Difference Between Copyrights & Trademarks

Copyrights and trademarks are both essential tools for protecting intellectual property, but they serve distinct purposes. A copyright safeguards original works of authorship, such as literary, artistic, and musical creations, providing exclusive rights to reproduce, distribute, and display the work. It protects the expression of ideas, rather than the ideas themselves. On the other hand, Read More

Recipes & Trademarks

With certain products, it’s not possible to reverse engineer the product. For example, with Coca-Cola, everybody has tried, everybody knows what’s in Coca-Cola, but they don’t know how to get there. And so people come close, other people not so close, but the formula has never been revealed, and it’s gone decades and decades beyond Read More

Protect Your Trade Secrets

A trade secret is quite different from a patent. A patent is a contract between you and the government, where the government says, if you tell us enough about your invention, so that your patent, after it expires, can show people how to make your invention, then for 20 years from the date of filing, Read More

Why Should I get a Copyright?

Securing a copyright is paramount for safeguarding your creative works and ensuring that you have exclusive rights over their use and distribution. By obtaining a copyright, you establish legal proof of ownership, which is essential for protecting your intellectual property from unauthorized reproduction, distribution, or modification. This not only allows you to control how your Read More

Supplemental Register

Ideally, your trademark is a unique word or design. But what are your options if the mark is descriptive or contains geographic terms? This is where the Supplemental Register may be an option. The Supplemental Register serves as a gateway for trademarks not yet eligible for the Principal Register’s full protection. It offers valuable benefits Read More

What is an IP Contract?

An inventor is someone who has taken part in either the concept or the reduction to practice that is the making of an invention, which is completely different than ownership. Most inventions, in fact, are not owned by the inventor. The inventor is most likely an engineer that works for a big company and he’s Read More

The Role of an IP Attorney

Well, there certainly is a lot of back and forth with the patent office, dealing with examiners, sometimes by telephone, most of the time in writing, but the art of a patent application is the drafting of the claims, and this is so important, and I think that local inventors, small inventors don’t really understand Read More

Trademark Likelihood of Confusion

The concept of Trademark Likelihood of Confusion is fundamental in the world of intellectual property law. Essentially, it refers to the risk that consumers may confuse one trademark with another due to similarities in appearance. Sound, meaning, or overall impression. This confusion can lead to a variety of negative outcomes, including loss of business, dilution Read More

Patents 101

When people come into us, we give them a little bit of, kind of patents 101, and we tell them what it’s all about. And even with companies, even sometimes larger companies, we will actually do a presentation, and we want these people to understand what patents are all about. Engineers, for example, often are Read More

The Madrid Protocol

If I go with what is called the Madrid Protocol, I present my U.S. trademark, present it to Madrid, they go ahead, they make an international registration. Now the international registration, it means they review the form, make sure it qualifies as far as physically what’s in the application, that all the components are there. Read More