IP Law Summit – September 13-15, 2012

The National Law Review is pleased to bring you information about the upcoming IP Law Summit:

The IP Law Summit will highlight the current challenges and opportunities through visionary conference sessions and keynote presentations delivered by your most esteemed peers and thought leaders from Americas leading corporations. The one-on-one meetings with leading service providers will offer vast expertise in the area of intellectual property law. All this, seamlessly integrated with informal networking opportunities over three days, will provide a unique interactive forum. Do not miss this opportunity to network, establish new connections, exchange ideas and gain knowledge.

IP Law Summit – September 13-15, 2012

The National Law Review is pleased to bring you information about the upcoming IP Law Summit:

The IP Law Summit will highlight the current challenges and opportunities through visionary conference sessions and keynote presentations delivered by your most esteemed peers and thought leaders from Americas leading corporations. The one-on-one meetings with leading service providers will offer vast expertise in the area of intellectual property law. All this, seamlessly integrated with informal networking opportunities over three days, will provide a unique interactive forum. Do not miss this opportunity to network, establish new connections, exchange ideas and gain knowledge.

IP Law Summit – September 13-15, 2012

The National Law Review is pleased to bring you information about the upcoming IP Law Summit:

 

The IP Law Summit will highlight the current challenges and opportunities through visionary conference sessions and keynote presentations delivered by your most esteemed peers and thought leaders from Americas leading corporations. The one-on-one meetings with leading service providers will offer vast expertise in the area of intellectual property law. All this, seamlessly integrated with informal networking opportunities over three days, will provide a unique interactive forum. Do not miss this opportunity to network, establish new connections, exchange ideas and gain knowledge.

Recent NLRB Memo Identifies “Hot Topic” Cases for 2012

Recently an article appeared in the National Law Review by Peter T. Tschanz of Barnes & Thornburg LLP regarding Hot Topic cases:

 

The NLRB recently circulated a memorandum asking all Regional Directors, Officers-in-Charge and Residential Officers to begin tracking what the Agency has defined as “Hot Topic” Cases.  The categories include:

– Cessation of Dues Check-Off;

– Information Requests for Financial Records;

– Post Arbitration Deferral;

– Social Media; and

– Use of Employer e-Mail.

The memorandum provides insight into the types of issues likely to grab the NLRB’s attention in 2012.  The memorandum can be accessed here.

Surprise! You Just Starred In Our Movie

Recently posted in the National Law Review an article by Matthew J. Kreutzer of Armstrong Teasdale regarding a lawsuit by actor Jesse Eisenberg’s small role in a movie although the DVD cover has his face prominently featured:

One of my all-time favorite comedies is the movie Bowfinger, in which a down-and-out movie producer named Bobby Bowfinger (played by Steve Martin) makes a movie starring a well-known A-list actor named Kit Ramsey (played by Eddie Murphy) without Ramsey’s knowing participation.  Some of the best scenes in the movie occur when Bowfinger and his “crew” create situations around the increasingly-unhinged Ramsey, secretly filming his hilarious reactions to the ridiculous set-ups.  Apparently, life has (sort of) imitated art: in a recently-filed $3 million lawsuit, actor Jesse Eisenberg (star of The Social Network and Zombieland) claims that he was exploited in a similar manner by the producers of the direct-to-DVD movie, Camp Hell.

According to the lawsuit, in 2007 Eisenberg agreed to appear in Camp Hell as a favor to his friends.  He was on set for only one day of filming, and logged only a few minutes of total screen time.  Because he was only minimally involved in the movie, he was surprised to see that his face was prominently featured on the cover of the DVD, implying that he starred in the film.  His lawsuit asserts various California law causes of action, including claims for unfair business practices and publicity rights.  But, according to Hollywood law blogger Eriq Gardner, the lawsuit reads more like “a consumer class action, saying that the producers are ‘continuing to perpetrate a fraud on the public.’”

Camp-Hell-Poster
Overselling a famous actor’s involvement in a film is a common practice in the industry, although the Camp Hell example may be one of the worst offenders.  But, while there are agreements and rules among various creative unions in Hollywood relating to attribution and credit, there apparently aren’t any that specifically state the number of minutes of screen time that are necessary in a movie before an actor can be marketed as a film’s “star.”

Fortunately, the franchising world has more explicit rules regarding how a franchise can be marketed and sold to potential franchisees.  Generally, the FTC Franchise Rule and a number of state laws require a franchise company to provide to a prospect certain types of disclosures regarding the business being marketed.  Through a legally compliant Franchise Disclosure Document, a possible franchise buyer will obtain a great deal of information about the franchise being sold, which information should support the marketing claims the franchisor makes generally.  Further, several states have specific restrictions on the types of statements that franchisors can make in advertising pieces, which restrictions are further designed to protect against misinformation to franchise buyers.  These laws work together to attempt to ensure that members of the public are not lured into buying a franchise based on puffery or overblown claims of success.

It will be interesting to see how the Court handles Mr. Eisenberg’s lawsuit.  I wonder if the movie industry will, in the face of the Camp Hell situation, consider adopting more stringent rules about marketing actors?

I would love to hear from you — have you ever watched a movie based on the claim that a movie was “starring” a certain actor, only to find out that the actor’s involvement was minimal?

© Copyright 2011 Armstrong Teasdale LLP. All rights reserved

Intervening Rights Can Apply to an Original Claim Based on Arguments Made During Reexamination

Recently posted in the National Law Review an article by Cynthia Chen, Ph.D. of McDermott Will & Emery  regarding the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit’s decision to grant injunction and reasonable royalty damages for patent infringement:

 

In reversing and vacating a district court’s decision to grant injunction and reasonable royalty damages for patent infringement, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit held that intervening rights can apply to an original claim based on arguments made by the patentee during reexamination.   Marine Polymer Technologies, Inc. v. HemCon, Inc., Case No. 10-1548 (Fed. Cir., Sept. 26, 2011) (Dyk, J.) (Lourie, J., dissenting).  Intervening rights typically occur where the scope of coverage of a patent changes during reexamination.

Marine Polymer sued HemCon for infringing its patent claiming a biocompatible polymer.   In the ensuing litigation, the district court construed the term “biocompatible” as meaning polymers “with no detectable biological reactivity as determined by biocompatibility tests.”  Meanwhile, in the parallel reexamination proceeding, the examiner construed the term “biocompatible” as meaning polymers with “little or no detectable reactivity” reasoning that certain dependent claims recited a biocompatibility test score that is greater than zero.  Marine Polymer urged the examiner to adopt the district court’s claim construction and canceled all dependent claims reciting a biocompatibility test score greater than zero.  In view of the cancellation of those dependent claims, the examiner adopted the district court’s claim construction, and the remaining claims were issued.

In this appeal from the district court (where HemCon was subjected to a $29 million dollar damages award against it), HemCon argued that it was entitled to intervening rights because Marine Polymer changed the scope of the claims of the asserted patent during reexamination.  Marine Polymer, contended that intervening rights cannot apply because the actual language of the asserted claims was not amended during reexamination.

The Federal Circuit agreed with HemCon and held that Marine Polymer indeed narrowed the scope of the claims by “argument rather than changing the language of the claims to preserve otherwise invalid claims.”   Noting that intervening rights are available if the original claims have been “substantively changed,” the Court emphasized that “in determining whether substantive changes have been made, we must discern whether the scope of the claims [has changed], not merely whether different words are used.”  In particular, those dependent claims that were canceled during reexamination indicated that “the term ‘biocompatible’ must include slight or mild biological reactivity.”  As such, the district court’s claim construction, which required that the polymer show “no detectable biological reactivity,” imposed a new claim limitation that narrowed the scope of the claims. Therefore, intervening rights did apply in this case, as “argument to PTO on reexamination constituted disavowal of claim scope even though ‘no amendments were made.’”

Judge Lourie dissented and argued that the majority went beyond the statutory rules for intervening rights under 35 U.S.C. §§ 307(b) and 316(b).   Judge Lourie believes that, according to the language of the statute, intervening rights should only apply to “amended or new claims.”

Practice Note:   Post-grant proceedings could be a pitfall for patentees seeking to enforce their patents.  A patentee should consider whether it would be better off filing a continuing application before grant of the original patent to leave a vehicle to present new or amended claims.

© 2011 McDermott Will & Emery

Protecting Your Brand in the New .XXX Top-Level Domain

Recently posted in the National Law Review an article written by atttorneys  Lee J. EulgenAntony J. McShane and Katherine Dennis Nye of Neal, Gerber & Eisenberg LLP regarding  ICANN’s established procedures for the use of .XXX as a new top-level domain :

 

The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) recently established procedures for the use of .XXX as a new top-level domain (TLD) like .COM, .NET, and .ORG. However, unlike those other TLDs, .XXX has been designed to clearly signal adult content on the Internet. Given the connection between .XXX and adult content, many brand owners outside the adult industry have reasonable concerns about protecting their name and brand from use with the .XXX TLD.

In part to allay some of these fears, the company behind .XXX, ICM Registry, has created a sunrise period, which has just opened, to help protect brand owners from the use of their trademarks with the .XXX TLD. Between Sept. 7 and Oct. 28, 2011, trademark owners that are not in the adult industry can “reserve” their trademark for a one-time fee of approximately $250. For example, if the fictional ABC Company owns a U.S. federal trademark registration covering the mark ABC, it could reserve www.abc.xxx so that no one else can register or use that domain name for at least the next 10 years.

One important exception to the reservation process is that if two trademark owners both own the same mark, the one that wants to actually register and use the .XXX domain will prevail over the one that simply wants to reserve the same domain. For example, assume the fictional Acme Adult Magazine and Acme Family Restaurant both own U.S. federal trademark registrations for the mark ACME. If the restaurant applies to reserve www.acme.xxx and the magazine applies to register the same domain, ICM Registry will permit the magazine to register and use the domain, and the restaurant will lose its reservation fee.

Failure to reserve important trademarks during this sunrise period could have serious consequences. Most fundamentally, failure to reserve .XXX domain names corresponding to your trademarks could of course lead to undesirable usage of your marks in connection with domain names corresponding to adult web sites. Although brand owners may be able to recover .XXX domain names from others who register and use those domains in bad faith – just as brand owners can in domain name disputes over .COM or .ORG domains – the damage to a brand may be greater from misuse of a trademark in connection with the .XXX TLD by an adult content site than from misuse with another TLD. Furthermore, regardless of what TLD is at issue, the process of forcibly obtaining a domain name through legal means can be expensive. Thus, trademark owners should consider carefully whether reserving their marks during the .XXX sunrise period makes sense for their brands. 

© 2011 Neal, Gerber & Eisenberg LLP.

The U.S. Has a New Patent Law

Posted in the National Law Review on October 27, 2011 an article regarding the Patent Reform Act of 2011 by Taylor P. Evans of Andrews Kurth LLP:

President Obama signed the Patent Reform Act of 2011 into law on September 16, 2011. Below is a summary of selected provisions of the Act.

First to File

Effective March 2013, the U.S. patent system will change from a first-to-invent to a first-to-file system. This means that if two people make the same invention and there has been no public disclosure of the invention, and both describe and claim that invention in separate patent applications, the inventor that filed his patent application first gets the patent. Thus, filing early will be more critical than ever before. Companies should consider filing a provisional application for an invention as early as possible, possibly followed by additional provisional applications as the technology of an invention develops, with a non-provisional application within a year of the first provisional application. The first-to-file provision will have no effect on existing patents or applications filed before March 2013.

Post-Grant Challenges

Effective September 2012, third parties will be able to challenge the validity of patents within nine months of issuance in the Patent Office in a Post-Grant Opposition Review proceeding. Any basis for a validity challenge will be entertained, including questions of novelty and obviousness, as well as challenges based on non-patentable subject matter or an improper written description or other formalities. After nine months, third parties may challenge patents through Inter Partes Review, which will replace existing Inter Partes Reexamination proceedings. In an Inter Partes Review, invalidity challenges must be based only on prior patents and printed publications.

In view of these changes, companies planning to initiate Inter Partes Reexamination proceedings should do so prior to September 2012. In addition, companies should arrange a monitoring program to identify patents that relate to the company’s product line for possible challenge in a Post-Grant Opposition Review proceeding upon issuance. Similarly, patentees should be aware that a significant challenge against their patents in the patent office may develop, and they should be prepared to defend against challenges from competitors when their own patents issue.

False Marking

The new Act severely limits false marking lawsuits. Only the federal government and direct competitors that have been damaged can sue for false marking. Furthermore, non-government litigants will no longer be able to collect five hundred dollars in damages per item. In addition, it is no longer actionable not to remove expired patent numbers from products. The new law also provides for “virtual marking,” by which a company marks its product with “Patent” or “Pat.,” followed by a web address. The corresponding website displays the patent marking information and must be available to the public at no charge. These changes apply retroactively to existing cases.

Disjoinder

The new law bars plaintiffs from suing multiple defendants in the same suit if the only thing that the defendants have in common is that they are alleged to infringe the same patent(s). Courts will also be barred from consolidating cases involving different defendants according to the same criteria, except that unrelated parties may still be joined for purposes of discovery. This provision applies to all suits filed on or after September 16, 2011.

Supplemental Examination

Supplemental examination is a new post-grant procedure that will allow a patentee to cure possible inequitable conduct by presenting previously withheld information to the Patent Office after issuance of a patent. After the previously withheld information is presented, and if the claims are allowed again, that information cannot be used in later court proceedings. Supplemental examination proceedings cannot be commenced or continue once an infringement action has been brought.

Assignee Filing

Under the new Act, a company can file a patent application on behalf of an inventor where the inventor is under obligation to assign its rights to the company and refuses to sign the oath or declaration. This provision will become effective in September 2012.

Fees

Effective September 26, 2011, all Patent Office fees will be subject to a 15% surcharge.

Other Changes

There are numerous other changes to the patent system under the Patent Reform Act of 2011, including, for example, elimination of the “best mode” requirement, and changes unique to specific types of inventions, such as business methods or computers. For additional information or to discuss all the new changes in more detail, please call us.

© 2011 Andrews Kurth LLP

The Top Five Intellectual Property Traps in M&A Transactions

Recently posted in the National Law Review an article by Carey C. Jordan of McDermott Will & Emery  regarding intellectual rights in M&A transactions:  

 

In M&A transactions, many lawyers assume that intellectual property (IP) rights will automatically transfer with the purchase and that IP issues can be cured by general representations and warranties. While getting strong representations and warranties covering intellectual property is useful, relying on a breach of representations and warranties as the only remedy to protect the covered IP can doom the deal to failure or lead to unexpected surprises after closing, including requiring significant changes to future business plans and opportunities. If the target’s IP rights are important to the ultimate deal, then those IP rights must be investigated thoroughly in the due diligence and fully understood.

A due diligence investigation into a company’s intellectual property assets is essentially a methodical audit which will cover at least the following main areas:

  • Patents
  • Know-how
  • Copyright
  • Trademarks
  • Infringements
  • Licenses and collaboration agreements

Failure to examine these during due diligence in a manner appropriate to the deal at hand can lead to reevaluation, repricing or structural changes of the transaction.

For example, Volkswagen outbid BMW in 1998 to buy Rolls Royce and Bentley and their British factory from Vickers PLC for $917 million. But an odd twist in the deal allowed the Rolls-Royce aerospace company to sell rights to the ROLLS-ROYCE trademark to BMW out from under Volkswagen for $78 million. Thus, after the deal closed, Volkswagen did not have the rights to use the ROLLS-ROYCE mark. Only after a separate deal was made with BMW to avoid litigation, did Volkswagen gain the ability to manufacture a trademarked ROLLS-ROYCE car.

Thus, IP due diligence in an M&A transaction should not be overlooked and should be undertaken early in the process. The following are five common IP issues that may impact M&A transactions.

1. Target Does Not Actually Have the Critical Patent Rights

A target company may not actually own the IP rights that it represents that it owns. This may be due to a failure to update the title through corporate name changes or lien releases, or a failure to ensure that employees have properly assigned their rights to IP assets developed with company resources to the target. This latter situation is particularly problematic. For example, under U.S. patent law, each joint inventor has the right to use and to license patented technology to a competitor without accounting to the other owner in the absence of an agreement to the contrary. As a result, a non-assigning employee can license a key competitor of the buyer (and even keep the royalties) without notifying the target. The problem can be more acute in the case of an independent contractor, who may not have an obligation to assign rights to the target. It is therefore important to review contractor agreements related to any IP relevant to the transaction to confirm that the agreements address ownership of any IP created by the contractor.

Trademarks must be evaluated in terms of their goods, services and countries of registration to confirm that they cover the buyer’s intended uses in intended markets. Certain countries recognize common law trademark rights, based on use of a mark, while other jurisdictions give priority to the first party to file a trademark application, regardless of use. Internet domain names are subject to fewer formalities, but must be investigated as well. Domain name registrations may expire and, if expired, the domain names can be bought by anyone. It is also important to confirm that important domain names are owned by an entity relevant to the transaction, as opposed to an information technology (IT) professional within the company, a licensee or another entity.

2. Prior Agreements Limit IP Rights

Sometimes, the target’s IP rights may be subject to prior agreements that restrict their use in other markets or fields of use. The target may have existing licenses or agreements with respect to some or all of its IP rights. For instance, the target may have granted a third party exclusive use in a key field of use, territory or patent, which may limited the buyer’s full and expected use of the IP rights.

For example, when the Clorox Company purchased the PINE-SOL business and trademark from American Cyanamid in 1990, Clorox planned to leverage the strength of the PINE-SOL mark into other products. Clorox purchased the PINE-SOL assets and mark subject to a prior 1987 agreement that Cyanamid had entered into with the owner of the LYSOL trademark to settle a trademark dispute years earlier. That prior agreement restricted Cyanamid (and subsequently Clorox) from expanding the use of the mark beyond the PINE-SOL pine cleaner. Clorox tried to void the terms of the settlement agreement through litigation, but was unsuccessful.

Licensors of intellectual property may argue that a merger in which a licensee does not “survive” as a separate corporate entity may void the license – even if the license agreement contained no prohibition against merger, acquisition or transfer. This argument is based on an arcane line of federal cases holding that patent licenses are not assignable unless expressly made so. More recently, some federal courts have extended this rule in ways that affect corporate mergers, and have found, in effect, that certain mergers can constitute transfers that void patent licenses. This is especially problematic in an acquisition of a licensee.

Additionally, in certain instances in which the U.S. government has provided funding to an entity (usually a nonprofit, university or small business), the U.S. government may retain certain rights to any relevant patents developed from that research, and any subsequent grants relating to those rights (e.g., a license or acquisition) will remain subject to the government’s retained rights. These government “march-in” include the right to license the invention to a third party, without the consent of the patent holder or original licensee, where it determines the invention is not being made available to the public on a reasonable basis.

3. Target is Subject to Pending/Threatened Infringement Claims

No buyer wants to buy an expensive IP-related lawsuit through an acquisition. Any potential litigation or enforcement risks must be assessed and independently analyzed, including evaluating potential indemnifications. Although others exist, two primary areas for inquiry in this context include potential patent infringement and copyright liabilities.

For potential patent liability issues, a purchaser does not want to spend a great deal of time and money to acquire rights that it will not be able to exploit because of third party’s potential infringement lawsuit. Potential litigation and enforcement risks may be identified through the target’s legal opinions, cease and desist letters, freedom to operate studies and similar materials, which should be requested and analyzed in the due diligence process.

As to open-source software, the GNU General Public License governs a large number of open-source products. Open-source code can only be tightly integrated into other open-source products, and a condition of using the code is that the user also publishes its modified version of the code to the public. The Free Software Foundation enforces the GNU General Public License. This can be problematic in an acquisition, especially when the software is a valuable piece of the assets being acquired. There have been instances where an acquiree has been sued by the Free Software Foundation after acquiring a company that had allegedly incorporate open-source code into its software. In at least one instance, the acquirer had to release the acquired software to the public as a result. Open-source liability can kill a deal and affect the value of a transaction. In the absence of insurance, some companies will accept a reduction in deal price.

4. Significant Barriers Exist to Exploitation of the Technology

With regard to patents and the ability to exploit the acquired patented technology, significant barriers may exist. Third parties may have blocking IP rights that prevent the buyer from exploiting the target’s IP or expanding the business as planned. Sometimes, this risk is not specifically known even to a target. Thus, the buyer’s freedom to operate often should be analyzed before completing the transaction, to make sure that the buyer will be able to use the assets purchased as intended in the conduct of the business operations, or as proposed to be used according to the buyer’s future plans. A freedom-to-operate analysis should be performed, which is an assessment of whether making, using sale, offering to sell or importation of a product in the U.S. will infringe any third-party patents.

If third party IP rights are identified that may block or limit the buyer’s use of particular IP rights, and a meaningful design-around is not possible, then it may be necessary to license or acquire ancillary rights to such third party blocking IP rights. Alternatively, the target could seek to invalidate the blocking IP at the United States Patent and Trademark Office (e.g., through a reexamination) or in a court. The inquiry is more complex when pending claims are published yet not issued, so the inquiry not only requires construction of the claims and infringement analysis, but also estimation of whether the published claim(s) will issue. Evolving application of infringement under the doctrine of equivalents and other changing legal standards through judicial decisions only adds to the complexity and cost of the analysis.

Of course, this still leaves unknown barriers to the exploitation of technology. Included in this category are issues such as unpublished patent rights that could block a buyer, misappropriation of technology, reverse engineering by competitors who have then patented improvements to a target’s trade secrets or even competitors who independently discover trade secrets and patent them, and the like. To the extent these can be explored, it is wise to do so. However, there are risks in any deal, and wise IP counsel can consider the impact of potential unknowns based on the industry and technology involved in the contemplated transaction.

5. Target’s IP Rights Are Encumbered by Liens

IP rights may also be encumbered by liens. To record and perfect a lien against both patents and trademarks in the United States, Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) filings need to be made. Although not legally required, most lenders also record the security agreement in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO). Under U.S. copyright law, however, only a lien recorded in the U.S. Copyright Office will perfect a security interest in copyrights. Due diligence should include reviewing reports from all of the applicable filing offices.

In sum, early and comprehensive IP due diligence in M&A transactions is important because it can lead to a reevaluation, repricing or restructuring of the proposed transaction.

© 2011 McDermott Will & Emery

Fifty Ways To Leave Your Lover And Nine Ways To Attack Patents

Recently posted in the National Law Review an article by Warren Woessner of Schwegman, Lundberg & Woessner, P.A. about the Patent Reform Bill, H.R. 1249:

As a “quick guide” to the Patent Reform Bill, H.R. 1249, that will soon become law, these are the sections of the Act and of the present statute that will all be, or remain effective, upon enactment, to facilitate blocking the issuance of applications or cancellation of objectionable claims. I will try to be brief, but it is not easy. Section references are to section of the Bill; “s.” references are to sections of 35 U.S.C.

  1. Sec. 3: Derivation proceedings (This replaces s. 291 – Interfering patents)
  2. Sec. 6: Citation of prior art and written statements  (Modifies s. 301 – Citation of prior art in an issued patent).
  3. S. 302-307 – “Old” ex parte reexamination is not affected by Bill. (But, remember, ex parte reexamination is essentially unused now.)
  4. S. 251-253. Reissue section is unscathed.
  5. Sec. 6: Inter partes review (Substantially modifies inter partes reexamination – must wait to file until after “opposition period” for post-grant review).
  6. Sec. 6: s. 321: Post-grant review (This is the new “opposition” section – must be filed within 9 mos. of issuance.)
  7. Sec. 8: Adds s. 122(e)   to permit preissuance submissions of art by third parties.
  8. Sec. 12: Adds s. 257: “Supplemental examination to consider, reconsider, or correct information.” Commentators have noted that these proceedings will permit patent owners to purge “fraud,” but there are exceptions.
  9. Sec. 18: Transitional post-grant review proceeding  for review of validity ofbusiness method patents – Can be initiated by defendant in civil suit.

Since reissue, ex parte reexamination, and supplemental examination are owner-initiated, perhaps I should have titled this post, “Nine Ways to Limit Patent Protection”, but then I would have had to list sections involving limiting false marking suits and  the ban on patenting human organisms.  I hope that this will help you locate specific parts of the Bill and of 35 USC as the commentary begins to pile up. As Prof. Hal Wegner summarizes this array:

“A major feature of the [Bill] is the creation of a variety of new post-grant review procedures. The difficulty with both the current and the new procedures results in part from the fact that essentially nothing is being  taken away while time consuming procedures are added to the burden of the upper end professionals at the Patent Office, all at a time when the Board is slowly sinking into an ever greater backlog.” (H.C. Wegner, The 2011 Patent Law: Law and Practice, Version 5.0, Sept. 8, 2011).

Hear! Hear! And, by the way, the Patent Office Board of Appeals and Interferences  is now “The Patent Trial and Appeal Board.” Check out its duties at Section 6 of the Bill.

© 2011 Schwegman, Lundberg & Woessner, P.A. All Rights Reserved