Congress calls a time-out on Internet taxesBy Miriam V. HallbauerFebruary 1999The Internet is a booming marketplace. Internet sales, already reaching billions of dollars annually, likely will reach the hundreds of billions in the next decade.
The hows and whys of Web site auditsBy Lynn E. Rzonca & Patricia M. DeSimoneMay 1999By now your company's Web site is up and running. Monthly "hit" reports show that more and more "visitors" (read: potential clients) are accessing your site.
Intellectual improbabilitiesBy Daniel KeganNovember 1999DOJ antitrust guidelines for competitor collaboration. The Justice Department and the Federal Trade Commission October 1, 1999 released and sought comment on proposed guidelines for lawful and illegal collaboration among competitors.
Intellectual improbabilities™By Daniel KeganMay 1999Popular patents. The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office issued a record 151,024 patents in 1998, up 33% from 113,720 in 1997. For the sixth year in a row, IBM was the leading patentee, with 2,657 issued patents, up 54% from 1997.
IP Q&ANovember 1999John Augustyn offers these questions to sharpen our patent analyses. We welcome your suggestions of interesting intellectual property questions--with your suggested answers, for publication in following issues.
Native American tribe insignia under studyJune 1999Federal law requires the Patent and Trademark Office to study a variety of issues surrounding trademark protection for official insignia of federally and state recognized Native American tribes.
The “Online Copyright Infringement Liability Limitation Act”By David LoundyFebruary 1999An important piece of legislation was signed by President Clinton in October, the "Online Copyright Infringement Liability Limitation Act," passed as part of the "Digital Millennium Copyright Act" (Public Law 105-304), that affects Internet service providers and copyright holders that are infringed online.
Recent changes to trademark opposition and cancellation practiceBy Joseph T. NaborFebruary 1999The Patent and Trademark Office has recently issued its amendment to the Rules of Practice in inter partes proceedings before the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board.
Safe IPBy Daniel KeganFebruary 1999Filing a document. To an intellectual property attorney, "filing a document" generally means ensuring the document is accepted by the proper government office, often the United States Patent and Trademark Office, the U.S. Copyright Office, or a foreign government office.
Safe IP: Corporate name and trademark differBy Daniel KeganMay 1999Don't be confused between corporate names and trademarks. Incorporation, partnership, and other business and nonprofit organization status is governed by state law.
Safe IP: derivative infringementBy Daniel KeganNovember 1999Obtaining a patent, copyright, or trademark is no guarantee that you do not infringe. Your patented invention may be an improvement on an earlier patented invention, and read on the earlier patent's claims
Safe IP: Signing applicationsBy Daniel KeganJune 1999Priority is often paramount in deciding trademark rights and disputes.
Selected U.S. domain name case decisionsBy David LoundyMay 1999The first Internet domain name case decision was released in 1994, the second domain name case decision was a year later.
States gain IP immunityBy Daniel KeganJune 1999A narrow but consistent 5-4 majority of the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that state sovereignty prevents suing a state for patent infringement or for unfair competition damages.