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Patent Infringement

Patent infringement

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How do you know about patent infringement? Take minutes to check this PPT and you'll have a better understanding of patent infringement.

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Page 1: Patent infringement

Patent Infringement

Page 2: Patent infringement

Contents

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What Is Patent Infringement?

Types of Patent Infringement

Basic Features of Patent Infringement

How to Judge Patent Infringement?

Several Cases of Patent Infringement

Page 3: Patent infringement

What Is Patent Infringement?

Patent infringement is the commission of a prohibited act with

respect to a patented invention without permission from the patent

holder.

It occurs when someone violates the patent rights an inventor has in

his invention by making, using or selling the invention without the

patent owner’s permission (or if the patent has been licensed), in a

way not permitted by the license.

Page 4: Patent infringement

Types of Patent Infringement

1. Direct Infringement

It directly states that the third

party has willfully or intentionally stole the technology from the inventor without his prior permission.

It occurs when someone directly makes, uses or sells the patented invention within the United States. 

 

2. Indirect Infringement

It refers to the unfair practice that does not give a clear indication that the patent is bought and sold in the market.

It occurs, for instance, when a device is claimed in a patent and a third party supplies a product which can only be reasonably used to make the claimed device.

Page 5: Patent infringement

Direct or Indirect Infringement?

Direct Infringement Indirect Infringement

• sell parts that can only be realistically used for a patented invention;

• sell an invention with instructions on using a certain method that infringes on a method patent;

• license an invention that is covered by another’s patent;

• sell material components that have been especially made for use in a patented invention and have no other commercial use.

• manufacture patented technology;

• use patented technology;

• offer patented technology for sale;

• sell patented technology;

• import patented technology;

• pass off the patented.

These behaviors happen during the term of the patent and within the country that issued the patent.

!

Page 6: Patent infringement

Basic Features of Patent Infringement

The patents must be valid!

The infringers must infringe with thepurpose of operation or production!

3. Violation of legal rules

2. Infringement behavior

1. Objects of Infringement

The behavior is carried out without the permission of patentees!

Page 7: Patent infringement

Possible Consequences of Patent Infringement

What consequences can we expect from patent infringement?

1. A huge barrier for independent innovation;

2. Great challenge to the social civilization and sanctity of the law.

3. A damage to the economic laws and law of value.

4. An illegal behavior that destroys the fair and orderly market

competitive order.

Page 8: Patent infringement

How to Judge Patent Infringement?

“Compare Patent Claims ” Doctrine of Equivalents

Doctrine of Complete Coverage

Doctrine of Compromise

Doctrine of Estoppel

Doctrine of Superfluity

5 Principles

Page 9: Patent infringement

How to Judge Patent Infringement?

A determination of patent infringement

involves a two-step process:

1. The claims are analyzed by studying

all the relevant patent documents;

2. The claims must “read on” the accused

device or process.

In a word, the claims are tested to see

whether they describe the accused

infringement.

Page 10: Patent infringement

About Patent Claims

Defines the scope of protection

The utmost important both during prosecution and litigation

A preamble that recites the class of the invention, and optionally its primary properties, purpose, or field.

The possible parts contained in a claim may be:

A "transitional" phrase that characterizes the elements that follow.

A set of "limitations" that together describe the invention.

Optionally, a purpose clause that further describes the overall operation of the Invention.

Page 11: Patent infringement

Legal Responsibilities That Infringers Will Take

Legal Responsibilities

Administrative Responsibility

Criminal Responsibility

Civil

Responsibility

When patent infringement happens, the patentee may sue for relief in the appropriate Federal court.

Page 12: Patent infringement

Remedies of Patent Infringement

1. Compensatory damages

-- a patent owner may recover lost profits or infringement

2. Increased damages

-- up to three times the compensatory damages can be recovered in cases of willful or deliberate infringement

Monetary Relief Equitable Relief Cost & Attorney’s Fees

1. Preliminary injunctions

2. Permanent injunctions

Costs are typically recoverable and in rare cases where there has been willful infringement , so are attorney’s fees.

Page 13: Patent infringement

Several Cases of Patent Infringement

Time: 2011

Event: Huawei filed lawsuits in Germany, France and Hungary against ZTE for infringing a series of its patents relating to data card and LTE technologies.

Time: 2010

Event: Apple filed a lawsuit against HTC for infringing on 20 Apple patents related to the iPhone’s user interface, underlying architecture and hardware.

Time: 2009

Event: Nokia sued Apple for violation of 10 patents it holds on several wireless technologies.

Page 14: Patent infringement

THANK YOU!

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