Podcast

Science Fiction Prior Art – Ep. 29 [Podcast]

Science Fiction Prior Art – Ep. 29 [Podcast]

In this week’s episode of Stuff You Should Know About IP, Thomas Colson and Raymond Guarnieri examine whether a science fiction work can be used as prior art to block a patent. In order to obtain patent protection, an invention must be novel and non-obvious. If a science fiction work shows that an invention is either obvious or not new, then the science fiction work can prevent the invention from being patented, but only if the work describes the invention in sufficient detail. For example, in 1968, Charles Hall’s utility patent application for a water-bed was rejected because Robert Heinlein had thoroughly described a water-bed in three science fiction works: Beyond this Horizon in 1942, Double Star in 1956, and Stranger in a Strange Land in 1961. But Star Trek would not block a patent for a transporter beam, and Star Wars would not block a patent for a light saber, because neither Star Trek nor Star Wars describes how either invention actually works. Litigants can also cite science fiction in cases involving infringement of design patents. In 2011, when Apple sued Samsung for design patent infringement, Samsung argued that Arthur C. Clarke’s 2001: A Space Odyssey was relevant prior art. Even The Sunken Yacht, a Donald Duck cartoon by Carl Banks, was used as prior art to block a patent. Karl Kroyer sought a patent for his method of raising a sunken ship by using a tube to fill it with ping pong balls, but his application was rejected because Donald Duck did it first.

The Top 20 Most Incredible, Amazing, WOW – False Advertising Claims! – Ep. 28 [Podcast]

The Top 20 Most Incredible, Amazing, WOW – False Advertising Claims! – Ep. 28 [Podcast]

In this week’s episode of Stuff You Should Know About IP, Thomas Colson and Raymond Guarnieri discuss the differences between false advertising and puffery. Distinguishing between false advertising and puffery often depends on how specific a factual claim is. Under the US Lanham Act, deceptive trademarks, which are false advertising, are prohibited. And the US Patent and Trademark Office will reject marks for being deceptive. Some of the most mind-blowing, amazing false advertising cases are as follows:

The Crystal Ball of Data Analytics – Ep. 27 [Podcast]

The Crystal Ball of Data Analytics – Ep. 27 [Podcast]

In this week’s episode of Stuff You Should Know About IP, Thomas Colson and Raymond Guarnieri welcome special guest Tony Trippe to discuss patent data. Patent data can reveal trends and indicate where a field is headed. The best way for a smaller company, like Jawbone or Fitbit, to compete with a larger company, like Apple or Nike, is to have a great patent portfolio. If a smaller company doesn’t have a great portfolio of its own, it can be beneficial to acquire another company’s patents. The earlier the priority date of a patent application, the better; nothing published after that date can be used to invalidate the patent. Each feature of a product can be covered by its own patent. A savvy investor can analyze public information in patent portfolios and then use that information to guide investments. Companies with well-developed patent portfolios tend to be traded at higher values. A company can use patent information to find new technologies and for competitive intelligence. Patent information can also be used to predict new products that will be released. Patent applications are published eighteen months after having been filed. Tony Trippe predicts that Northrop Grumman, a company in the quantum computing field, might form a major partnership with an established player in the field. In just a few hours, a quantum computer can solve an equation that a huge network of supercomputers would need hundreds of years to solve. Quantum computers present cybersecurity concerns, and they also have applications for chemistry, molecular modeling, other multiple body problems, and encryption.

Marvel VS DC: Trademark Treaty Saga – Ep. 26 [Podcast]

Marvel VS DC: Trademark Treaty Saga – Ep. 26 [Podcast]

In this week’s episode of Stuff You Should Know About IP, Thomas Colson and Raymond Guarnieri discuss a trademark for the word “superhero.” In 1979, DC Comics and Marvel trademarked “superhero” in connection with comic books. Both companies had been independently using that term for decades, so if either company – on its own – had tried to trademark “superhero,” the other company could have successfully opposed it. A trademark is something – including a word, a graphic, a logo, a color scheme, a scent, or a shape – that designates the origin of a product or service. Different categories of trademarks have different strengths, and they include, in decreasing order of strength: fanciful marks, arbitrary marks, and suggestive marks. Typically, a mark that is merely descriptive is ineligible for trademark protection, though an exception exists for a descriptive mark that has acquired secondary meaning. If a trademark becomes generic, it can become unenforceable. The trademark for “superhero” is unusual for two reasons: 1) two companies hold the mark, so the mark does not necessarily designate the actual source of a product; and 2) the term has been genericized. During a legal action, a large company that can afford prolonged, expensive litigation has an advantage over a less affluent company.

Do You Roku? Watch This – Ep. 25 [Podcast]

Do You Roku? Watch This – Ep. 25 [Podcast]

In this week’s episode of Stuff You Should Know About IP, Thomas Colson and Raymond Guarnieri discuss a patent infringement lawsuit that MV3 Partners brought against Roku. The case was filed in the Western District of Texas, and Roku claimed that there was no infringement. Judge Alan Albright, who presided over the case, is a former patent litigator. A candy store named Hey Sugar sits across from the Waco courthouse, and after Judge Albright was appointed in 2018, he went on a speaking tour entitled Why You Should File Your Next Patent Case Across From Hey Sugar to encourage would-be litigants to file in his district. At the time of the case, MV3 Partners also had pending litigation against companies like Best Buy, Kohl’s, Google, Microsoft, Sony, Samsung, LG, Apple, Philips, and Amazon. Judge Albright moved the trial along rapidly: the litigants were arguing in court within two years, and a panel of seven jurors heard the case over five days. There is no legal requirement that jurors in a patent infringement case be technically-savvy. This jury ruled that Roku did not infringe the patent rights of MV3 Partners. A litigator often wants to provide a jury with the simplest instructions possible.

CRISPR and the Transatlantic Race to the Patent Office – Ep. 24 [Podcast]

CRISPR and the Transatlantic Race to the Patent Office – Ep. 24 [Podcast]

In this week’s episode of Stuff You Should Know About IP, Thomas Colson and Raymond Guarnieri welcome special guest Patrick von Hinnegan to discuss a CRISPR technology patent case that involves happenings in the United States and in Europe. Most nations in the world, including the US, operate under a first-to-file patent regime, which means that patent rights are awarded to the first party to file a patent application for a new technology, even if that party was not the first to invent the technology. In the US, an inventor can file a provisional patent application – which isn’t a real patent application, but is instead more of a placeholder for one – to obtain an earlier priority date, which is valuable for obtaining patent protection because nothing published after that date can be used to reject or invalidate a patent.

Cannabis and Innovation – Potent Patents! – Ep. 23 [Podcast]

Cannabis and Innovation – Potent Patents! – Ep. 23 [Podcast]

In this week’s episode of Stuff You Should Know About IP, Thomas Colson and Raymond Guarnieri welcome special guest Kevin Fortin, a patent attorney who has been in the cannabis industry for more than ten years, to discuss intellectual property issues relating to cannabis. Many states have legalized marijuana, but it is still prohibited at the federal level. The United States Patent and Trademark Office can grant a patent for a product that the Food and Drug Administration has not yet approved. Federal trademark protection is only possible in connection with a product that is sold in interstate commerce, or when there is a bona fide intention to sell it in interstate commerce. Though it can be difficult to get a federal trademark for certain cannabis products, it can be possible to obtain common law trademark rights within a state or to register the trademark with a state. Present-day patent law is derived from the mining industry’s concept of a land patent. Cannabis is a botanical term that includes marijuana and hemp, the latter of which is legal at the federal level. Hemp contains less than 0.3% THC; marijuana has more than 0.3% THC, and it can contain up to between 20% and 30% THC in its buds. Hemp can be used to make products such as fabric, rope, graphene, hempcrete, and animal bedding. A plant patent can be obtained for an engineered hemp plant. A utility patent can be obtained for applications of hemp and for hemp processing methods.

Can You Own The Law? Georgia v. Public.Resource.Org- Ep. 22 [Podcast]

Can You Own The Law? Georgia v. Public.Resource.Org- Ep. 22 [Podcast]

In this episode of Stuff You Should Know About IP, Thomas Colson and Raymond Guarnieri discuss a copyright infringement case between Public.Resource.Org (“PRO”) and the state of Georgia that was decided by the Supreme Court of the United States. An unofficial, unannotated version of the Code of Georgia is freely available, but citizens must pay to obtain the Official Code of Georgia Annotated (“OCGA”). Georgia’s Code Revision Commission contracted LexisNexis to annotate its state code with information that can make it easier for citizens to understand the law, such as summaries, references to caselaw, or references to relevant articles. Georgia sued PRO for copyright infringement after PRO’s Carl Malamud published the OCGA, the official version that contained annotations from LexisNexis, on the PRO website; Malamud also copied the OCGA onto a thumb drive, and he sent it to several members of the Georgia legislature. Georgia won in the federal district court, but PRO appealed that decision, and the Eleventh Circuit sided with PRO. The case eventually went before the Supreme Court of the United States, which sided with PRO. Under the Government Edicts Doctrine, when legislators or judges are empowered to speak with the force of law, any works they produce in furtherance of their legislative or judicial duties are not copyrightable, because they cannot be authors in the copyright sense. The Supreme Court was divided 5-4, with the majority composed of Chief Justice Roberts and Justices Sotomayor, Kagan, Gorsuch, and Kavanaugh; meanwhile, Justices Thomas, Alito, Breyer, and Ginsburg dissented. In the Court’s Opinion, Chief Justice Roberts noted the importance of knowing that certain laws that still appear in the Code of Georgia have been declared unconstitutional by courts, and this would only be known from the annotated version.

Cisco Must Pay Two BILLION for Patent Infringement – Ep. 21 [Podcast]

Cisco Must Pay Two BILLION for Patent Infringement – Ep. 21 [Podcast]

In this episode of Stuff You Should Know About IP, Thomas Colson and Raymond Guarnieri discuss a patent infringement case between Centripetal Networks, Inc. and Cisco. Centripetal was awarded $1.9 billion, plus royalty payments of 10% for the first three years and 5% for the next three years, potentially bringing the total verdict to somewhere between $2.5 billion and $3.5 billion. This lawsuit involved five patents, and four of them were found to have been literally infringed by Cisco. The litigation spanned three years.

Is Reverse Engineering Skittles Trade Secret Theft or Not? – Ep. 20[Podcast]

Is Reverse Engineering Skittles Trade Secret Theft or Not? – Ep. 20[Podcast]

In this episode of Stuff You Should Know About IP, Thomas Colson and Raymond Guarnieri welcome special guest Candice Renaldo to discuss the reverse-engineering of trade secrets. The show Gourmet Makes with Claire Saffitz regularly reverse-engineers well-known candies, such as Skittles, Reese’s peanut butter cups, and Jelly Belly jelly beans. In one episode of Gourmet Makes, Saffitz deconstructed a Skittle and attempted to recreate it using the published ingredient list. Saffitz would have been prohibited from doing this if Skittles were protected by a patent, because a patent prohibits the making, using, selling, or offering for sale of a patented product. However, if Skittles had patent protection, she would not have had to reverse-engineer them to learn how they were made, because a patent teaches anyone reasonably skilled in the art how to make the patented product. In contrast, if Skittles are protected by a trade secret, the company that owns the secret would not tell Saffitz how to make the Skittles, but she would be allowed to make them if she were able to reverse-engineer the candy. Trade secrets are fragile, and they can be lost to reverse-engineering. Stealing a trade secret is known as misappropriation, however, and that is prohibited. Even if Saffitz succeeded at reverse-engineering the Skittles, she could not sell them under the Skittles name because that name is trademarked. Also, even if she were to reverse-engineer the Skittles, she could not patent them because she did not invent them. However, she might be able to patent a new formula for a healthier version of the candy. An inventor needs to carefully consider whether to protect an invention with a patent or as a trade secret. A company can produce a product that is relatively inexpensive to make but was very expensive to develop.