Licensing Best Practices: Strategic, Territorial, and Technology Issues

Pirmais vāks
Robert Goldscheider, Alan H. Gordon
John Wiley & Sons, 2006. gada 26. jūn. - 312 lappuses
"The LESI Guide to Licensing Best Practices, to which I was proud to contribute, has found solid acceptance in the international licensing community. The new volume of Licensing Best Practices maintains this high standard. It was designed to be complementary to its predecessor and broadens the scope of the scholarship. Standing alone, Licensing Best Practices is a valuable source of contemporary information. In combination with The LESI Guide to Licensing Best Practices, we have a very valuable source of insights and practical knowledge."
—Heinz Goddar Partner Boehmert & Boehmert

"Few if any other intellectual property references lay the required geographic foundation for the scientific, business, and legal issues presented. Goldscheider and Gordon demonstrate that tech transfer occurs in a global arena. The book lives up to its title: Licensing Best Practices."
—James E. Malackowski President & CEO, Ocean Tomo, LLC past president, LES-USA & Canada

An invaluable complement to the field's acclaimed book on licensing best practices

Spanning the globe, from Scandinavia to Japan and Mexico to Korea, Licensing Best Practices provides a comprehensive and user-friendly resource for professionals in licensing and technology management. Featuring contributions from some of the most highly regarded LESI professionals, this definitive guide includes detailed discussions on some of the hottest topics in licensing, including:

  • Licensing and Technology Transfer to China
  • Software Licensing as a Driver of the Indian Economy
  • Secrets of Successful Dealmaking in Asia
  • Licensing in Scandinavia-Home of Entrepreneurial Inventors, Industrialists, and Philanthropists
  • Global Innovation and Licensing Opportunities on the Internet
  • Energy and Environment Driving Technology and Licensing
  • Licensing Nanotechnology
  • Assuring Royalty Compliance in High Technology Licensing
  • Intellectual Property Allocation Strategies in Joint Ventures
  • Applications of Game Theory to IP Royalty Negotiations

No grāmatas satura

Saturs

STRATEGIC TERRITORIAL AND TECHNOLOGY ISSUES Part II SCIENTIFIC ISSUES
109
STRATEGIC TERRITORIAL AND TECHNOLOGY ISSUES Part III BUSINESS LEGAL AND PROFESSIONAL ISSUES
189
STRATEGIC TERRITORIAL AND TECHNOLOGY ISSUES SUGGESTED READING LIST
273
STRATEGIC TERRITORIAL AND TECHNOLOGY ISSUES INDEX
279
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Populāri fragmenti

126. lappuse - Sustainable development is development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.
196. lappuse - performing rights society" is an association, corporation, or other entity that licenses the public performance of nondramatic musical works on behalf of copyright owners of such works, such as the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP), Broadcast Music, Inc. (BMI), and SESAC, Inc. "Phonorecords...
31. lappuse - ... the observation, study or test of functioning of the computer programme in order to determine the ideas and principles which underlie any elements of the programme while performing such acts necessary for the functions for which the computer programme was supplied...
123. lappuse - The Stone Age did not end for lack of stone and the Oil Age will end long before the world runs out of oil," observed Sheikh Zaki Yamani, Saudi Arabia's oil minister for some three decades.
170. lappuse - Research and technology development at the atomic, molecular, or macromolecular levels, in the length scale of approximately 1-100 nanometer range. 2. Creating and using structures, devices, and systems that have novel properties and functions because of their small and/or intermediate size.
17. lappuse - China, the general licensing policy is to approve applications, except that those items that would make a direct and significant contribution to electronic and anti-submarine warfare, intelligence gathering, power projection, and air superiority receive extended review or denial.
230. lappuse - The activities are coordinated through the Foundation for Scientific and Industrial Research at the Norwegian Institute of Technology (SINTEF).
156. lappuse - ... activities undertaken within the scope of the joint research agreement; and (C) the application for patent for the claimed invention discloses or is amended to disclose the names of the parties to the joint research agreement. (3) For purposes of paragraph (2), the term "joint research agreement...
5. lappuse - This section follows the requirement of the International Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property, to which the United States Is a party...
17. lappuse - CCL is divided into 10 categories, numbered as follows: 0 — Nuclear Materials. Facilities and Equipment and Miscellaneous 1 — Materials, Chemicals, "Microorganisms." and Toxins 2 — Materials Processing 3 — Electronics 4 — Computers 5 — Telecommunications and Information Security 6— Lasers and Sensors 7 — Navigation and Avionics 8 — Marine 9 — Propulsion Systems, Space Vehicles and Related Equipment (b) Groups.

Par autoru (2006)

ROBERT GOLDSCHEIDER conceived and edited the first volume and is Coeditor of this book. He is an attorney and pioneer of the profession of technology management consulting. He heads the International Licensing Network, which was formed in 1975. He has also established precedence as an expert in litigation and has testified over fifty times. Mr. Goldscheider is the author of two treatises on licensing issues that are regularly update and has published over thirty articles on licensing-related subjects. He has been active in LES since 1967, has regularly lectured at LES and other meetings around the world, and believes he has taught more people about licensing than anyone alive.

ALAN H. GORDON has thirty-five years' experience in the practice of intellectual property law. He established Alan H. Gordon & Associates after having been aprincipal/partner of Fish & Richardson, P.C.; a partner/shareholder with Arnold, White & Durkee (now Howrey, LLP); and an associate with Burns, Doane, Swecker & Mathis (now Buchanan Ingersoll P.C.). He earned his BS in engineering from Columbia University in New York City and his JD (with Honors) from The George Washington University in Washington, D.C. He is a registered patent attorney in the U.S. and a registered patent agent in Canada and the Philippines. He is an author and frequent lecturer in the intellectual property area and has appeared numerous times as an expert witness in patent, trademark, trade secret, and licensing cases. Mr. Gordon has served as a local chapter chair, committee chair, trustee, vice-president, and secretary of the Licensing Executives Society (USA & Canada).

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