The Supreme Court\u27s unanimous decision in Quanta v. LG Electronics may make it significantly more difficult to structure transactions involving patents. While this decision does make a group of players into winners in the immediate term for existing patent deals (this group includes any customer who, like Quanta, buys patented parts without buying a patent license), almost everyone is likely to come out a loser going forward. The Court in Quanta decided that a patent license that LG Electronics sold only to Intel - and explicitly limited to exclude Intel\u27s customers, like Quanta, and priced to reflect these modest ambitions - would be treated by the Court as extending permission under the patent to those Intel customers. The legal ho...
An analysis of recent cases indicates that no major changes have taken place in the interpretation o...
By eliminating the market power presumption for patent holders, Independent Ink calls into question ...
The Supreme Court’s 2017 ruling in Impression Products v. Lexmark clearly came as an unwelcome, thou...
The Supreme Court\u27s unanimous decision in Quanta v. LG Electronics may make it significantly more...
In Quanta Computer, Inc. v. LG Electronics, Inc., the Supreme Court recalibrated the balance between...
The Supreme Court held in United States v. Univis Lens Co. that the authorized disposition of an art...
In a broad reaffirmation of the principle of patent exhaustion, the Supreme Courts decision in Quant...
Supreme Court decisions regarding the doctrine of patent exhaustion have drawn a bright line for det...
A lengthy tug of war between the Supreme Court and the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals may have end...
The exclusive rights of a patent owner to exclude others from making, using, or selling patented inv...
A lengthy tug of war between the Supreme Court and the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals may have end...
In June 9, 2008, U.S. Supreme Court declared in Quanta v. LG decision that the patent-exhaustion do...
Deciding a patent’s validity is costly, and so is deciding it incorrectly. Judges and juries must ex...
Research Summary: Remedies for infringement are important determinants of the strength of patent pro...
Mobile devices, such as smartphones and tablets, rely heavily on technical standards, which are crea...
An analysis of recent cases indicates that no major changes have taken place in the interpretation o...
By eliminating the market power presumption for patent holders, Independent Ink calls into question ...
The Supreme Court’s 2017 ruling in Impression Products v. Lexmark clearly came as an unwelcome, thou...
The Supreme Court\u27s unanimous decision in Quanta v. LG Electronics may make it significantly more...
In Quanta Computer, Inc. v. LG Electronics, Inc., the Supreme Court recalibrated the balance between...
The Supreme Court held in United States v. Univis Lens Co. that the authorized disposition of an art...
In a broad reaffirmation of the principle of patent exhaustion, the Supreme Courts decision in Quant...
Supreme Court decisions regarding the doctrine of patent exhaustion have drawn a bright line for det...
A lengthy tug of war between the Supreme Court and the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals may have end...
The exclusive rights of a patent owner to exclude others from making, using, or selling patented inv...
A lengthy tug of war between the Supreme Court and the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals may have end...
In June 9, 2008, U.S. Supreme Court declared in Quanta v. LG decision that the patent-exhaustion do...
Deciding a patent’s validity is costly, and so is deciding it incorrectly. Judges and juries must ex...
Research Summary: Remedies for infringement are important determinants of the strength of patent pro...
Mobile devices, such as smartphones and tablets, rely heavily on technical standards, which are crea...
An analysis of recent cases indicates that no major changes have taken place in the interpretation o...
By eliminating the market power presumption for patent holders, Independent Ink calls into question ...
The Supreme Court’s 2017 ruling in Impression Products v. Lexmark clearly came as an unwelcome, thou...