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The Current Patent Landscape and State of Patent Reform

Contains material from Mar 2016

The Current Patent Landscape and State of Patent Reform
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Good big-picture discussion. Wish there were more good news.

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Session 1: The Patent Landscape: Economics of Enforceability and Licensing - The patent environment has undergone dramatic, unprecedented change in the past several years. Explore the many changes across industries, stakeholders, owners and competitors, and political perspectives, and put context and narrative around these changes and proposed best practices for dealing with this new global patent environment. 
 
Session 2: Proposed U.S. Patent Law Reforms: Is the Desirable Achievable? - Numerous patent reforms have been proposed addressing different stakeholder concerns pertaining to the effective functioning of our patent system. Differing ones are contained in bills that have been passed out of the House and Senate Judiciary Committees, but which have not reached the floors of either chamber. In the wake of several recent Supreme Court decisions, yet other proposals are now being advanced, and more are certain to follow. Differences of opinion exist as to which of these proposals are desirable, which are achievable, and whether there is a nexus between the two.

Includes: Audio Paper Slides


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1. The Patent Landscape: Economics of Enforceability and Licensing (Mar 2016)

Robert Greene Sterne, Hon. Paul R. Michel, Chris Ruggeri, Robert L. Stoll, Caren A. Yusem

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(mp3)
81 mins
(pdf)
115 pgs
Slides
(pdf)
5 pgs
Session 1 —81 mins
The Patent Landscape: Economics of Enforceability and Licensing (Mar 2016)

The patent environment has undergone dramatic, unprecedented change in the past several years. Explore the many changes across industries, stakeholders, owners and competitors, and political perspectives, and put context and narrative around these changes and proposed best practices for dealing with this new global patent environment.  

Originally presented: Mar 2016 Advanced Patent Law Institute

Robert Greene Sterne, Sterne, Kessler, Goldstein & Fox P.L.L.C. - Washington, DC
Hon. Paul R. Michel, Chief Judge, Retired, United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit - Washington, DC
Chris Ruggeri, Deloitte Financial Advisory Services LLP - New York, NY
Robert L. Stoll, Drinker Biddle & Reath LLP - Washington, DC
Caren A. Yusem, Olympic IP - Chicago, IL

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2. Proposed U.S. Patent Law Reforms: Is the Desirable Achievable? (Mar 2016)

Philip S. Johnson

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(mp3)
52 mins
(pdf)
329 pgs
(pdf)
9 pgs
Session 2 —52 mins
Proposed U.S. Patent Law Reforms: Is the Desirable Achievable? (Mar 2016)

Numerous patent reforms have been proposed addressing different stakeholder concerns pertaining to the effective functioning of our patent system. Differing ones are contained in bills that have been passed out of the House and Senate Judiciary Committees, but which have not reached the floors of either chamber. In the wake of several recent Supreme Court decisions, yet other proposals are now being advanced, and more are certain to follow. Differences of opinion exist as to which of these proposals are desirable, which are achievable, and whether there is a nexus between the two.

Originally presented: Mar 2016 Advanced Patent Law Institute

Philip S. Johnson, Johnson & Johnson - New Brunswick, NJ