Owning-Up To Entrepreneurship: Intellectual Property

Download Report

Transcript Owning-Up To Entrepreneurship: Intellectual Property

Owning-Up To Entrepreneurship:
Common Intellectual Property Issues
Involving Software Start-ups
Patrick H. Gaughan, JD, MBA
Executive Director
Innovation Practice Center
[email protected]
1
Outline
•
•
•
•
•
Why Do We Care?
Types of Intellectual Property
Common Problems
Getting Help On Proof of Concept
Learning More About Entrepreneurship &
Commercialization
2
Why Do We Care?
• Apple v. Samsung - $US 1 billion patent verdict
(last year)
• Apple v. Samsung - $US 2billion patent litigation
(current). Samsung claims all android software
came from Google!
• Lots of Little Guys Fighting Too – e.g.
MyPOSGeeks.com sued for “false designation of
origin and unfair competition, common law
trademark infringement and state law unfair
competition and dilution.”
• Patent Trolls – Nonpracticing Entities
3
Types of Intellectual Property
•
•
•
•
•
Patents
Copyrights
Trademarks
Trade Dress
Trade Secrets
4
Patents
• A patent grants an inventor the exclusive right
to exclude others from making, using, selling,
offering to sell, and importing an invention for
a limited period of time, in exchange for the
public disclosure of the invention.
• Duration: Utility patents, 20 years from date
of filing. Design patents, 15 years from date of
filing.
5
Patent Requirements
•
•
•
•
Patent eligible
Novel
Useful
Nonobvious to a “PHOSITA” (person having
ordinary skill in the art)
• Adequately described
6
Copyrights
• A copyright gives the creator of an original
work exclusive rights to it and derivative
works, usually for a limited time. Copyright
does not cover ideas and information
themselves, only the form or manner in which
they are expressed.
• Duration: usually 70 years from after the
author’s death.
7
Copyright Requirements
• Attaches automatically upon creation.
• However, formal registration provides
documentation of assertion of rights and support
of damages.
• “©” 2014 is optional after 1989 but still a good
idea
• Fill out the form from the U.S. Copyright office.
• Send copy of the material and form in. The
material will be in the Library of Congress
8
Trademarks/Servicemarks
• A trademark is any recognizable word, sign,
symbol or design which uniquely identifies or
distinguishes products or services.
• Provided protection by common law at the state
level (use ™ ).
• Standard: Likelihood of confusion by consumers
with preexisting marks
• Federal protection through registration (use ®).
• Duration: As long as used in commerce and
defended against infringement
9
Trademark Examples
• T.Markee for shoes; Tee Marqee for shirts
• See Starbucks
10
Other Previously Famous Tradenames
that lost their protection
•
•
•
•
•
Aspirin – Bayer name (lost protection in U.S.)
Escalator – Otis Elevator name (lost)
Thermos – Thermos Gmbh name (lost)
Videotape – Ampex Corporation (lost)
Zipper – B.F. Goodrich (lost)
11
Trade Dress
• Trade dress is a legal term of art extension of
Trademark law (through Lanham Act) that
generally refers to characteristics of the visual
appearance of a product that signify the source of
the product to consumers.
• Product packaging can be inherently distinctive.
• Product design must have consumer secondary
meaning linking design to the origin/source.
• Key is confusion of consumers.
12
Examples of Tradedress
• The light blue Tiffany jewelry boxes
• The shape of Coke bottles
• The color and design of Reeces Peanut Butter
Cups
• Golden Arches outside of McDonalds
restraunts.
13
Trade Secrets
• A trade secret is anything not generally known or
reasonably ascertainable by which a business can obtain an
economic advantage over competitors or customers.
• Holder of trade secret must take reasonable steps to
preserve the secret (like non-disclosures from employees
and reasonable efforts to limit employee access).
• Trade secret law is primarily handled at the state level
under the Uniform Trade Secrets Act
• Federal law also potentially applicable under the Economic
Espionage Act of 1996 which makes the theft or
misappropriation of a trade secret a federal crime.
14
IP Issues Impacting Software Startups
•
•
•
•
Patents
Copyrights
Trademark infringement
Ownership of initial IP
– Co-inventors
– ORC 3345.14
– Work for Hire
• Non-competition clauses
15
Patent, Copyright and Trademark
Issues
• Does the software incorporate a patented
design? [e.g. Amazon’s One-Click patent?]
• Does it use or integrate software components
with asserted ownership in others? (no license?)
[e.g. Napster’s copyright infringement?]
• Is the name, design, look and feel likely to
confuse others as to the origin of the software?
• Is there “fair use”?
16
O.R.C. 3345.14 (B)
(B) All rights to and interests in discoveries, inventions, or patents which result
from research or investigation conducted in any experiment station, bureau,
laboratory, research facility, or other facility of any state college or university,
or by employees of any state college or university acting within the scope of
their employment or with funding, equipment, or infrastructure provided by
or through any state college or university, shall be the sole property of that
college or university. No person, firm, association, corporation, or
governmental agency which uses the facilities of such college or university in
connection with such research or investigation and no faculty member,
employee, or student of such college or university participating in or making
such discoveries or inventions, shall have any rights to or interests in such
discoveries or inventions, including income therefrom, except as may, by
determination of the board of trustees of such college or university, be
assigned, licensed, transferred, or paid to such persons or entities in
accordance with division (C) of this section or in accordance with rules adopted
under division (D) of this section.
17
Work for Hire (Non-University)
• Under copyright law, work product can be
created two ways:
– Work produced by employees within the scope of
their employment
– Work produced by independent contractors
• Employee work-product produced within their
scope of employment is owned by the Employer
• Independent contractor work-product is owned
by the independent contract unless there is a
written agreement saying the work is to be
considered “work for hire.”
18
Application of Work for Hire Issue #1
• You’re an employee at Company “X”.
• You’re asked to work on a software problem
within the scope of your employment and you
do a great job coming up with a solution.
• The solution is owned by Company “X”.
• If you subsequently open a new Company “Y”
you need to prove that you did not use code
from Company “X”.
19
Application of Work for Hire Issue #2
• You start and own Company “X”.
• You verbally hire a “friend” to work on a software
problem and he/she does a great job coming up
with a solution.
• The solution is owned by the friend – because
there isn’t any written agreement showing the
work was “for hire”.
• You subsequently want to extend the code into a
new product. Your former “friend” can claim
rights to royalties.
20
Corporate Opportunity Doctrine
• You’re an employee at Company “X”.
• You are NOT asked to work on any project.
However programming is within the scope of
your employment.
• Company “X” owns it. However, if, after
presentation, they decide they do not want to
pursue this, then you own it.
21
Taking the Low Road
• You’re a graduate student or faculty member at
University of Akron OR you are an employee at
Company “X”.
• You decide to “claim” that you developed the software
on your own time, using your own equipment, and that
the idea came to you while in the shower… at home.
• Problem: you’ll still have trouble passing any investor’s
due diligence and potentially face a law suit if you
eventually develop something of value (recall the guys
who sued Zuckerberg claiming co-ownership of
Facebook?).
22
Better Route
• Clarify the rights/duties in writing BEFORE you
create anything
• Save all the contracts and scan them.
• For UA, file a disclosure with Tech Transfer
indicating that you do NOT believe UA has any
interest (and explain why)
• Be careful to avoid using ANY UA resources
including computers, software, etc.
• In some circumstances, document the
development of the software.
23
Non-competition/ Non-pilfer Clauses
• Does not apply to the software but MAY apply
to the creator or programmers hired by the
creator.
• Based upon employment law. Usually
prohibits competition or pilfering of
employees for a period of less than 3 years.
• Usually restrictively construed by time, scope
and geography to achieve the legitimate
intention of the clause.
24
Getting Help On Proof of Concept
• iCorp Program
• Proof of Concept Center – Gopal Nadkarni,
Directory, [email protected]
• Arch Angels
• Youngstown Business Incubator (YBI.org)
25
Learning More About Entrepreneurship
and Commercialization
• Graduate Entrepreneurship, – Fall 2014, 3
Credits, Thursday Evenings 5:20-7:50. Course:
Entrepreneurship 6500:608:801
• Graduate Commercialization – Spring 2015, 3
credits, time tbd.
• Graduate Commercialization Externship –
Summer 2015, credits tbd.
26
Any questions?
Patrick H. Gaughan
[email protected]
27