Measuring the Impact of Patent Reform on Life Sciences Companies

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Kristin Jones, President and CEO of the Indiana Health Industry Forum, has an editorial piece in the latest Indianapolis Business Journal on the impact of the new U.S. patent law on life sciences companies:

For others, this act has been labeled an “innovation killer,” handing over market control to large corporations, driving inventors and potential entrepreneurs back into their labs to toil in secret, and basically halting America’s leadership in research and development.

For Indiana’s life sciences sector, it both raises hopes and creates challenges for continued growth.

For large or small companies, the product development life cycle for a biological therapy comes with a lot of risk. It can take a decade or more and over $1 billion to bring a product to market, and the product can fail at pretty much any point in that process. For the majority of the time in development, a company’s intellectual property is its primary asset.

For larger companies, that risk is spread across multiple products (the company’s pipeline); for smaller companies, everything may depend on the success or failure of a single molecule or protein. Large or small, intellectual property plays a huge role in a life sciences company’s valuation and business strategy.

Check out IBJ.com for the full story.

Indiana Copyright Litigation Update – Jeral Tidwell v. Raw International

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Jeral Tidwell v. Raw International, LLC et al

Plaintiff Jeral Tidwell is a Kentucky-based artist who accuses Defendant of copying his artwork on motorcycle helmets without authorization. See the Complaint (below) for images.

Court Case Number: 4:11-cv-00137-RLY-TAB
File Date: Wednesday, November 23, 2011
Plaintiff: Jeral Tidwell
Plaintiff Counsel: Christopher A. Bates of Seiller Waterman LLC
Defendant: Raw International, LLC, VSJ, Ltd.
Cause: Copyright Infringement
Court: Southern District of Indiana
Judge: Judge Richard L. Young
Referred To: Magistrate Judge Tim A. Baker

Stories from the Week that Was – 11/13-11/19/11

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Stories from the Week that Was – 11/13-11/19/11

Press Russia on intellectual property: US lawmakers

Criminal Case Glut Impedes Civil Suits

Picking Brand Names in China Is a Business Itself

The Entrepreneurial Generation

The NLRB’s Obsession with Social Media Continues

Viacom so devastated by piracy that CEO gets $50 million raise

Woman decapitated after anti-crime blog, police say

Attorneys seek to auction Righthaven copyrights

Artists Sue CBS, CNET, for Promoting and Profiting from Piracy

SOPA and Protect IP: What Legal Nightmares Are Made of

Number of 90-plus people likely to quadruple by 2050

Are Digital Resale Markets Legal? Should They Be?

“Humanity is acquiring all the right technology for all the wrong reasons.” -R. Buckminster Fuller

Purdue School of Engineering and Technology at IUPUI offers new Sustainable Technologies Certificate

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The Purdue School of Engineering and Technology at IUPUI recently announced a new “Sustainable Technologies Certificate” available to help students prepare for the changing green job market. This certificate is designed to address a growing need for professionals who can contribute to the green workforce with knowledge in sustainable practices in current technologies. The Sustainable Technologies Certificate is useful to students who want to have knowledge in areas of green building, renewable energies and sustainable design.

Here’s a link to the school’s other certificate programs.

Source: Purdue School of Engineering and Technology at IUPUI

Indianapolis Among First Cities to Get AT&T 4G Network

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On November 20,  Indianapolis will become one of the first cities in the U.S. to get access to AT&T’s 4G LTE network. The 4G network is expected to provide broadband speeds as much as 10 times faster than 3G networks.

The other 5 cities to receive 4G are Charlotte, Kansas City, Las Vegas, Oklahoma City, and San Juan, Puerto Rico. AT&T hopes to cover 15 additional markets by the end of November.