Royalty differentiation under exclusive territorial grants is a device which a patent owner, given proper conditions, can use to maximize his profits from licensing the patent rights to an invention. The patentee creates exclusive territories by granting only one license per territory, and then sets different royalties for each territory in accordance with the differing price elasticities of demand for the patented end product. Commentators have taken various stands on how the interests of the patentee and the public should be balanced in determining the desirability of permitting such exclusive territorial grants. One analysis purports to show that permitting a patentee to grant more than one exclusive territorial license is unjustifiable ...
Historically, the law has based the philosophical justification of granting intellectual property ri...
This paper studies royalty negotiations between a patent holder and a downstream firm selling a prod...
Uncertainty and delay in patent litigation may have unforeseen virtues. The combination of these oft...
Royalty differentiation under exclusive territorial grants is a device which a patent owner, given p...
Patent licensing is today, as always, a very significant part of patent law. Since royalty licenses ...
Efficient exploitation of a patent often requires patentees to license users of their inventions. Th...
Neither the Constitution nor federal legislation defines a patentee\u27s licensing rights; consequen...
Obtaining a patent provides the patentee with the ability to offer a potential entrant a license to ...
In patent laws around the world, exclusive licensees often have standing to initiate infringement ac...
This paper studies royalty negotiations between a patent holder and a downstream firm selling a prod...
In patent laws around the world, exclusive licensees often have standing to initiate infringement ac...
There is considerable controversy about the relative merits of the apportionment rule (which results...
Published as an article in: Economics Letters, 2010, vol. 107, issue 2, pages 284-287.A patent provi...
In light of the recent outrageous price-spiking of pharmaceuticals, this Article questions the under...
Article I of the Constitution\u27 expressly provides Congress with the authority to grant inventors ...
Historically, the law has based the philosophical justification of granting intellectual property ri...
This paper studies royalty negotiations between a patent holder and a downstream firm selling a prod...
Uncertainty and delay in patent litigation may have unforeseen virtues. The combination of these oft...
Royalty differentiation under exclusive territorial grants is a device which a patent owner, given p...
Patent licensing is today, as always, a very significant part of patent law. Since royalty licenses ...
Efficient exploitation of a patent often requires patentees to license users of their inventions. Th...
Neither the Constitution nor federal legislation defines a patentee\u27s licensing rights; consequen...
Obtaining a patent provides the patentee with the ability to offer a potential entrant a license to ...
In patent laws around the world, exclusive licensees often have standing to initiate infringement ac...
This paper studies royalty negotiations between a patent holder and a downstream firm selling a prod...
In patent laws around the world, exclusive licensees often have standing to initiate infringement ac...
There is considerable controversy about the relative merits of the apportionment rule (which results...
Published as an article in: Economics Letters, 2010, vol. 107, issue 2, pages 284-287.A patent provi...
In light of the recent outrageous price-spiking of pharmaceuticals, this Article questions the under...
Article I of the Constitution\u27 expressly provides Congress with the authority to grant inventors ...
Historically, the law has based the philosophical justification of granting intellectual property ri...
This paper studies royalty negotiations between a patent holder and a downstream firm selling a prod...
Uncertainty and delay in patent litigation may have unforeseen virtues. The combination of these oft...