View allAll Photos Tagged IntellectualProperty

At the start of Transatlantic Week 2012 in Washington, DC, Science|Business organised an open, expert debate on the legal, economic and technological implications of a new trend: the US and EU patent systems are starting to converge.

 

The discussion took place on 7 May 2012 on Captiol Hill in the Rayburn House Office Building.

 

www.sciencebusiness.net

 

Something funny has happened on the way to new patent legislation: For the first time, the US and EU systems are starting to converge. The new US patent law has moved towards a European, first-to-file approach to patent priority. The European Union is moving, ever so slowly, towards a unified patent system that operates in English with just a few other languages; and it is proposing a unified court system for IP.

 

How far could this converging trend go? What will it mean, for inventors and for the economies generally on both sides of the ocean? What further measures are needed?

 

This event was organised in association with the Transatlantic Policy Network and the Federal Circuit Bar Association.

 

Pictures: Maryum Raza Photography

 

The European Union is struggling towards a reform of its complex, costly patent system with unified application process (in most member-states), and steps towards a more efficient court system.

 

The discussion took place on 18 June 2012 at the European Parliament in Brussels.

 

www.sciencebusiness.net

 

Following its conference on international IP reform May 7 in the US Congress, Science|Business is launching a study of the innovation impact of these changes to provide an overview of the reforms, and begin examining their meaning for industry and academia.

 

Pictures by Carlos Nomen

Winners of the 2011 Rock the House music competition which took place on the House of Commons Terrace overlooking the Thames.

 

More info here....

 

www.mikeweatherleymp.com/2011/07/01/we-really-rocked-the-...

 

and their own site here...

 

www.angryvsthebear.com/home.cfm

  

Art outside the old Tower Records, now a bookstore, Intellectual Property.

Winners of the 2011 Rock the House music competition which took place on the House of Commons Terrace overlooking the Thames.

 

More info here....

 

www.mikeweatherleymp.com/2011/07/01/we-really-rocked-the-...

 

and their own site here...

 

www.angryvsthebear.com/home.cfm

  

Pitmans Pancake Tossing Team:

Session on ‘Intellectual Property’ was held on 9 November.

The session was held as part of the India-UK TECH Summit in New Delhi, 7-9 November 2016. Follow us on Twitter @UKinIndia

 

DLA Piper was a proud sponsor of the Second Annual University of San Diego School of Law Patent Law Conference: The Future of Patent Law.

 

Opening night of this event, January 29, 2012, featured dinner and a musical performance by DeNovo (featuring Chief Judge Randall Rader, Federal Circuit Court of Appeals; Matthew Bryan, Esq., World Intellectual Property Organization; Professor Sean O’Connor, University of Washington School of Law, and others) at House of San Diego.

 

www.dlapiper.com

 

www.law.sandiego.edu/plc

  

Photos by Alan Decker, David Gulley and Diane Vislisel

DLA Piper was a proud sponsor of the Second Annual University of San Diego School of Law Patent Law Conference: The Future of Patent Law.

 

Opening night of this event, January 29, 2012, featured dinner and a musical performance by DeNovo (featuring Chief Judge Randall Rader, Federal Circuit Court of Appeals; Matthew Bryan, Esq., World Intellectual Property Organization; Professor Sean O’Connor, University of Washington School of Law, and others) at House of San Diego.

 

www.dlapiper.com

 

www.law.sandiego.edu/plc

  

Photos by Alan Decker, David Gulley and Diane Vislisel

At the start of Transatlantic Week 2012 in Washington, DC, Science|Business organised an open, expert debate on the legal, economic and technological implications of a new trend: the US and EU patent systems are starting to converge.

 

The discussion took place on 7 May 2012 on Captiol Hill in the Rayburn House Office Building.

 

www.sciencebusiness.net

 

Something funny has happened on the way to new patent legislation: For the first time, the US and EU systems are starting to converge. The new US patent law has moved towards a European, first-to-file approach to patent priority. The European Union is moving, ever so slowly, towards a unified patent system that operates in English with just a few other languages; and it is proposing a unified court system for IP.

 

How far could this converging trend go? What will it mean, for inventors and for the economies generally on both sides of the ocean? What further measures are needed?

 

This event was organised in association with the Transatlantic Policy Network and the Federal Circuit Bar Association.

 

Pictures: Maryum Raza Photography

DLA Piper was a proud sponsor of the Second Annual University of San Diego School of Law Patent Law Conference: The Future of Patent Law.

 

Opening night of this event, January 29, 2012, featured dinner and a musical performance by DeNovo (featuring Chief Judge Randall Rader, Federal Circuit Court of Appeals; Matthew Bryan, Esq., World Intellectual Property Organization; Professor Sean O’Connor, University of Washington School of Law, and others) at House of San Diego.

 

www.dlapiper.com

 

www.law.sandiego.edu/plc

  

Photos by Alan Decker, David Gulley and Diane Vislisel

Conclusion of decision: Dismissal based on 1914 performances prior to patent. Judge Hugh M. Morris.

Intellectual property students from the University of Washington and its European partner schools will convene in Alicante, Spain to attend the Transnational Seminar on patent, trademark and copyright protection, including topics such as legal protection for software, trade dress protection, and license negotiation. The program is co-hosted by the Center for Advanced Study and Research on Intellectual Property (CASRIP) of the University of Washington School of Law and the University of Alicante (Alicante, Spain)

Walter Park, Associate Professor, American University

 

At the start of Transatlantic Week 2012 in Washington, DC, Science|Business organised an open, expert debate on the legal, economic and technological implications of a new trend: the US and EU patent systems are starting to converge.

 

The discussion took place on 7 May 2012 on Captiol Hill in the Rayburn House Office Building.

 

www.sciencebusiness.net

 

Something funny has happened on the way to new patent legislation: For the first time, the US and EU systems are starting to converge. The new US patent law has moved towards a European, first-to-file approach to patent priority. The European Union is moving, ever so slowly, towards a unified patent system that operates in English with just a few other languages; and it is proposing a unified court system for IP.

 

How far could this converging trend go? What will it mean, for inventors and for the economies generally on both sides of the ocean? What further measures are needed?

 

This event was organised in association with the Transatlantic Policy Network and the Federal Circuit Bar Association.

 

Pictures: Maryum Raza Photography

The European Union is struggling towards a reform of its complex, costly patent system with unified application process (in most member-states), and steps towards a more efficient court system.

 

The discussion took place on 18 June 2012 at the European Parliament in Brussels.

 

www.sciencebusiness.net

 

Following its conference on international IP reform May 7 in the US Congress, Science|Business is launching a study of the innovation impact of these changes to provide an overview of the reforms, and begin examining their meaning for industry and academia.

 

Pictures by Carlos Nomen

This image is excerpted from a U.S. GAO report:

www.gao.gov/products/GAO-25-107214

 

Intellectual Property: Information on Third-Party Funding of Patent Litigation

 

Note: The universities category above also includes non-profit organizations and government agencies.

 

Pitmans Pancake Tossing Team:

At the start of Transatlantic Week 2012 in Washington, DC, Science|Business organised an open, expert debate on the legal, economic and technological implications of a new trend: the US and EU patent systems are starting to converge.

 

The discussion took place on 7 May 2012 on Captiol Hill in the Rayburn House Office Building.

 

www.sciencebusiness.net

 

Something funny has happened on the way to new patent legislation: For the first time, the US and EU systems are starting to converge. The new US patent law has moved towards a European, first-to-file approach to patent priority. The European Union is moving, ever so slowly, towards a unified patent system that operates in English with just a few other languages; and it is proposing a unified court system for IP.

 

How far could this converging trend go? What will it mean, for inventors and for the economies generally on both sides of the ocean? What further measures are needed?

 

This event was organised in association with the Transatlantic Policy Network and the Federal Circuit Bar Association.

 

Pictures: Maryum Raza Photography

Intellectual property students from the University of Washington and its European partner schools will convene in Alicante, Spain to attend the Transnational Seminar on patent, trademark and copyright protection, including topics such as legal protection for software, trade dress protection, and license negotiation. The program is co-hosted by the Center for Advanced Study and Research on Intellectual Property (CASRIP) of the University of Washington School of Law and the University of Alicante (Alicante, Spain)

At the start of Transatlantic Week 2012 in Washington, DC, Science|Business organised an open, expert debate on the legal, economic and technological implications of a new trend: the US and EU patent systems are starting to converge.

 

The discussion took place on 7 May 2012 on Captiol Hill in the Rayburn House Office Building.

 

www.sciencebusiness.net

 

Something funny has happened on the way to new patent legislation: For the first time, the US and EU systems are starting to converge. The new US patent law has moved towards a European, first-to-file approach to patent priority. The European Union is moving, ever so slowly, towards a unified patent system that operates in English with just a few other languages; and it is proposing a unified court system for IP.

 

How far could this converging trend go? What will it mean, for inventors and for the economies generally on both sides of the ocean? What further measures are needed?

 

This event was organised in association with the Transatlantic Policy Network and the Federal Circuit Bar Association.

 

Pictures: Maryum Raza Photography

At the start of Transatlantic Week 2012 in Washington, DC, Science|Business organised an open, expert debate on the legal, economic and technological implications of a new trend: the US and EU patent systems are starting to converge.

 

The discussion took place on 7 May 2012 on Captiol Hill in the Rayburn House Office Building.

 

www.sciencebusiness.net

 

Something funny has happened on the way to new patent legislation: For the first time, the US and EU systems are starting to converge. The new US patent law has moved towards a European, first-to-file approach to patent priority. The European Union is moving, ever so slowly, towards a unified patent system that operates in English with just a few other languages; and it is proposing a unified court system for IP.

 

How far could this converging trend go? What will it mean, for inventors and for the economies generally on both sides of the ocean? What further measures are needed?

 

This event was organised in association with the Transatlantic Policy Network and the Federal Circuit Bar Association.

 

Pictures: Maryum Raza Photography

Intellectual property students from the University of Washington and its European partner schools will convene in Alicante, Spain to attend the Transnational Seminar on patent, trademark and copyright protection, including topics such as legal protection for software, trade dress protection, and license negotiation. The program is co-hosted by the Center for Advanced Study and Research on Intellectual Property (CASRIP) of the University of Washington School of Law and the University of Alicante (Alicante, Spain)

Walter Park, Associate Professor, American University

 

At the start of Transatlantic Week 2012 in Washington, DC, Science|Business organised an open, expert debate on the legal, economic and technological implications of a new trend: the US and EU patent systems are starting to converge.

 

The discussion took place on 7 May 2012 on Captiol Hill in the Rayburn House Office Building.

 

www.sciencebusiness.net

 

Something funny has happened on the way to new patent legislation: For the first time, the US and EU systems are starting to converge. The new US patent law has moved towards a European, first-to-file approach to patent priority. The European Union is moving, ever so slowly, towards a unified patent system that operates in English with just a few other languages; and it is proposing a unified court system for IP.

 

How far could this converging trend go? What will it mean, for inventors and for the economies generally on both sides of the ocean? What further measures are needed?

 

This event was organised in association with the Transatlantic Policy Network and the Federal Circuit Bar Association.

 

Pictures: Maryum Raza Photography

At the start of Transatlantic Week 2012 in Washington, DC, Science|Business organised an open, expert debate on the legal, economic and technological implications of a new trend: the US and EU patent systems are starting to converge.

 

The discussion took place on 7 May 2012 on Captiol Hill in the Rayburn House Office Building.

 

www.sciencebusiness.net

 

Something funny has happened on the way to new patent legislation: For the first time, the US and EU systems are starting to converge. The new US patent law has moved towards a European, first-to-file approach to patent priority. The European Union is moving, ever so slowly, towards a unified patent system that operates in English with just a few other languages; and it is proposing a unified court system for IP.

 

How far could this converging trend go? What will it mean, for inventors and for the economies generally on both sides of the ocean? What further measures are needed?

 

This event was organised in association with the Transatlantic Policy Network and the Federal Circuit Bar Association.

 

Pictures: Maryum Raza Photography

Conference co-organized by the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) and Brazilian National Confederation of Industry (CNI) and sponsored by CNI

Ricahrd L. Hudson, CEO & Editor, Science|Business

 

At the start of Transatlantic Week 2012 in Washington, DC, Science|Business organised an open, expert debate on the legal, economic and technological implications of a new trend: the US and EU patent systems are starting to converge.

 

The discussion took place on 7 May 2012 on Captiol Hill in the Rayburn House Office Building.

 

www.sciencebusiness.net

 

Something funny has happened on the way to new patent legislation: For the first time, the US and EU systems are starting to converge. The new US patent law has moved towards a European, first-to-file approach to patent priority. The European Union is moving, ever so slowly, towards a unified patent system that operates in English with just a few other languages; and it is proposing a unified court system for IP.

 

How far could this converging trend go? What will it mean, for inventors and for the economies generally on both sides of the ocean? What further measures are needed?

 

This event was organised in association with the Transatlantic Policy Network and the Federal Circuit Bar Association.

 

Pictures: Maryum Raza Photography

Winners of the 2011 Rock the House music competition which took place on the House of Commons Terrace overlooking the Thames.

 

More info here....

 

www.mikeweatherleymp.com/2011/07/01/we-really-rocked-the-...

 

and their own site here...

 

www.angryvsthebear.com/home.cfm

  

Ric Henschel, Partner, Foley & Lardner LLP

 

At the start of Transatlantic Week 2012 in Washington, DC, Science|Business organised an open, expert debate on the legal, economic and technological implications of a new trend: the US and EU patent systems are starting to converge.

 

The discussion took place on 7 May 2012 on Captiol Hill in the Rayburn House Office Building.

 

www.sciencebusiness.net

 

Something funny has happened on the way to new patent legislation: For the first time, the US and EU systems are starting to converge. The new US patent law has moved towards a European, first-to-file approach to patent priority. The European Union is moving, ever so slowly, towards a unified patent system that operates in English with just a few other languages; and it is proposing a unified court system for IP.

 

How far could this converging trend go? What will it mean, for inventors and for the economies generally on both sides of the ocean? What further measures are needed?

 

This event was organised in association with the Transatlantic Policy Network and the Federal Circuit Bar Association.

 

Pictures: Maryum Raza Photography

Winners of the 2011 Rock the House music competition which took place on the House of Commons Terrace overlooking the Thames.

 

More info here....

 

www.mikeweatherleymp.com/2011/07/01/we-really-rocked-the-...

 

and their own site here...

 

www.angryvsthebear.com/home.cfm

  

DLA Piper was a proud sponsor of the Second Annual University of San Diego School of Law Patent Law Conference: The Future of Patent Law.

 

Opening night of this event, January 29, 2012, featured dinner and a musical performance by DeNovo (featuring Chief Judge Randall Rader, Federal Circuit Court of Appeals; Matthew Bryan, Esq., World Intellectual Property Organization; Professor Sean O’Connor, University of Washington School of Law, and others) at House of San Diego.

 

www.dlapiper.com

 

www.law.sandiego.edu/plc

  

Photos by Alan Decker, David Gulley and Diane Vislisel

Winners of the 2011 Rock the House music competition which took place on the House of Commons Terrace overlooking the Thames.

 

More info here....

 

www.mikeweatherleymp.com/2011/07/01/we-really-rocked-the-...

 

and their own site here...

 

www.angryvsthebear.com/home.cfm

  

Howard Fogt, Partner, Foley & Lardner LLP

 

The European Union is struggling towards a reform of its complex, costly patent system with unified application process (in most member-states), and steps towards a more efficient court system.

 

The discussion took place on 18 June 2012 at the European Parliament in Brussels.

 

www.sciencebusiness.net

 

Following its conference on international IP reform May 7 in the US Congress, Science|Business is launching a study of the innovation impact of these changes to provide an overview of the reforms, and begin examining their meaning for industry and academia.

 

Pictures by Carlos Nomen

Intellectual property students from the University of Washington and its European partner schools will convene in Alicante, Spain to attend the Transnational Seminar on patent, trademark and copyright protection, including topics such as legal protection for software, trade dress protection, and license negotiation. The program is co-hosted by the Center for Advanced Study and Research on Intellectual Property (CASRIP) of the University of Washington School of Law and the University of Alicante (Alicante, Spain)

DuPont Vice President, Assistant General Counsel, and Chief IP Counsel P. Michael Walker offers closing remarks.

Session on ‘Intellectual Property’ was held on 9 November.

The session was held as part of the India-UK TECH Summit in New Delhi, 7-9 November 2016. Follow us on Twitter @UKinIndia

 

At the start of Transatlantic Week 2012 in Washington, DC, Science|Business organised an open, expert debate on the legal, economic and technological implications of a new trend: the US and EU patent systems are starting to converge.

 

The discussion took place on 7 May 2012 on Captiol Hill in the Rayburn House Office Building.

 

www.sciencebusiness.net

 

Something funny has happened on the way to new patent legislation: For the first time, the US and EU systems are starting to converge. The new US patent law has moved towards a European, first-to-file approach to patent priority. The European Union is moving, ever so slowly, towards a unified patent system that operates in English with just a few other languages; and it is proposing a unified court system for IP.

 

How far could this converging trend go? What will it mean, for inventors and for the economies generally on both sides of the ocean? What further measures are needed?

 

This event was organised in association with the Transatlantic Policy Network and the Federal Circuit Bar Association.

 

Pictures: Maryum Raza Photography

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