filed after certain
public or private disclosure of the invention. Such disclosure may arise, for
example, from a mere "offer for sale" of the technology, even if the product has
not yet been built or prototyped. In comparison, the foreign rule, which
applies to many industrialized jurisdictions, such as Japan and various European
countries, do not give applicants the benefit of any grace period after a public
disclosure has occurred. Thus, it is legally compelling for applicants to
consider filing for patent protection sooner than later. Although in some
situations, there may be some special exception that still allows for late
filings; it is not advisable for applicants to count on those exceptions.
2.
Too
Narrow Legal Scope of Claiming Patentable Inventions
Many
issued patents are not commercially valuable because the scope of their
submitted claims are particularly narrow, and can be relatively easily avoided
by determined competitors. Thus when submitting new patent claim language,
applicants should broadly define novel concepts that include potential
design-around by other parties. Although this legal blocking strategy sounds
easy enough to state as an objective, in fact, the serious exercise of analyzing
future competitive and industry directions can be an extremely difficult task,
particularly because the analysis often requires sophisticated market
understanding, as well as technical and engineering vision.
3.
Internally Mismanaged Patent Infringement "Wilfulness" Exposure
Under U.S.
patent law, one's awareness or willful state-of-mind about the existence and
infringement of a competitor's issued patent may significantly affect subsequent
legal liability. Thus if a party is proven to be a willful infringer of a known
patent, then for punitive policy reasons, economic damages may be awarded to the
patent owner up to three times normal recovery amount. This treble-damage
exposure is so substantial, that company management should be careful to avoid
creating evidence of internal communications such as emails that may be
construed later to indicate such willfulness state-of-mind. Additionally in
many cases, it may be appropriate for companies as a matter of policy to
discourage looking at issued patents owned by other entities. And when a
suspect patent is already known, management must take careful steps to refer the
matter to competent patent counsel for appropriate analysis and opinion.
4.
Relying Solely on Copyrights for Software Protection
Copyright
protection in the U.S. and many other countries arises instantly and at
virtually no cost to protect software technologies, such as computer programs,
electronic databases, and graphical display screens and related media. In fact,
copyright protection is often quite a suitable means to secure much digital
media such as video and audio creative works, often even without compliance with
copyright registration and notice requirements. Copyright protection, however,
is legally vulnerable to reverse-engineering efforts by competitors, during
which no copyright infringement may arise when the reverse engineering results
does not result in literal copying of the original code, but merely an
understanding of the underlying ideas and functions. In this vulnerable
scenario, perhaps patent protection may be more appropriate to secure any novel
algorithm, methods, and computing apparatus.
5.
Inadvertantly Tainting IPR with 3rd-Party Co-ownership Rights
During the
course typically of joint-development engineering projects, ideas may originate
from many sources, such as advisors, consultant, employees, and even customers.
This collaborative scenario sets the stage for creating intellectual property
rights that may be co-owned by multiple parties. And unless the rights of such
joint owners are specified up-front, for example by contract terms, then there
is a problematic possibility that certain parties later may assert not just
their partial ownership interest, but actually endeavor to offer licensing
rights to other 3rd parties or even competitors.
6.
Ignoring the Impact of New "Festo" U.S. Supreme Court Ruling Re Patent
Amendments
On May 28,
2002, the U.S. Supreme Court (Festo Corp. v. Shoketsu Kinzoku Kogyo Kabushiki
Co., Ltd) substantially changed the legal effect of amending patent claims,
particularly upon the effective scope of amended claims. This judicial change
cannot be ignored without possibly impairing commercial value of many issued
U.S. patents, especially where applicants introduce explicit argument that
distinguish various prior-art cited by the Patent Examiner. Without getting
into the subtle legal and policy complexities associated with the so-called
"Doctrine of Equivalents," the Festo decision and related subsequent federal
cases clearly narrow many patent claims scope whenever applicants propose
routine amendments to distinguish the claimed invention against cited prior-art
references.
7.
Underestimating the Importance of Trade Secrets and Confidentiality
Since
patent protection may not arise for many years until after filing patent
applications, and copyright protection may not be applicable to protect
functional aspects of various technologies,
trade secret
protection may serve realistically as a solid backstop against competitive
piracy or other misappropriation of company know-how. Thus the importance of
diligent use of Non-Disclosure Agreements (NDA) and in-house policies and
systems to secure confidential and proprietary information rises to a more
significant level of management priority. Additionally early disclosures, for
example through customer marketing presentations, may irreparably hurt company
rights to file domestic or international patent applications.
8.
Overlooking Legitimate Opportunity to Set-up Offshore Licensing Tax Shelters
Often
neglected by early-stage startup companies and entrepreneurs are offshore
strategies for mitigating federal tax exposure. Such international tax
strategies are especially relevant when foreign licensees of intellectual
property rights are contemplated possibly in the company business plan. In many
cases in fact, it is particularly beneficial to deploy one or more
corporate entities offshore much sooner, rather than after licensees are
identified, in order to minimize certain taxable valuation exposure associated
with transferring such licensed rights.
9.
Responding Slowly to U.S.P.T.O. Office Actions
Because
the U.S. patent rules now provide 20 years of enforcement patent protection,
after the U.S. filing date, it is important to expedite the claim amendment and
application prosecution process; otherwise applicant's enforcement period is
effectively eroded by unnecessary delays in the process. Accordingly,
applicants should endeavor to respond in timely fashion, expediting all office
action responses and facilitating communications with patent counsel whenever
possible. Additionally, the new patent rules actually apply a time penalty to
deduct enforcement period against issued U.S. patents in certain situations
where applicants contribute to delays during patent prosecution.
10.
Over/Under-Spending on Legal Fees to Prosecute Patent Applications
In the
realistic context of the current economic recession especially in Silicon
Valley, startup companies and entrepreneurs who are strapped for cash may
negotiate for substantial fee discounts from patent counsel to prepare and file
patent applications. However, patent applicants should be careful to ensure
that most qualified legal counsel in terms of technical and business experience
are selected and engaged to work on critical company inventions, perhaps with
bottom-line pricing being just one of a number of significant factors to
consider.
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