Several aspects of patent litigation call into question patent holders' motivation for enforcing their exclusionary rights. Indeed, the expense alone can be enough to deter a firm from engaging in litigation, especially if it is likely that the parties will be unable to reach a settlement agreement and will go to trial. Notwithstanding, the number of patent infringement filings in district courts grows each year, thus providing a forum for asking what patent holders really desire to gain from litigating. Although injunctive relief and damages awards confer benefits to patent holders that can make litigating worthwhile, this Article posits that plaintiffs have no intention of ever obtaining these statutory remedies. Rather, handsome settleme...
Abusive patent assertion results in deadweight losses to society. Faced with the high cost of patent...
This paper shows that the process of enforcing patent rights both dilutes and distorts Research and ...
As a general rule, judges and scholars believe settlement is a good thing. But for nearly a century,...
For decades now, there has been a pronounced trend in civil litigation away from adjudication and to...
Patent litigation is often called the “sport of kings.” While that phrase may not be appropriate for...
This Article provides the first look at patent litigation hazards for public firms during the 1980s ...
The current approach for determining when courts should award injunctions in patent disputes involve...
Recent years have seen a marked increase in patent suits filed primarily for nuisance value. Non-pra...
We study the determinants of patent suits and settlements during 1978-1999 by linking information fr...
This article empirically studies current claims that patent trolls, also known as patent assertion e...
This paper investigates the characteristics of litigated patents by combining for the first time inf...
Patent law is where the law meets the most cutting-edge and innovative technology of its time. Usual...
The patent system focuses on the actions of two players: the patentee and its competitor. It assumes...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
My inspiration for the article was two articles by John Allison, Mark Lemley and Joshua Walker analy...
Abusive patent assertion results in deadweight losses to society. Faced with the high cost of patent...
This paper shows that the process of enforcing patent rights both dilutes and distorts Research and ...
As a general rule, judges and scholars believe settlement is a good thing. But for nearly a century,...
For decades now, there has been a pronounced trend in civil litigation away from adjudication and to...
Patent litigation is often called the “sport of kings.” While that phrase may not be appropriate for...
This Article provides the first look at patent litigation hazards for public firms during the 1980s ...
The current approach for determining when courts should award injunctions in patent disputes involve...
Recent years have seen a marked increase in patent suits filed primarily for nuisance value. Non-pra...
We study the determinants of patent suits and settlements during 1978-1999 by linking information fr...
This article empirically studies current claims that patent trolls, also known as patent assertion e...
This paper investigates the characteristics of litigated patents by combining for the first time inf...
Patent law is where the law meets the most cutting-edge and innovative technology of its time. Usual...
The patent system focuses on the actions of two players: the patentee and its competitor. It assumes...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
My inspiration for the article was two articles by John Allison, Mark Lemley and Joshua Walker analy...
Abusive patent assertion results in deadweight losses to society. Faced with the high cost of patent...
This paper shows that the process of enforcing patent rights both dilutes and distorts Research and ...
As a general rule, judges and scholars believe settlement is a good thing. But for nearly a century,...