Sentences with phrase «patent monetization»

"Patent monetization" refers to the process of making money from a patent by licensing or selling it to others. It involves finding ways to use the patent to generate income, such as through licensing agreements, selling it outright, or by taking legal action against those who infringe on the patent. Full definition
By Brian Howard, Legal Data Scientist & Director of Analytics Services This blog post takes a deeper dive into some of the data and conclusions published in Lex Machina's 2013 Patent Litigation: Year in Review, more closely examining the increase in patent cases filed in 2013 and investigating the roles played by the passage of the America Invents Act (the AIA), by patent monetization entity plaintiffs (PMEs), and by design patents in this rise.
This blog post takes a deeper dive into some of the data and conclusions published in Lex Machina's 2013 Patent Litigation: Year in Review, more closely examining the increase in patent cases filed in 2013 and investigating the roles played by the passage of the America Invents Act (the AIA), by patent monetization entity plaintiffs (PMEs), and by design patents in this rise.
DataNovo's dynamic platform needs only a product or company name to identify potentially - infringed patents, offering a valuable tool to patent owners for advancing patent monetization efforts and to licensees for securing licensing partnerships.
Lex Machina says the top plaintiffs nationwide are all «patent monetization entities» — commonly known as patent trolls.
The OIN can't change anything about Nokia's patent monetization and litigation.
Every single one of the top ten most prolific filers of patent lawsuits in 2013 was a patent monetization entity.
Of the top ten companies on this list, only three are patent monetization entities (PME)-- Intellectual Ventures I and II, and Ronald Katz Licensing.
Becker begins the story in the mid-2000s when many big tech companies had started to experience a new legal phenomenon, Patent Monetization Entities (or PMEs also called «Patent Trolls»), i.e. individuals or companies making claims against established companies on the basis that one or more of their patents could be challenged in order to extract monetary damages.
Top findings: New patent cases decline 10 % in 2017; Teva, Samsung and Apple were top defendants; 11 of top 15 plaintiffs were patent monetization entities
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