Defending Trademark Infringement
Patent infringement is considered the theft of an invention, idea, or enhancement that has been filed with the U.S. Patent Office, with a given time frame of acceptable overlap of one year.
The U.S. Patent Office is responsible for determining whether or not a patent can be granted based on the information given by the applicant. Trademark infringement is the use of a company’s or individual’s registered trademark, a trademark being a sign, symbol, or emblem used to distinguish one company’s or individual’s trademark from another, such as RCA uses a specific dog in a specific position as their trademark.
Any company wishing to use a dog as their trademark can do so without being guilty of a trademark infringement provided they use a different type of dog as their trademark.
Trademark infringement is as equally serious as patent infringement. Trademarks are a recognizable symbol, which companies are hopeful that the general public will associate with quality and purchase the product based on recognition.
Trademark infringement is profit infringement, and if trademark infringement is suspected it is within a company’s or individual’s best interest to contact a trademark lawyer. A trademark lawyer can help launch an investigation and determine whether or not a trademark infringement has occurred.
By enlisting the assistance of a trademark lawyer, the company or individual is then able to have legal backing should they choose to make a legal claim of trademark infringement. A trademark lawyer can naturally do the same thing for a patent infringement.
The difference between a patent infringement and a trademark infringement is the nature of the idea that is copied. A patent infringement refers to the copying or theft of an actual invention while a trademark infringement refers to the copying or theft of an icon, symbol, or even a special set of lettering. A trademark lawyer can assist a company or individual with either case.
The U.S. Patent Office is responsible for keeping and maintaining the records of all patents and trademarks, which is a searchable database of registered patents and trademarks.
In order to obtain a legal basis for patent infringement or trademark infringement, the U.S. Patent Office must have a record of the original filing of the patent or trademark. This is not so difficult to obtain through the U.S. Patent Office, especially with the development of the internet and searchable software.
These tools have both removed any valid excuse of ignorance for trademark infringement or patent infringement while simultaneously enhancing an inventor’s ability to search out trademark infringements and patent infringements. It doesn’t take a trademark lawyer to search the database, as this is something anyone can easily do with a little time and energy, and an internet connection.
Once the original patent or trademark registration is determined, a trademark lawyer can then follow a few basic steps to determine the actuality of a patent infringement or trademark infringement.
This means that the trademark lawyer will likely write a certified letter to the company stating the fact that the company is in violation of trademark infringement laws or patent infringement laws, and they are to immediately cease and desist the current use of either the trademark or the patent.
The company then has a choice to make, whether they will immediately abide by the warning letter or they may choose to fight the notion that they are guilty of any type of trademark infringement or patent infringement.
They as well will turn to the U.S. Patent Office to determine if they are in error, or if the inventor or trademarked company is mistaken in their assertion. Should their U.S. Patent Office search prove to them that they are in violation of trademark infringement laws or patent infringement laws, and they do not immediately cease and desist, the trademark lawyer will undoubtedly recommend filing a lawsuit.
The trademark lawyer may very well recommend filing a lawsuit regardless of the company’s further actions, as this is likely to prompt a settlement offer for any marketing or promotion damage that may have been done while the offending company was in violation of trademark infringement laws or patent infringement laws.
Trademark infringement and patent infringement can be complicated in proving every detail, particularly if the infringement was in fact intentional or accidental. However, while intent does play a role in determining the outcome of a lawsuit, ignorance does not excuse the action. There should be a decline in trademark infringement and patent infringement cases as the U.S.
Patent Office records are now easier than ever to search, however it seems as though cases of infringement are climbing rather than declining.
Nick Johnson represents individuals or companies with cases involving patent infringement. Find more information at http://www.toppatentinfringementattorneys.com or http://www.toppatentinfringementlawyers.com . Call 1-888-311-5522 to receive a free case evaluation.
California Patent Lawyer Discusses Patent Laws
In the United States, patent laws vary from state to state or even from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. Thus, California patent laws are unique to California. California patent laws are still both clearly defined and as technically difficult as other states. Patent infringement is basically defined the same everywhere.
The manufacture, use, sale, offer to sell, or import and existing or patented device, product, material, or other conceivable invention constitutes patent infringement. Patent infringement lawyers basically have three jobs.
The first job of a patent infringement lawyer is to protect people’s right to carry, and exclusively market their patent for the time frame of the patent. A patent infringement lawyer also helps throughout the development process in determining whether or not a patent already exists or has been applied for. Finally, a patent infringement lawyer will defend those accused of patent infringement.
California patent laws state that, just like all other states, the only person who is permitted to apply for the patent is the actual inventor. Thus, even if the inventor is currently employed by a company who creates and develops new products, the inventor is the only one who can sign the patent.
However, with the help of a patent infringement attorney, the inventor can be “bought out”. This means that a patent infringement attorney can facilitate a negotiation between the inventor and the company to purchase from the inventor the rights to produce, market, and sell the invention or product without the threat of a patent infringement lawsuit.
This also means that the company has to be willing and able to purchase the idea from the inventor. For example, Kodak did not, as a company, invent the disposable camera. An employee of the company invented the disposable camera. Two patent infringement attorneys, one for the employee and one for the company, negotiated the reasonable amount of money the inventor was willing to accept in exchange for his invention. California patent laws state that this is perfectly reasonable and acceptable provided that the inventor is not coerced, threatened, or forced into this agreement, which can include the threat of a job loss.
California patent laws also state that while an inventor is the only individual who is permitted to apply for a patent, an the event that for whatever reason the individual determines that he or she does not wish to apply for the patent or can not be located, an interested party may file for a patent on that individual’s behalf.
Thus, if Mary Alice has created in her basement in her spare time the ultimate software but doesn’t wish to apply for a patent, her friend Janet can take the information to a patent infringement attorney and provided that there is not another patent on file, Janet and the patent infringement attorney can file for the patent on behalf of Mary Alice.
Mary Alice will still hold the rights to the patent, and Janet doesn’t financially benefit from this at all. In fact, she is now responsible for the patent infringement attorney’s fees. Hopefully Mary Alice is just as good of a friend and will buy Mary Alice a house or something when the software patent rights are purchased by a major software company.
California patent laws have clarified rights for people who don’t wish to file patents, rights of filing for patents for the legally insane, and exclude employees of the patent office from having any interest whatsoever in a patent, with the exception of inheritance.
California patent laws still of course require the constantly patent educated patent infringement attorneys to interpret the fine details. California patent laws can be segregated into three basic categories. One for plants, one for utilities, and one for design.
Patent infringement attorneys are typically well versed in all three categories, however most patents fall under utility patents. Utility patents encompass pretty much everything that was ever invented outside of plants (which aren’t really invented anyway) and designs. Patent infringement attorneys are able to represent any of these three categories for a client if the need arises.
California patent laws prevent the application process for a patent based solely on an idea, however, patent infringement attorneys are still often asked to do clearance or patent searches when the only thing the inventor has is an idea.
California patent paws require that the patent applied for has a functioning version of the item being applied for and may very well request to see it. California patent laws are fairly stringent and are a constant fluid entity. Patent infringement attorneys are often confused with the final approval of a patent. Not so.
The U.S. Patent Office has the last say as to whether or not a patent will be issued. Patent infringement attorneys are valuable in interpreting and keeping up with California patent law changes, but have no final direction in whether or not a patent will be granted for any particular invention.
Nick Johnson, lead counsel and founding partner of Johnson Law Group, represents individuals or companies with cases involving patent infringement. Find more information at: http://www.toppatentinfringementlawyers.com or call 1-888-311-5522
Knowing and Understanding Copyrights
Copyright infringement and patent infringement are not quite the same thing, although they are based on the same principle, don’t steal what isn’t yours. Copyright infringement refers to not stealing someone else artistic or intellectual property, such as writings or music while patent infringement refers to refraining from stealing an actual product that doesn’t belong to you.
The U.S. Copyright Office is responsible for holding onto the records of everything that has been copyrighted to help ensure that an individual’s artistic or intellectual property remains their own. However, it is not legally necessary to register a copyrighted material with the office.
It is sufficient to place the copyright icon in front of a copyright statement and is adequate protection for copyright laws. However, it is still more secure to register copyrighted material with the U.S. Copyright Office.
Copyright infringement is the theft of written, artistic, or intellectually produced material. Copyright infringement differs from patent infringement only in the actual material, which can make determining copyright infringement and patent infringement easier to detect.
In business, it is not so unheard of for advertisement media to be copied, thus becoming a copyright infringement. However, there is a difference between stealing the advertising media which creates the copyright infringement and stealing the icon or symbol used to create consumer recognition which is then a trademark violation.
Patented material, such as the product, is the only avenue which a patent infringement can occur. Why is this important? Because from conception to marketing, to advertising, all the way down to the jingle used in the television or radio campaign, stealing any part of the product, the advertising, the logo, the writing, the product enhancement, or any other related idea as it applies to any particular patented or copyrighted material can mean the end of a company.
These various rules can become confusing and even a little hard to wade through when there are numerous people working on any given project. Thus, enlisting the help of a Copyright attorney may be the only way to make sure all of the potential bases are covered.
A copyright attorney can be influential in preventing copyright infringement via advertisement or other written avenue, such as products that are written materials.
Bearing in mind that all printed materials are typically copyrighted, even if they have failed to register with the copyright office, a copyright attorney can still effectively guide a copy writer from accidentally becoming guilty of copyright infringement.
In most cases, any large company or media of copyrighted materials that are likely to be used beyond basic small press use will be registered with the copyright office, as registering with the U.S.
Copyright Office is a failsafe against copyright infringement. Thus, if a small time writer claims against a big company an explicit use of copyrighted material, but the large company registered with the Office, the small time writer can hold no claim even if they copyrighted their own material, simply because the large company registered with the Office.
While a copyright attorney is likely required to determine the exact definition of the laws as they apply to any given case, the likelihood of being held accountable for a copyright infringement that was not registered with the U.S. Copyright Office, and they granted a copyright, there really is no case, regardless of how talented the copyright attorney may be.
The bottom line is still pretty basic, despite the variation in copyright infringement and patent infringement. Hiring a patent or otherwise known as copyright attorney from the beginning of any substantial project is the best protection against being accused of any type of copyright infringement.
Registering a copyright with the copyright office protects the copyrighted material against theft. All of these simple and basic steps should be taken by any company who intends to market a product, whether they anticipate being a small company of local distribution or a large company with global potential.
By registering copyrighted material with them and by hiring a copyright attorney to oversee the basic laws are covered, any company with a marketing plan will know they are protected under copyright infringement laws as well as patent infringement laws.
Without the assistance of a copyright attorney or patent attorney, a business is playing with the potential of an accidental copyright infringement or patent infringement. It is much safer to cover all the bases and protect the company and the brainchild behind the fabulous ideas that can launch a company into the land of happy returns.
Nick Johnson represents individuals or companies with cases involving patent infringement. Find more information at http://www.toppatentinfringementattorneys.com or http://www.toppatentinfringementlawyers.com . Call 1-888-311-5522 to receive a free case evaluation.
Comparison Between Trade Secrets, Patents, and Trademarks
It typically requires a patent attorney to define all the nuances between trade secrets, patents, and trademarks, however a few basics don’t require a patent attorney for a generic understanding.
Patent infringement is considered an infringement on a product, or a product enhancement that is patented to an existing inventor or company. For a period nearing twenty years, an inventor or company can hold exclusive rights to a patent, and anyone who markets or presents a product that can only reasonably used for the same purpose is guilty of patent infringement.
A trade secret is typically regarded as a company secret that makes the product different from any other, often this refers to an ingredient such as what makes Corn Pops taste like Corn Pops instead of Corn Crunchies.
A patent attorney may be called in to draw up contracts with employees to keep trade secrets safe, as well as prosecute any trade secret infringements once an employee has left a company. It is illegal for an employee or anyone else privy to trade secrets to open up their own company using the trade secrets they learned while working for another company.
A trademark is typically an emblem, logo design, or other distinguishable characteristic that is easily recognizable as a company’s trademark. A trademark can be the way a name is or brand id displayed, like Coca Cola’s emblem placed up the can or across the bottle.
Trade secrets, trademarks, and patents can all be subject to patent infringement laws, and while these laws are typically complicated enough to require a patent attorney to interpret them, the basis of these laws simply means that nobody is permitted to copy these things without permission.
When trade secrets or trademarks are copied, a patent attorney is usually contacted to assist the defrauded company in determining and prosecuting the offender, as the selling or theft of trade secrets or the copying of trademarks can sufficiently hurt the established company’s business.
Many companies rely on their trade secrets and trademarks to establish something special in the marketplace, and being defrauded means that the consumer is now likely to interpret the trademark or purchase the other brand, believing it is the same product.
When this is not true, the consumer may lose confidence in the defrauded company when the product is not the same as expected. The defrauded company has no way of explaining to the consumer that this product was not theirs without retaining a patent attorney to file a patent infringement lawsuit based on either the theft or sale of trade secrets, or the copying of a trademark.
Once a patent attorney is able to bring the case to court and expose the damage done, the consumer by then has already found either another product or may be leery of wasting money on a product that turns out to be less or even just different than what they expected.
A patent attorney can often be brought on board a project in order to help prevent the infringement of trade secrets and trademarks, and of course patents. This is routinely done in the development stage in order to prevent the company from wasting money and energy on a product or product enhancement that is already covered and protected under patent infringement laws, which includes trade secrets and trademarks.
Patent infringement covers all aspects of business practices that include things such as trademarks and trade secrets. Patent attorneys are able to keep up on the changing laws, which is often invaluable in the development of a new product.
No company wants to spend man hours and money in the development of a product or product enhancement that is like to find them on the receiving end of a patent attorney’s line of questioning. Considering the ample awards that are handed out for patent infringements, it makes financial sense to bring a patent attorney on board to justify the product development.
Naturally, patent infringement is taken very seriously in business law, and the penalties for either a patent infringement, trade secret violation, or a trademark infringement are quite severe. This is just one motivating factor in seeking assistance from a patent attorney before marketing a new product or product enhancement.
In today’s business world, an ounce of prevention is worth about 2.3 million dollars worth of cure. The vast majority of companies simply skip the guess work and retain a patent attorney from the start, and by doing so, thwart their chances of accidentally being guilty of patent infringement, trademark violations, or trade secret violations.
Nick Johnson represents individuals or companies with cases involving patent infringement. Find more information at http://www.toppatentinfringementattorneys.com or http://www.toppatentinfringementlawyers.com . Call 1-888-311-5522 to receive a free case evaluation.