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Intellectual Property

2000
"Intellectual property" (IP) is a generic legal term for patents, copyrights, and trademarks, all of which provide legal rights to protect ideas, the expression of ideas, and the inventors of such ideas (1). Intellectual property has many of the characteristics of real property (houses, buildings, and so forth); intellectual property can be bought ...
Michael Handler, Bryan Mercurio
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Acceptable Intellectual Property

Journal of Molecular Biology, 2002
Roughly three decades ago, the political dimensions of decision making about the technological hazards embedded in contemporary societies became publicly visible, provoking the emergence of a new politics of risk. Public controversies about what constituted “acceptable risk,” and who should decide and how, proliferated in a wide range of technical ...
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Intellectual Property

GEOPHYSICS, 2007
This book examines the history of the concepts of intellectual property and the current state of U.S. and international intellectual property law. In this timely and readable volume, law professor Aaron Schwabach explores the three traditional categories of intellectual property—copyright, patent, and trademark.
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Intellectual Property

GEOPHYSICS, 2009
The Intellectual Property department in each issue of Geophysics provides U.S. patent abstracts, published patent abstracts of U.S. patent applications, and published abstracts filed under the Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT).
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Intellectual Property Rights

Library Hi Tech, 2007
PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to provide an overview of intellectual property justifications and the basics of intellectual property law.Design/methodology/approachThe paper examines intellectual property rights, discussing such areas as: copyright protection, patents, trademarks, trade secrets and common and current misconceptions ...
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Intellectual Property

GEOPHYSICS, 2006
Abstract Intellectual property (IP) rights often constitute a corporation’s key assets – its “family jewels” so to speak. Thus any dispute over these rights is usually taken very seriously. As a result, IP lawyers often have particularly strong feelings with respect to the relative costs and benefits of arbitration related to patents ...
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Intellectual property or intellectual (im)property?

2007
This paper uses the term 'intellectual (im)property' as a rhetorical device to conceptualize and linguistically trouble the discursive and legal entity, 'intellectual property.' It begins by examining the contextual background for recent changes in the legal, political and economic arenas of 'intellectual property' and copyright regimes.
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Intellectual Property

GEOPHYSICS, 2014
The Intellectual Property department in each issue of Geophysics provides U.S. patent abstracts, published patent abstracts of U.S. patent applications, and published abstracts filed under the Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT).
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Intellectual Property

GEOPHYSICS, 2013
The Intellectual Property department in each issue of Geophysics provides U.S. patent abstracts, published patent abstracts of U.S. patent applications, and published abstracts filed under the Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT).
openaire   +1 more source

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