Ins and Outs of Global Patent Strategy

While most entrepreneurs have dozens of “great” ideas for starting companies, in actual practice most companies are started by picking a single good idea that can be grown into a successful product. If all goes well, this initial idea provides the financial wherewithal that enables the company to take more of these ideas and nurture them into products. One way of thinking about this is that the first idea is the core of the company’s technology which produces other “seeds” that can be successfully grown into additional products. By protecting each new development along this path, the company can build a “fence” around its core which will protect its business assets both defensively and offensively.

Because the core technology of an initial good idea is so critical to the company’s future viability, it must be vigorously protected from the outset. This is the primary function of patent protection; entrepreneurs need to grasp the basics of how it works while in the process of selecting which of their “great” ideas to go for first in building their company. Patents allow their owners to exclude others from making, using, offering for sale, importing or selling the patented item. Patents add value to a business, capable of generating millions of dollars in revenue through licensing fees and enforcement awards. Further, strong IP protection discourages competitors. This article is intended to help entrepreneurs navigate the ins and outs of the early business decision-making process that will determine the value of the resulting patent portfolio on a global scale.

via Law.com – Ins and Outs of Global Patent Strategy.

Using Technology to Help Your Firm Grow

At the August meeting of the International Legal Technology Association, or ILTA, there was a provocative session that Ron Friedmann summarized in his “Strategic Legal Technology” blog at www.prismlegal.com. The session discussed technologies that are disruptive to the traditional practice of law.

The point of the session was that these technologies are also growth opportunities for those lawyers and law firms that change the way they think about the practice of law and embrace these new opportunities to differentiate themselves from their peers.

The purpose of this article is to examine some of the insights generated from the ILTA session and identify the mindsets and skills that will make it possible to seize the opportunities presented by new technologies and use them to differentiate yourself and your law firm in the marketplace.

via Legal Technology – Using Technology to Help Your Firm Grow.

New Bill Could Bring Chapter 11 to Hong Kong

Efforts to introduce a Chapter 11-style corporate restructuring law in Hong Kong have been revived, the South China Morning Post reports subscription required.

In Hong Kong and in much of the rest of Asia, failing companies typically end up in the hands of liquidators. By comparison, Chapter 11 proceedings under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code famously permit troubled companies to enter a court-supervised period of reorganization, during which they are sheltered from creditors and can seek ways of boosting their finances, often by selling off assets.

The government of Hong Kong has been proposing such a law for over a decade but two previous versions of the Corporate Rescue Bill have foundered over a provision requiring employees be paid in full before a company can file a restructuring plan.

via New Bill Could Bring Chapter 11 to Hong Kong.

Congratulations from Global EDD Group – Women in eDiscovery Reports Continued Growth

Women in eDiscovery, a non-profit organization that brings together businesswomen interested in technology related to the legal industry, announced today the names of new chapter directors and that it is proudly approaching the 4,000 member mark. The organization held its first meeting with 30 women in attendance in 2007. In a short period of time, Women in eDiscovery has achieved global reach and nearly 4,000 members. The organization provides members with opportunities to help each other grow personally and professionally through leadership, education, networking support, and national recognition.

via Women in eDiscovery Elects New Board Members and Reports Continued Growth.

Internet Turns 40 Today: First Message Crashed System

Everyone surfing for last-minute Halloween costumes and pictures of black Lolcats today—what you might call the 40th anniversary of the Internet—can give thanks to the simple network message that started it all: “lo.”

On October 29, 1969, that message became the first ever to travel between two computers connected via the ARPANET, the computer network that would become the Internet.

via Internet Turns 40 Today: First Message Crashed System.

Sedona Continues Call for Cooperation – Law.com

If hell is the last stop for attorneys who are “eternally locked in discovery disputes,” then The Sedona Conference — a nonprofit research and educational institute — wants to be the guardian angel that keeps counsel cooperative and away from that realm. Working Group 1 of The Sedona Conference consists of judges, attorneys and other experts who meet, discuss and publish on issues relating to electronic discovery. Federal judges are now referring with increasing regularity to the e-discovery guidelines set forth in various publications of The Sedona Conference, including the recently issued The Sedona Conference Cooperation Proclamation. See The Sedona Conference, The Sedona Conference Cooperation Proclamation (July 2008).

The Cooperation Proclamation asks a timeless question: Can’t we all just get along? Although this pronouncement by The Sedona Conference is only a few pages long, its drafters seek no less than a “paradigm shift for the discovery process.”  Specifically, the Cooperation Proclamation encourages “a national drive to promote open and forthright information sharing, dialogue (internal and external), training and the development of practical tools to facilitate cooperative, collaborative, transparent discovery. “On the theory that overzealous discovery costs too much and yields too little, the Cooperation Proclamation aims to curb the knee-jerk and often counterproductive aggression sometimes exhibited by counsel in discovery. In this respect, its goal is the same as that of Rule 1 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure: to promote the “just, speedy, and inexpensive determination of every action.”

via Law.com – Sedona Continues Call for Cooperation.

Department of Defense (DoD) Memo Highlights Strategic Advantages of Open Source

With the current U.S. administration being tech-savvy and promising transparency, many in the open source community have been hoping to get more visibility and traction in the government’s procurement cycles.

It looks like the U.S. Department of Defense might have noticed — or at least has decided to catch up with other government organizations around the globe — as they make it easier for their staff to make use of open source. A recently released memo has been cause for some FOSS community jubilation.

DoD Memo Clarifies Open Source Policies

A widely-distributed memo released by David Wennergren, Deputy CIO of the U.S. Department of Defense offers clarification on the use and development of open source software within the DoD. The memo begins by briefly defining open source and explains that — as we all knew — “there are many OSS [open source software] programs in operational use by the Department today, in both classified and unclassified environments.”

via Department of Defense (DoD) Memo Highlights Strategic Advantages of Open Source.

Future Legal Technology Tool? Similar Images graduates from Google Labs

Similar Images is graduating from Google Labs and becoming a permanent feature in Google Images. You can try it out by clicking on “Find similar images” below the most popular images in our search results. For example, if you search for jaguar, you can use the “Find similar images” link to find more pictures of the car or the animal.

via Official Google Blog: Similar Images graduates from Google Labs.

Pitfalls of Cross-Border Investigations

Against the backdrop of the recent banking and financial markets crisis, enforcement agencies around the world are increasingly collaborating to investigate allegations of accounting and financial fraud, insider trading, Ponzi schemes, bribery of foreign government officials, other securities law violations, tax evasion, money laundering and antitrust violations. Accordingly, multinational and domestic companies with substantial overseas footprints are conducting more multijurisdictional and cross-border internal investigations in an effort to respond to the enforcement agencies’ investigations.

These multijurisdictional and cross-border investigations tend to multiply the magnitude of complex investigatory issues that a company faces in government investigations by the Department of Justice, the Securities and Exchange Commission, the New York State Attorney General or other U.S. federal or state enforcement agencies.

via Legal Technology – Pitfalls of Cross-Border Investigations .

Los Angeles adopts Google e-mail system for 30,000 city employees

The Los Angeles City Council voted unanimously today to outsource its e-mail system to Google Inc., making it the largest city in the nation to make the move and handing the Web search giant a major victory in its quest to become a software provider to the world’s cities and businesses.

After more than two hours of debate, council members voted 12-0 to approve the $7.25-million contract that would move all 30,000 city employees to Google’s so-called cloud over the coming year.

“The City of Los Angeles, the second largest city in the nation, made a world-class decision today to support a state-of-the art e-mail system,” said Councilman Tony Cardenas, who made the motion to approve the Google system.

via Los Angeles adopts Google e-mail system for 30,000 city employees | Technology | Los Angeles Times.