Jun 29, 2009
This morning, the U.S. Supreme Court decided not to review a 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals decision which may allow lower-cost use of DVR services without cable boxes. Cablevision Systems Corporation allows users to record television shows on Cablevision's central computer servers, instead of on cable boxes in the user's home. This allows more space for recordings, and eliminates the cost of installing cable boxes to store the recordings. Cablevisions system was challenged by a number of television networks, who allege that the ... Read More
Jun 26, 2009
As I said, the Ocean Tomo brand is still strong, and in fact continues to grow.
Just a week after news hit the fan that Ocean Tomo was selling its transactions practice and would be falling apart soon hereafter (not true), we receive word that Ocean Tomo and French bank Caisse des Dépôts have agreed to a working protocol to develop the first European patent ratings system. No money has yet changed hands as a result of the deal, but it is said ... Read More
Jun 24, 2009
Word came last week that the IP Auction platform that Ocean Tomo had pioneered and built into a world-renowned marketplace for high-profile intellectual property is now in the hands of another company, British information brokers ICAP. According to a press release:
ICAP (IAP.L), the world's premier interdealer broker, announced on Tuesday that it has agreed to acquire the transactions division of Ocean Tomo LLC, the leading Intellectual Capital Merchant Banc® firm, for an initial consideration of US$10 million at closing, comprising $5 million ... Read More
Jun 23, 2009
While I regret that I did not make it to the IP Business Congress in Chicago this week, I did promise to relay some of the important moments of the 3-day conference. Fortunately, Joff Wild has posted an update on the IAM blog titled Seen and heard at the IPBC on some of the useful information flying around the conference rooms at the Four Seasons. The post covers important tidbits and soundbites from directors at the EPO, the USPTO, and the Intellectual ... Read More
Jun 17, 2009
Producers of the Intellectual Asset Management magazine, among other publications and IP-related endeavors, the IP Media Group has made its mark in the IP transaction market. I read IAM magazine routinely, as it is truly the best source for IP transaction-related information. I posted recently on the IAM 250, the directory source for the world's 250 leading IP market professionals. This is just one of the great ideas coming from this IP "media" guru, meant to bring a little more transparency to ... Read More
Jun 17, 2009
IP Finance posted a great informational blog today explaining the inherent characteristics of a copyright in the hands of a business, specifically during insolvency. Some of the references to particular statutes should be disregarded if you are a U.S. reader, but the gist is the same under any copyright law system. Of interest is the section on Assignment and Sale of copyright licenses. Read the entire post HERE Read More
Jun 16, 2009
When a company deceives the consuming public, or exercises anti-competitive business practices in order to gain market share, we usually punish them. This is why a Washington attorney, in March of 2007, sued Solo Cup, and then Gillette, for claiming their products were protected by patents when in fact they were not. The story of Matthew Pequignot is not new. He found an archived legal hole that allows any citizen to sue on behalf of the government if they can prove that ... Read More
Jun 8, 2009
Intellectual Asset Management magazine has created the IAM 250, a non-exclusive list of the world's leading intellectual property strategists. The list includes professional attorneys, accountants, consultants, and other business persons that remain at the frontier of the IP market and the practices that are becoming essential to managing corporate intangible assets. The list is invitation-only, which requires at least three references and recommendations. Inclusion consists of a bio in the directory and access to the members-only online discussion board, a community of dialogue ... Read More
Jun 5, 2009
A while back I had a few discussions with attorneys regarding whether you could copyright a tweet on Twitter. The discussion was sparked when it was announced that start-ups were trying to capitalize on Twitter by creating ways to monetize the 140-character "tweets" created by millions of users worldwide. This was inevitable, because when money is involved, property ownership becomes more important. If ownership of subject matter determines who gets paid a portion of any proceeds produced by that subject matter, of ... Read More