Patent law in a nutshell:
Gespeichert in:
Hauptverfasser: | , , |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
St. Paul, MN
Thomson West
2008
|
Schriftenreihe: | West Nutshell Series
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXXVIII, 450 S. |
ISBN: | 9780314256508 |
Internformat
MARC
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100 | 1 | |a Adelman, Martin J. |e Verfasser |4 aut | |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a Patent law in a nutshell |c by Martin J. Adelman ; Randall R. Rader ; Gordon P. Klancnik |
264 | 1 | |a St. Paul, MN |b Thomson West |c 2008 | |
300 | |a XXXVIII, 450 S. | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
490 | 0 | |a West Nutshell Series | |
650 | 7 | |a Octrooirecht |2 gtt | |
650 | 4 | |a Patent laws and legislation |z United States | |
650 | 0 | 7 | |a Patentrecht |0 (DE-588)4044884-8 |2 gnd |9 rswk-swf |
651 | 7 | |a Verenigde Staten |2 gtt | |
651 | 4 | |a USA | |
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700 | 1 | |a Klancnik, Gordon P. |e Verfasser |4 aut | |
856 | 4 | 2 | |m Digitalisierung UB Bayreuth |q application/pdf |u http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016371172&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |3 Inhaltsverzeichnis |
999 | |a oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016371172 |
Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804137453585432576 |
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adam_text | OUTLINE
Page
Table of Cases
______....._____________________ XVII
Chapter
1.
Foundations of Patent Law
--. 1
I. Foundations of Patent Law
---------------- 1
II. Economics (Incentive to Invent)
---------- 3
III. History: Antidote to Trade Secrets (In¬
centive to Disclose)
------------------------ 5
IV. History: Technology Transfer
------------- 8
V. Natural Rights (Entitlement Theory)-.-.-
9
VI
.
Patents and Public Utility Theory
_____ 12
VII.
Conclusion—
.....___.....____________ 13
Chapter
2.
Patent Acquisition
-------------- 14
I. The United States Patent and Trade¬
mark Office
-------------------------------- 14
A. Examination
----------------------------- 14
B. Historical Development
---------------- 18
C. Organization
----------------------------- 24
II. Prosecution Procedures
--------------------- 25
A. Application Types
----------------------- 25
1.
Provisional Applications
------.....- 25
2.
Nonprovisional Applications
------- 26
3.
Continuing Applications
----------- 27
V
OUTLINE
Page
II. Prosecution Procedures
—
Continued
a) Restriction Requirements and
Divisionals
--------------------- 29
b)
Requests for Continued Ex¬
amination
---------------------- 31
c) Presumptive Limits on Con¬
tinuations, CIPs, and RCEs
31
B. Publication Rule
------------------------ 32
С
Interferences
----------------------------- 33
D. Petition and Appeal Rights
------------ 34
III. Post-Grant Procedures
---------------------- 36
A. Certificates of Correction
-------------- 36
B. Reissue
------------------------------------ 38
1.
Error Correction
_____________ 38
2.
Intervening Rights
------------------ 40
3.
Recapture
----.....-------------------- 41
C. Reexamination
-------------------------- 42
1.
Ex Parte
------------------------------ 43
2.
Inter
Partes
_________________ 45
IV.
Conclusion: The World s Most Liberal
System
-------------------------------------- 45
Chapters. Patent Eligibility
__________ 47
I. Introduction
---------------------------------- 47
A. The Constitution
_______.....--------- 48
B. Section
101____________________ 48
II. Processes
---------------......----------------- 50
A. Process Versus Product Claims
------- 50
B. Computer-Related Methods
........___ 51
C. Business Method Patents
......-------- 55
D. Methods of Medical Treatment
..... - 57
E. Compositions of Matter/Biotechnolo¬
gy
59
III. Trips
____________________.....______ 62
VI
OUTLINE
Page
Chapter^ Utility
____________________ 64
I. Introduction
---------------------------------- 64
A. Section
101____________________ 64
B. Historical Development of the Doc¬
trine
------------------------------------- 65
II. Three Types of Utility
_______________ 67
A. Chemistry and Biotechnology
______ 70
B
.
Modern Biotech Guidelines
------------ 72
III. Industrial Application
----------------------- 74
Chapterõ.
Anticipation
----------------------- 75
I. Introduction
---------------------------------- 75
II. Identification of Prior Art Under the
U.S. First-to-Invent Regime
------------- 76
A. Novelty Under
§
102(a)
__________ 81
B. Secret Prior Art
_________________ 84
III. Anticipation
---------------------------------- 86
A. Each and Every Element
--------------- 86
B. Enablement Requirement
------------- 89
C. Inherency
-------------------------------- 89
D. Anticipation vs. Obviousness
--------- 91
Chapter
6.
Statutory Bars
------------------- 93
I. Introduction
---------------------------------- 93
II. Public Use
________________________ 97
A. Definitions
------------------------------- 97
B. Activities of the Applicant
------------- 98
1.
Informing
----------------------------- 99
2.
Noninforming
----------------------- 100
3.
Secret
______________________ 102
С
Activities of Third Parties
_________ 103
1.
Informing
----------------------------- 103
VII
OUTLINE
Page
II. Public Use
—
Continued
2.
Noninforming
------------------------ 104
3.
Secret
______________________ 105
III. On Sale
________________________..... 106
A. Definitions
------------------------------- 106
B. Two-Part Test
__________________ 107
1.
Commercial Offer for Sale
______ 107
2.
Ready for Patenting
----------------- 108
IV. Experimental Use Negation
---------------- 109
A. Exception Versus Negation
________ 109
B. Sales of the Invention
------------------ 112
V. Patents and Printed Publications
--------- 113
VI. Other Statutory Bars
________________ 114
A. Abandonment
---------------------------- 114
B. Delay
_________________________ 115
Chapter
7.
Novelty: Prior Invention
____ 117
I. Introduction
------------------------------..... 117
II. Prior Invention Under Section 102(a)
--- 119
A. Known or Used
_______________ 119
B. Section 102(a) Before the Patent and
Trademark Office
______________ 122
III. Priority Under Section 102(g)
_________ 124
A. Section 102(g) s Purpose
__________ 124
B. Statutory Framework
____________ 125
1.
Interferences
------------------------ 126
2.
Conception
____.....___________ 129
3.
Reduction to Practice
--------------- 131
4.
Diligence
------------------------------ 134
5.
Abandoned, Suppressed, or Con¬
cealed
____________________ 136
6.
The second paragraph of
§
102(g)
137
7.
Examples
......._______________ 139
VIII
OUTLINE
Page
IV.
Prior
Invention Under Section
102(e)~—
140
V. Derivation Under Section 102(f)
_______ 142
Chapter
8.
Nonobviousness
----------------- 144
I. Introduction
---------------------------------- 144
II. History of Patent Law s Crown Jewel
150
III. Prior Art
_______......_______________ 154
A. Section
102-......________________ 154
1.
Analogous Art
----------------------- 156
2.
Joint Research Exception
--------- 157
B. Prior Art by Admission
---------------- 158
IV. The Supreme Court Trilogy
__________ 159
V. The Federal Circuit
_________________ 163
A. Motivation or Suggestion to Combine
164
B. KSR
__________________________ 166
С
Scrutiny of Hindsight
------------------ 170
D. Objective Criteria (Secondary Con¬
siderations)
---------------------------- 171
E. Obviousness Traps
____________ 177
1.
Standard of Proof
_____________ 177
2.
Manner of Invention Irrelevant
.-. 178
3.
Obvious to Try
---------------------- 179
4.
Patentability vs. Validity
---------- 181
F. Chemistry and Biotechnology
-------- 182
1.
Chemistry
.......-......._________ 183
2.
Biotechnology
________________ 183
VI. Obviousness (Inventive Step) in Foreign
Patent Systems
---------------------.....-. 187
Chapter
9.
Adequate Disclosure
----------- 189
I. Introduction
---------------------------------- 189
II. Enablement
_______________________ 192
A. Purpose
..................------........____ 192
DC
OUTLINE
Page
II. Enablement
—
Continued
В.
Test
__________________________ 193
1.
At the Time of Filing
__________ 194
2.
Scope of Disclosure
----------------- 196
3.
Without Undue Experimentation
200
С
Relationship to Utility
-------------..... 202
III. Written Description
_________________ 203
A. Purpose
_______________________ 203
B. Possession of the Claimed Subject
Matter
____________________..... 206
C. Written Description Unchained
------- 207
IV. Best Mode
------------------------------------- 210
A. Purpose
_______________________ 210
B. Two-PartTest
__________________ 210
1.
Inventor s Subjective Belief-
------- 211
2.
Concealment
------------------------- 212
С
Unnecessary Vestige?
------------------ 215
Chapter
10.
Claims
___________________ 218
I. Introduction
_______________________ 218
A. Central Legal Element of a Patent
— 218
B. Historical Development
___________ 219
С
Section
112____________________ 221
II. Parts of a Claim
____________________ 223
A. One-Sentence Rule
______________ 224
B. Preamble
______________________ 225
С
Transitional phrase
______________ 226
D. Body
__________________________ 230
E. Independent and Dependent Claims
232
III. Special Claim Formats
______________ 234
A. Means-Plus-Function
____......____ 235
1.
Section
112,
Paragraph6
_______ 235
2.
Practical Significance
__________ 238
X
OUTLINE
Page
III. Special Claim Formats
—
Continued
3.
Equivalents Under Section
112,
Paragraph
6,
and the Doctrine
of Equivalents
______________ 243
4.
International Treatment
---------- 248
B. Product-by-Process
______________ 248
1.
Purpose
____________________ 248
2.
International Treatment
---------- 252
С
Jepson
------------------------------------- 252
D. Markush
_______________________ 253
rV. Definiteness
_______________________ 255
A. Test
__________________________ 255
B. Relative Terminology
&
Words of
Approximation
------------------------ 258
Chapter
11.
Issues in Patent Acquisition
260
I. Introduction
---------------------------------- 260
II. Inventorship
---------------------------------- 261
A. Test for Inventorship
------------------- 261
B. Consequences of Incorrect Inventor¬
ship
___________________.....___ 264
III. Inequitable Conduct
------------------------ 266
A. Purpose
----------------------------------- 266
B. Test for Inequitable Conduct
______ 269
1.
Materiality
__________________ 270
2.
Intent
______________________ 273
С
International Treatment
--------------- 277
IV.
Double Patenting
-------------------.....—-- 277
A. Purpose-
.....------------------------------ 277
B. Two Types
____....._____________ 278
1.
Same Invention or Statutory
------ 278
2.
Obviousness-Type or Nonstat-
utory
_____________________ 279
XI
OUTLINE
Page
IV. Double
Patenting—Continued
С.
Terminal Disclaimer
-------------------- 282
V. International Prosecution
------------------ 284
Chapter
12.
Claim Construction
----------- 285
I. Introduction
---------------------------------- 285
II. Claim Construction
------------------------- 288
A. Challenges of Claim Construction
---- 289
B. Claim Construction in the Federal
Circuit Era:
Markmän
--------------- 292
C.
Sources of Claim Meaning
------------- 299
1.
The Claim Language
__________ 302
2.
The Specification
_____________ 306
3.
The Prosecution History
----------- 311
4.
Extrinsic Evidence
------------------ 315
a) Dictionaries, Treatises, and
Encyclopedias
---------------- 316
b) Expert Testimony
--------------- 318
c) Prior Art References and Sci¬
entific Articles
___________ 320
D. Guidelines for Claim Construction.--.
321
E. Practical Problems
______________ 322
1.
Preamble
____________________ 323
2.
Construing Claims in Light of the
Specification Versus Impermis-
sibly Importing a Limitation
from the Specification
_______ 325
3.
Construing Claims to the Extent
Necessary Versus Construing
Claims in Light of the Accused
Device
____________________ 326
4.
Evolving Claim Construction
____ 328
XII
OUTLINE
Page
II. Claim Construction
—
Continued
F.
Claim Construction at the Patent Of¬
fice
___.....___________________ 329
Chapter
13.
Infringement
_______.....___ 331
I. Introduction
---------------------------------- 331
II. Literal Infringement
------------------------ 332
III. The Doctrine of Equivalents
—
Non-tex¬
tual Infringement
-----------................ 333
A. Purpose
----------------------------------- 333
B. Test(s)
________________________ 336
С
Limitations
------------------------------ 338
1.
Prosecution History Estoppel
----- 339
2.
All-Elements Rule
____________ 342
3.
Prior Art
____________________ 345
4.
Public Dedication
........________ 347
D. Means-Plus
—
Function Claims
-------- 348
E. Reverse Doctrine of Equivalents
------ 349
F. Indirect Infringement
------------------ 350
1.
Inducement of Infringement
------ 351
2.
Contributory Infringement
-------- 353
IV. Territorial Scope
___________________ 354
A. Exporting Components of a Patented
Combination
-------------------------- 355
B. Importation of Goods Manufactured
by a Patented Process
—.....------- 357
V. International Trade Commission
--------- 359
VI. Exceptions to Infringement
-..........------ 362
A. Implied Licenses, First Sale
&
Ex¬
haustion, and Repair
&
Recon¬
struction
------------------------------- 363
B. Experimental Use
------.................-- 365
XIII
OUTLINE
Page
VII.
Artificial Infringement Under
§
271(e)(2)
______________________ 368
VIII.
Infringement Abroad
------------------------ 371
Chapter
14.
Additional Defenses
---------- 374
I. Introduction
---------------------------------- 374
II. Laches and Estoppel
------------------------ 376
A. Laches
_________________________ 377
B. Equitable Estoppel
---------------------- 379
C. Prosecution Laches
--------------------- 381
D. Licensee Estoppel
------------------------ 383
E. Assignor Estoppel
----------------------- 386
III. Shop Rights
_______________________ 387
IV. Temporary Presence in the United
States
__________________________ 389
V. First Inventor Defense
---------------------- 390
VI. Patent Misuse
______________________ 392
Chapter
15.
Remedies
------------------------- 397
I. Introduction
_______________________ 397
II. Injunctions
------------------------------------ 398
III. Damages
__________________________ 403
A. Lost Profits
____________________ 404
B. Price Erosion
----------------------------- 411
C. Reasonable Royalty
______________ 413
D. The Entire Market Value Rule
_____ 416
E. Marking
_______________________ 418
IV. Willful Infringement: Enhanced Dam¬
ages and Attorney Fees
____________ 421
V. International Remedies
--------------------- 425
Chapter
16.
International Patent Law-..
427
I. Major International Agreements
______ 427
XIV
OUTLINE
Page
I. Major International Agreements
—
Con¬
tinued
A. Paris Convention
----------------------- 428
B. Patent Cooperation Treaty
------------ 434
C. Regional Agreements
------------------- 436
1.
European Patent Convention and
the European Union
------------- 436
2.
TRIPS and Bilateral Free Trade
Agreements
----------------------- 437
II
.
International Enforcement
---------------- 440
Index
-------------------------------------------------- 443
XV
|
adam_txt |
OUTLINE
Page
Table of Cases
_._ XVII
Chapter
1.
Foundations of Patent Law
--. 1
I. Foundations of Patent Law
---------------- 1
II. Economics (Incentive to Invent)
---------- 3
III. History: Antidote to Trade Secrets (In¬
centive to Disclose)
------------------------ 5
IV. History: Technology Transfer
------------- 8
V. Natural Rights (Entitlement Theory)-.-.-
9
VI
.
Patents and Public Utility Theory
_ 12
VII.
Conclusion—
._._ 13
Chapter
2.
Patent Acquisition
-------------- 14
I. The United States Patent and Trade¬
mark Office
-------------------------------- 14
A. Examination
----------------------------- 14
B. Historical Development
---------------- 18
C. Organization
----------------------------- 24
II. Prosecution Procedures
--------------------- 25
A. Application Types
----------------------- 25
1.
Provisional Applications
------.- 25
2.
Nonprovisional Applications
------- 26
3.
Continuing Applications
----------- 27
V
OUTLINE
Page
II. Prosecution Procedures
—
Continued
a) Restriction Requirements and
Divisionals
--------------------- 29
b)
Requests for Continued Ex¬
amination
---------------------- 31
c) Presumptive Limits on Con¬
tinuations, CIPs, and RCEs
31
B. Publication Rule
------------------------ 32
С
Interferences
----------------------------- 33
D. Petition and Appeal Rights
------------ 34
III. Post-Grant Procedures
---------------------- 36
A. Certificates of Correction
-------------- 36
B. Reissue
------------------------------------ 38
1.
Error Correction
_ 38
2.
Intervening Rights
------------------ 40
3.
Recapture
----.-------------------- 41
C. Reexamination
-------------------------- 42
1.
Ex Parte
------------------------------ 43
2.
Inter
Partes
_ 45
IV.
Conclusion: The World's Most Liberal
System
-------------------------------------- 45
Chapters. Patent Eligibility
_ 47
I. Introduction
---------------------------------- 47
A. The Constitution
_.--------- 48
B. Section
101_ 48
II. Processes
---------------.----------------- 50
A. Process Versus Product Claims
------- 50
B. Computer-Related Methods
._ 51
C. Business Method Patents
.-------- 55
D. Methods of Medical Treatment
. - 57
E. Compositions of Matter/Biotechnolo¬
gy
59
III. Trips
_._ 62
VI
OUTLINE
Page
Chapter^ Utility
_ 64
I. Introduction
---------------------------------- 64
A. Section
101_ 64
B. Historical Development of the Doc¬
trine
------------------------------------- 65
II. Three Types of Utility
_ 67
A. Chemistry and Biotechnology
_ 70
B
.
Modern Biotech Guidelines
------------ 72
III. Industrial Application
----------------------- 74
Chapterõ.
Anticipation
----------------------- 75
I. Introduction
---------------------------------- 75
II. Identification of Prior Art Under the
U.S. First-to-Invent Regime
------------- 76
A. Novelty Under
§
102(a)
_ 81
B. Secret Prior Art
_ 84
III. Anticipation
---------------------------------- 86
A. Each and Every Element
--------------- 86
B. Enablement Requirement
------------- 89
C. Inherency
-------------------------------- 89
D. Anticipation vs. Obviousness
--------- 91
Chapter
6.
Statutory Bars
------------------- 93
I. Introduction
---------------------------------- 93
II. Public Use
_ 97
A. Definitions
------------------------------- 97
B. Activities of the Applicant
------------- 98
1.
Informing
----------------------------- 99
2.
Noninforming
----------------------- 100
3.
Secret
_ 102
С
Activities of Third Parties
_ 103
1.
Informing
----------------------------- 103
VII
OUTLINE
Page
II. Public Use
—
Continued
2.
Noninforming
------------------------ 104
3.
Secret
_ 105
III. On Sale
_. 106
A. Definitions
------------------------------- 106
B. Two-Part Test
_ 107
1.
Commercial Offer for Sale
_ 107
2.
Ready for Patenting
----------------- 108
IV. Experimental Use Negation
---------------- 109
A. Exception Versus Negation
_ 109
B. Sales of the Invention
------------------ 112
V. Patents and Printed Publications
--------- 113
VI. Other Statutory Bars
_ 114
A. Abandonment
---------------------------- 114
B. Delay
_ 115
Chapter
7.
Novelty: Prior Invention
_ 117
I. Introduction
------------------------------. 117
II. Prior Invention Under Section 102(a)
--- 119
A. "Known or Used"
_ 119
B. Section 102(a) Before the Patent and
Trademark Office
_ 122
III. Priority Under Section 102(g)
_ 124
A. Section 102(g)'s Purpose
_ 124
B. Statutory Framework
_ 125
1.
Interferences
------------------------ 126
2.
Conception
_._ 129
3.
Reduction to Practice
--------------- 131
4.
Diligence
------------------------------ 134
5.
Abandoned, Suppressed, or Con¬
cealed
_ 136
6.
The second paragraph of
§
102(g)
137
7.
Examples
._ 139
VIII
OUTLINE
Page
IV.
Prior
Invention Under Section
102(e)~—
140
V. Derivation Under Section 102(f)
_ 142
Chapter
8.
Nonobviousness
----------------- 144
I. Introduction
---------------------------------- 144
II. History of Patent Law's "Crown Jewel"
150
III. Prior Art
_._ 154
A. Section
102-._ 154
1.
Analogous Art
----------------------- 156
2.
Joint Research Exception
--------- 157
B. Prior Art by Admission
---------------- 158
IV. The Supreme Court Trilogy
_ 159
V. The Federal Circuit
_ 163
A. Motivation or Suggestion to Combine
164
B. KSR
_ 166
С
Scrutiny of Hindsight
------------------ 170
D. Objective Criteria (Secondary Con¬
siderations)
---------------------------- 171
E. Obviousness "Traps"
_ 177
1.
Standard of Proof
_ 177
2.
Manner of Invention Irrelevant
.-. 178
3.
Obvious to Try
---------------------- 179
4.
Patentability vs. Validity
---------- 181
F. Chemistry and Biotechnology
-------- 182
1.
Chemistry
.-._ 183
2.
Biotechnology
_ 183
VI. Obviousness (Inventive Step) in Foreign
Patent Systems
---------------------.-. 187
Chapter
9.
Adequate Disclosure
----------- 189
I. Introduction
---------------------------------- 189
II. Enablement
_ 192
A. Purpose
.------._ 192
DC
OUTLINE
Page
II. Enablement
—
Continued
В.
Test
_ 193
1.
At the Time of Filing
_ 194
2.
Scope of Disclosure
----------------- 196
3.
Without Undue Experimentation
200
С
Relationship to Utility
-------------. 202
III. Written Description
_ 203
A. Purpose
_ 203
B. "Possession" of the Claimed Subject
Matter
_. 206
C. Written Description Unchained
------- 207
IV. Best Mode
------------------------------------- 210
A. Purpose
_ 210
B. Two-PartTest
_ 210
1.
Inventor's Subjective Belief-
------- 211
2.
Concealment
------------------------- 212
С
Unnecessary Vestige?
------------------ 215
Chapter
10.
Claims
_ 218
I. Introduction
_ 218
A. Central Legal Element of a Patent
— 218
B. Historical Development
_ 219
С
Section
112_ 221
II. Parts of a Claim
_ 223
A. One-Sentence Rule
_ 224
B. Preamble
_ 225
С
Transitional phrase
_ 226
D. Body
_ 230
E. Independent and Dependent Claims
232
III. Special Claim Formats
_ 234
A. Means-Plus-Function
_._ 235
1.
Section
112,
Paragraph6
_ 235
2.
Practical Significance
_ 238
X
OUTLINE
Page
III. Special Claim Formats
—
Continued
3.
Equivalents Under Section
112,
Paragraph
6,
and the Doctrine
of Equivalents
_ 243
4.
International Treatment
---------- 248
B. Product-by-Process
_ 248
1.
Purpose
_ 248
2.
International Treatment
---------- 252
С
Jepson
------------------------------------- 252
D. Markush
_ 253
rV. Definiteness
_ 255
A. Test
_ 255
B. Relative Terminology
&
Words of
Approximation
------------------------ 258
Chapter
11.
Issues in Patent Acquisition
260
I. Introduction
---------------------------------- 260
II. Inventorship
---------------------------------- 261
A. Test for Inventorship
------------------- 261
B. Consequences of Incorrect Inventor¬
ship
_._ 264
III. Inequitable Conduct
------------------------ 266
A. Purpose
----------------------------------- 266
B. Test for Inequitable Conduct
_ 269
1.
Materiality
_ 270
2.
Intent
_ 273
С
International Treatment
--------------- 277
IV.
Double Patenting
-------------------.—-- 277
A. Purpose-
.------------------------------ 277
B. Two Types
_._ 278
1.
Same Invention or Statutory
------ 278
2.
"Obviousness-Type" or Nonstat-
utory
_ 279
XI
OUTLINE
Page
IV. Double
Patenting—Continued
С.
Terminal Disclaimer
-------------------- 282
V. International Prosecution
------------------ 284
Chapter
12.
Claim Construction
----------- 285
I. Introduction
---------------------------------- 285
II. Claim Construction
------------------------- 288
A. Challenges of Claim Construction
---- 289
B. Claim Construction in the Federal
Circuit Era:
Markmän
--------------- 292
C.
Sources of Claim Meaning
------------- 299
1.
The Claim Language
_ 302
2.
The Specification
_ 306
3.
The Prosecution History
----------- 311
4.
Extrinsic Evidence
------------------ 315
a) Dictionaries, Treatises, and
Encyclopedias
---------------- 316
b) Expert Testimony
--------------- 318
c) Prior Art References and Sci¬
entific Articles
_ 320
D. Guidelines for Claim Construction.--.
321
E. Practical Problems
_ 322
1.
Preamble
_ 323
2.
Construing Claims in Light of the
Specification Versus Impermis-
sibly Importing a Limitation
from the Specification
_ 325
3.
Construing Claims to the Extent
Necessary Versus Construing
Claims in Light of the Accused
Device
_ 326
4.
Evolving Claim Construction
_ 328
XII
OUTLINE
Page
II. Claim Construction
—
Continued
F.
Claim Construction at the Patent Of¬
fice
_._ 329
Chapter
13.
Infringement
_._ 331
I. Introduction
---------------------------------- 331
II. Literal Infringement
------------------------ 332
III. The Doctrine of Equivalents
—
Non-tex¬
tual Infringement
-----------. 333
A. Purpose
----------------------------------- 333
B. Test(s)
_ 336
С
Limitations
------------------------------ 338
1.
Prosecution History Estoppel
----- 339
2.
All-Elements Rule
_ 342
3.
Prior Art
_ 345
4.
Public Dedication
._ 347
D. Means-Plus
—
Function Claims
-------- 348
E. Reverse Doctrine of Equivalents
------ 349
F. Indirect Infringement
------------------ 350
1.
Inducement of Infringement
------ 351
2.
Contributory Infringement
-------- 353
IV. Territorial Scope
_ 354
A. Exporting Components of a Patented
Combination
-------------------------- 355
B. Importation of Goods Manufactured
by a Patented Process
—.------- 357
V. International Trade Commission
--------- 359
VI. Exceptions to Infringement
-.------ 362
A. Implied Licenses, First Sale
&
Ex¬
haustion, and Repair
&
Recon¬
struction
------------------------------- 363
B. Experimental Use
------.-- 365
XIII
OUTLINE
Page
VII.
"Artificial" Infringement Under
§
271(e)(2)
_ 368
VIII.
Infringement Abroad
------------------------ 371
Chapter
14.
Additional Defenses
---------- 374
I. Introduction
---------------------------------- 374
II. Laches and Estoppel
------------------------ 376
A. Laches
_ 377
B. Equitable Estoppel
---------------------- 379
C. Prosecution Laches
--------------------- 381
D. Licensee Estoppel
------------------------ 383
E. Assignor Estoppel
----------------------- 386
III. Shop Rights
_ 387
IV. Temporary Presence in the United
States
_ 389
V. First Inventor Defense
---------------------- 390
VI. Patent Misuse
_ 392
Chapter
15.
Remedies
------------------------- 397
I. Introduction
_ 397
II. Injunctions
------------------------------------ 398
III. Damages
_ 403
A. Lost Profits
_ 404
B. Price Erosion
----------------------------- 411
C. Reasonable Royalty
_ 413
D. The Entire Market Value Rule
_ 416
E. Marking
_ 418
IV. Willful Infringement: Enhanced Dam¬
ages and Attorney Fees
_ 421
V. International Remedies
--------------------- 425
Chapter
16.
International Patent Law-.
427
I. Major International Agreements
_ 427
XIV
OUTLINE
Page
I. Major International Agreements
—
Con¬
tinued
A. Paris Convention
----------------------- 428
B. Patent Cooperation Treaty
------------ 434
C. Regional Agreements
------------------- 436
1.
European Patent Convention and
the European Union
------------- 436
2.
TRIPS and Bilateral Free Trade
Agreements
----------------------- 437
II
.
International Enforcement
---------------- 440
Index
-------------------------------------------------- 443
XV |
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author | Adelman, Martin J. Rader, Randall R. Klancnik, Gordon P. |
author_facet | Adelman, Martin J. Rader, Randall R. Klancnik, Gordon P. |
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dewey-ones | 346 - Private law |
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dewey-sort | 3346.0486 |
dewey-tens | 340 - Law |
discipline | Rechtswissenschaft |
discipline_str_mv | Rechtswissenschaft |
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illustrated | Not Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T20:02:44Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:12:32Z |
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isbn | 9780314256508 |
language | English |
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physical | XXXVIII, 450 S. |
publishDate | 2008 |
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spelling | Adelman, Martin J. Verfasser aut Patent law in a nutshell by Martin J. Adelman ; Randall R. Rader ; Gordon P. Klancnik St. Paul, MN Thomson West 2008 XXXVIII, 450 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier West Nutshell Series Octrooirecht gtt Patent laws and legislation United States Patentrecht (DE-588)4044884-8 gnd rswk-swf Verenigde Staten gtt USA USA (DE-588)4078704-7 gnd rswk-swf USA (DE-588)4078704-7 g Patentrecht (DE-588)4044884-8 s DE-604 Rader, Randall R. Verfasser aut Klancnik, Gordon P. Verfasser aut Digitalisierung UB Bayreuth application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016371172&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Adelman, Martin J. Rader, Randall R. Klancnik, Gordon P. Patent law in a nutshell Octrooirecht gtt Patent laws and legislation United States Patentrecht (DE-588)4044884-8 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4044884-8 (DE-588)4078704-7 |
title | Patent law in a nutshell |
title_auth | Patent law in a nutshell |
title_exact_search | Patent law in a nutshell |
title_exact_search_txtP | Patent law in a nutshell |
title_full | Patent law in a nutshell by Martin J. Adelman ; Randall R. Rader ; Gordon P. Klancnik |
title_fullStr | Patent law in a nutshell by Martin J. Adelman ; Randall R. Rader ; Gordon P. Klancnik |
title_full_unstemmed | Patent law in a nutshell by Martin J. Adelman ; Randall R. Rader ; Gordon P. Klancnik |
title_short | Patent law in a nutshell |
title_sort | patent law in a nutshell |
topic | Octrooirecht gtt Patent laws and legislation United States Patentrecht (DE-588)4044884-8 gnd |
topic_facet | Octrooirecht Patent laws and legislation United States Patentrecht Verenigde Staten USA |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016371172&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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