| Intellectual Property Law | Patent, Trademark, Copyright and Unfair Competition |
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About this office:
Flachsbart & Greenspoon, LLC prosecutes and defends intellectual property matters throughout the United States. It also represents parties to license negotiations. Its clients range from individual inventors to multibillion dollar companies.
Statement of Practice Summary:
Patent Litigation; Intellectual Property; Intellectual Property Litigation; Technology Law; Copyrights; Copyright Infringement; Copyright Licensing; Copyright Litigation; Copyright Protection; Internet Copyright Law; Electrical Intellectual Property; Electronic Intellectual Property; Industrial Property; Industrial Property Rights; Intellectual Property Arbitration; Intellectual Property Enforcement; Intellectual Property Infringement; Intellectual Property Licensing; Intellectual Property Rights; International Licensing; Medical Intellectual Property; Proprietary Rights; Civil Appeals; US Supreme Court Litigation; Patent Licensing; Patent Infringement; Patent Portfolio Management; Business Method Patents; Computer and Software Patents; Computer Architecture Patents; Design Patents; Electrical Patents; Electro-Mechanical Patents; Electronic Patents; Internet Patents; Mechanical Patents; Medical Patents; Trademarks; Lanham Act; Service Marks; Trade Dress; Trade Names; Trademark Licensing; Trademark Infringement; Trademark Arbitration; Trademark Litigation; Trademark Protection; Trade Secrets; Theft of Trade Secrets; Trade Secret Misappropriation; Electrical Patent Prosecution; International Patent Prosecution; Mechanical Patent Prosecution; Patent Applications; Patent Prosecution; Patent Protection.
Documents by Lawyers at this office | |
Don't Assume a Can Opener: Confronting Patent Economic Theory with Licensing and Enforcement RealityCatherine Cottle,Robert P. Greenspoon, June 13, 2011, previously published by Columbia Science and Technology Law Review on Spring/Summer 2011
Many different kinds of entities use the United States patent system, from individual inventors, to start-ups, to patent assertion entities, to massive operating companies. Meanwhile, “reward theory,” “prospect theory,” and “commercialization theory” are three...