Books > Professional & Technical > Technology: general issues > Inventions & inventors
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Consider a Spherical Patent - IP and Patenting in Technology Business (Paperback, New)
Loot Price: R1,751
Discovery Miles 17 510
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Consider a Spherical Patent - IP and Patenting in Technology Business (Paperback, New)
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Get Critical Insight into the Modern Patenting Scene We are now
living in the "IP Era of the Information Age" where technology
businesses are placing increasing emphasis on intellectual property
(IP) as a way to add to their bottom lines. As a consequence, those
working in a technology business or organization will inevitably be
thrust into working with IP in one or more of its various forms.
This increasing emphasis on IP matters requires technology workers
to have at least a basic practical understanding of IP,
particularly patents, so that they can effectively participate in
their organizations' IP and patenting efforts. Consider a Spherical
Patent: IP and Patenting in Technology Business provides an
unconventional and unvarnished examination of patents and the
reality of how they are used and abused in technology business. The
book starts with an overview of patents and how the patenting
universe has become so complex, and warns of the danger of making
"spherical," simplifying assumptions about patents and
patent-related matters. It then takes a look at the cast of
characters in the modern patenting world and the roles they play at
the "IP Bazaar." The book goes on to explain the increasing
emphasis in today's modern IP world of leveraging patents in large
collections of patents called "portfolios." The author describes
how the fractal nature of innovation allows for the exponential
growth of patents to densely pack an "IP space," including how this
packing can exceed its normal limits and the adverse consequences.
He also explores the evolution and importance of core to
improvement to commercialization patents. A modern view of patents
based on "quantum patent mechanics" explains some of the mysterious
patent-related phenomena that are otherwise inexplicable using
"classical patent mechanics." Using examples of actual patents and
patent portfolios of real technology businesses, the author
discusses how patenting strategies are defined based on "central
organizing principles" behind why patents are being pursued. He
describes the operational realities of running an internal
patenting system as well as how to avoid the prevalent trap of
accepting a high degree of disorder (entropy) in the business's
patenting system. He also takes a close look at other problematic
areas, such as the use and abuse of provisional patent applications
and how "no shame claims" can be issued by the patent office and
the havoc they can create.
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