Category: Nick Garrett Graphic Sign Writer London

  • IP issues: The Wolves are at the Door: Hire an Intellectual Property Lawyer

    The Wolves are at the Door: Why YOU Need to Hire an Intellectual Property Lawyer

    Posted by Robert Brands on August 30, 2011
     0 comments  |  616 reads

    Innovation is the lifeblood of any organization, and value creation is measured by a company’s intellectual property portfolio. As a business leader, you are responsible for protecting your company’s IP portfolio through patents. What exactly is a patent? A patent is a legal document granted by the federal government that gives the patent owner the right to exclude others from making, using, selling, offering to sell, and importing the claimed invention. Essentially, it is the property right to the inventor. Virtually anything made by man can be patented, such as “a new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new and useful improvement,” according to Fleit Gibbons Gutman Bongini & Bianco PL.

    Why patent, you ask? To make profit from your invention! In order to succeed in business, you must protect and manage your innovation. Remember – the wolves are always at the door, just waiting to pounce on your ideas. Patents are part of an offensive and defensive strategy. Intellectual property law keeps your competitors from copying, using, selling or importing your idea. Patents protect your trademark against counterfeiting and unauthorized use.

    If your organization has a portfolio of intellectual property, it is necessary to hire an IP attorney that will protect, enforce and handle valuation of your intellectual assets. It is time and money well spent, as IP attorneys manage patents as well as a comprehensive list of intellectual property concerns including trademarks, copyrights, trade secrets, unfair competition, false advertising, computer law, technology licensing and related litigation.

    To choose the right IP firm for your organization, look for an attorney who has experience in your product or service arena. Find out if they have a degree in engineering or expertise working in your industry. Does the law firm specialize in any particular business segment, such as entertainment, machinery or financial products? Do they work with small, midsized or large companies? These are all questions you should address when selecting the best fit IP firm.

    Tips:

    -Make sure you patent and protect surrounding inventions to eliminate alternatives to copy what you try to do or deliver. When you develop a technology you normally will come across additional options and surrounding IP, protect these as a defensive strategy

    -Make sure you stay current with the changing Patent laws, including the possible upcoming change to “first to file” vs invent and having a year to file.

    -According to Futurist David Houle we are entering the “IP age”. Make sure you are part of it

    -Make IP as much a corporate governance issue at the Board level as any other strategic elements that is covered and watched over

    -Make sure you cash in on your IP Portfolio

    Here are some resources for information on patents:

    – U.S. Patent and Trademark Office www.uspto.gov

    – Patents.com www.Patents.com

    – Google Patents www.google.com/patents

    – Patently Obvious: Chapter 6 in “Robert’s Rules of Innovation”

    Remember, in high-stakes industries, your competitors are always looking for a way to get a leg-up. With increasingly advanced technology, it is easier than ever to unravel ideas and inventions through reverse engineering. The only way to truly protect your intellectual property is by patenting your IP portfolio. As they say, “the name of the game is the claim.” Without patenting, you will not share in the profits of your competitors. Be sure to educate your employees on the importance of protecting your company’s IP rights and create value for all the stakeholders.

    Republished with author’s permission from original post by Robert Brands.
  • Banksy breaks the Gold going for Mould! Olympic conumbdrum

    London could destroy Banksy’s valuable Olympic graffiti

    By Eurosport | London Spy – 8 hours ag

    While London and the world is enthralled with Olympians showing us what they worked their entire lives for, there will be distractions that take the focus away from the athletes. One individual who isn’t competing in the Games but is sharing the Olympic spotlight is London-based street artist and Oscar-nominated documentarian, Banksy.

    On Monday, Banksy posted photos on his website of his latest works: “Hackney Welcomes the Olympics” and “Going for Mould.” Both stencils, locations unknown, are Olympic-themed and may trouble the International Olympic Committee which maintains an iron fist over Olympic branding, not to mention the British Transport Police (BTP), which have been busy arresting alleged street artists and banning them from coming within a mile of any Olympic venue.

    The Guardian reported last week that the BTP had begun a pre-emptive sweep of alleged graffiti artists in preparation for the London Games. Street artists in London have also told the BBC that, “walls which they say have not been touched in years are now being cleaned off.”

    If and when Banksy’s new pieces are found, officials may want to think twice about removing the world-renown artist’s work. In March, 18 original Banksy artworks sold for over £400,000 at an auction in London. In the ever-present battle of street art vs. vandalism, Banksy’s form of self expression has grown from being viewed as a criminal act into a valuable commentary on society.

    Helen Bingham of Keep Britain Tidy told the BBC: “There’s a difference between low-grade tagging and the work people like Banksy do … You have to look at it and know the difference – it’s not a black and white thing.”

    From The Guardian’s Jonathan Jones:

    Tourists don’t come to London for shining perfection. They come for old and new in chaotic ungainly juxtaposition. And they come, partly, for Banksy. The prince of street art is our most famous contemporary artist, however much the moneyed art world would like to believe otherwise. Banksy postcards and canvas Banksy reproductions sell alongside royal memorabilia in London — West Country man as he may be. So how is the Olympics benefiting London by enforcing a clean-up of its most globally recognized art movement?

    This is not just about the freedom of a few artists to mess up the pristine Olympic bubble. It is about the identity of London.

    On Banksy’s website there is a frequently asked questions page in which the street artist answers critics who say his work is “crass, dumb and simplistic.” Banksy’s response is that they are correct. “Most of this stuff is designed to be viewed from a moving vehicle.”

    Armando Botello II | Fourth-Place Medal