To obtain a substantial patent damage award a patentee need not commercialize the patented invention; the patentee need only show that its patent was infringed. This surely incentivizes patenting but it dis-incentivizes innovation. Why commercialize yourself? The law allows you to wait for others to take the risks, and then you emerge later to lay claim to “in no event less than a reasonable” fraction of other people’s successes. It is rational to be a patent troll rather than an innovator. This troll-enabling interpretation of patent law’s reasonable royalty provision, however, is wrong as a matter of patent policy. Surprisingly, it is also wrong as a matter of patent history. The courts created the basis for reasonable royalties in the ni...
This chapter: (1) describes the current state of, and normative basis for, the law of reasonable roy...
Section 284 of the Patent Act specifies that damages for patent infringement must be “adequate to co...
Many policymakers, judges, and scholars justify patent law on economic-utilitarian grounds. It is th...
To obtain a substantial patent damage award a patentee need not commercialize the patented invention...
To obtain a substantial patent damage award a patentee need not commercialize the patented invention...
To obtain a substantial patent damage award a patentee need not commercialize the patented invention...
To obtain a substantial patent damage award a patentee need not commercialize the patented invention...
In recent years, juries in some patent infringement suits have awarded prevailing patentees reasona...
This Article studies the Federal Circuit\u27s use of excessive reasonable royalty awards as a patent...
In the last several years, commentators have expressed serious concerns with the state of the law go...
ABSTRACT INCENTIVES MUST CHANGE: ADDRESSING THE UNPREDICTABILITY OF REASONABLE ROYALTY DAMAGES Curre...
Reasonable royalty damages are the dominant form of relief awarded in patent infringement cases and ...
This chapter: (1) describes the current state of, and normative basis for, the law of reasonable roy...
In recent years, juries in some patent infringement suits have awarded prevailing patentees reasona...
This chapter: (1) describes the current state of, and normative basis for, the law of reasonable roy...
This chapter: (1) describes the current state of, and normative basis for, the law of reasonable roy...
Section 284 of the Patent Act specifies that damages for patent infringement must be “adequate to co...
Many policymakers, judges, and scholars justify patent law on economic-utilitarian grounds. It is th...
To obtain a substantial patent damage award a patentee need not commercialize the patented invention...
To obtain a substantial patent damage award a patentee need not commercialize the patented invention...
To obtain a substantial patent damage award a patentee need not commercialize the patented invention...
To obtain a substantial patent damage award a patentee need not commercialize the patented invention...
In recent years, juries in some patent infringement suits have awarded prevailing patentees reasona...
This Article studies the Federal Circuit\u27s use of excessive reasonable royalty awards as a patent...
In the last several years, commentators have expressed serious concerns with the state of the law go...
ABSTRACT INCENTIVES MUST CHANGE: ADDRESSING THE UNPREDICTABILITY OF REASONABLE ROYALTY DAMAGES Curre...
Reasonable royalty damages are the dominant form of relief awarded in patent infringement cases and ...
This chapter: (1) describes the current state of, and normative basis for, the law of reasonable roy...
In recent years, juries in some patent infringement suits have awarded prevailing patentees reasona...
This chapter: (1) describes the current state of, and normative basis for, the law of reasonable roy...
This chapter: (1) describes the current state of, and normative basis for, the law of reasonable roy...
Section 284 of the Patent Act specifies that damages for patent infringement must be “adequate to co...
Many policymakers, judges, and scholars justify patent law on economic-utilitarian grounds. It is th...