Skip Page Banner  
Skip Main Content

Patent Law and Practice, Seventh Edition (eBook)

PatentLawPracticeE_h


Also Available in Print

$169.99
Add To Cart

   

eBook Features
This eBook is ready for download on the iPhone®, iPad®, and iPod® touch using the iBooks app and on the computer with iTunes. It must be read on an iOS device.
User-friendly features include the ability to:

  • Search, highlight, and take notes to easily find commonly used references
  • Copy and paste text, including from tables and footnotes
  • Fully display, expand, and search tables
  • View in-line pop-up footnotes
  • Display physical page numbers within iBooks

About the Book 
The source judges use to review patent issues

Patent Law and Practice was first published by the Federal Judicial Center in 1988 as a one-volume introduction to patent law for federal judges. Since that time, the judiciary has come to rely on this reference for up-to-date information on patent law as it has evolved in response to the courts, Congress, and changes in practice at the Patent and Trademark Office (PTO). Patent Law and Practice has been cited by courts more than 100 times since its initial publication, most notably in the Supreme Court decision, Markman v. Westview Instruments.

Now, with the all-new Seventh Edition, the authors provide the latest analysis of the most recent case law and new legislation, including the Leahy-Smith America Invents Act, enacted into law on September 16, 2011. This law encompasses sweeping changes to the U.S. patent code, including a move to the “first-inventor-to-file” priority system and new options for testing the validity of an issued patent. The handbook also has been updated with discussion of the most important patent law decisions from the past three years, including:

  • Bilski v. Kappos (2010, S. Ct.), in which the Supreme Court addressed the scope of patentable subject matter, paving the way for resolution of validity challenges in the fields of business method patents, computer software, and biotechnology inventions
  • i4i v. Microsoft (2011, S. Ct.), in which the Supreme Court established the burden of proof for allegations of patent invalidity and explained how to address in litigation the problem of prior art that was not considered by the PTO during prosecution of the patent in suit
  • Therasense v. Becton Dickinson (2011, Fed. Cir.), in which the Federal Circuit redefined the defense that a patent may be unenforceable because of inequitable conduct, overturning 30 years of decisional law
  • Uniloc v. Microsoft (2011, Fed. Cir.) and a series of related decisions beginning with Lucent v. Gateway (2009, Fed. Cir.), in which the Federal Circuit began to establish new standards for asserting and proving reasonable royalty damages

The Seventh Edition covers these decisions, as well as the Federal Circuit’s continued evolution of the law relating to claim construction, invalidity for anticipation and obviousness, the statutory disclosure and claiming requirements, indirect infringement, and the availability of injunctive relief for patent infringement.

Practitioners will use the latest edition of Patent Law and Practice to:

  • Cite cases and sources relied upon by the bench
  • Direct the judge to a specific page in the guide—for a key case or explanation
  • Understand, and specifically address, procedural issues facing the court

To simplify research in the large volume of Federal Circuit decisions and cut down on research time, the treatise’s footnotes have been revised and shortened to provide only the relevant leading cases and recent examples of how the Federal Circuit has applied the law.

Learn more about the print version.

 

Pay Your Books Invoice

Closed for Inventory
Sept. 30th - Oct. 4th
Rush orders, please call 703.341.5763.
 Thank you.

10% discount on Web Orders. Use priority code BNAWEB13.