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Patently American: How the U S can sharpen its innovative edge

Technology and Innovation As the American economy struggles to recover from the Great Recession, it may have no better medicine than Article 1, Section 8, Clause 8 of the United States Constitution. Unanimously approved by the Constitutional Convention in 1787, the “patent clause” authorized the new government to “promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries.” This conception of intellectual-property rights was strongly supported by James Madison and Thomas Jefferson, who believed that ideas would be the engine of American wealth creation and that legal protection for them was therefore essential. After all, unlike the British, Americans had little accumulated capital; their most important resource would be their entrepreneurial spirit. Congress soon passed the Patent Act of 1790, which created a patent office, and Jefferson himself served as the first

Ericsson-Samsung patent deal ends legal disputes

Ericsson-Samsung patent deal ends legal disputes - Mobile World Live 07 MAY 2021 Ericsson worked out a multi-year cross-licensing patent deal with Samsung covering the sale of network infrastructure and handsets, with the settlement ending all ongoing legal disputes between the companies. The global agreement covers patents relating to the full range of cellular technologies including 5G from 1 January 2021. In a statement, Ericsson said the agreement ends complaints filed by both companies before the US International Trade Commission (ITC) as well as the ongoing lawsuits in several countries, noting details are confidential and will not be disclosed. In February 2021, the ITC announced it would investigate an ongoing dispute between the two companies over 4G and 5G patent infringements, after Ericsson filed a complaint the previous month.

Trade Court Backs Denial Of Duties On Plastic Resin Imports

ADVERTISEMENT Trade Court Backs Denial Of Duties On Plastic Resin Imports Law360 (May 6, 2021, 6:00 PM EDT) Plastic resin imports from five countries escaped anti-dumping duties sought by domestic producers when a federal trade court backed the U.S. International Trade Commission s findings that a domestic supply shortage, and not low prices, caused the surge in imports. After unearthing conflicting evidence in a similar determination the commission made last year, U.S. Court of International Trade Judge Gary Katzmann upheld the commission s revised finding that PET resin, a polymer used to make plastic bottles, wasn t being sold at unfairly low prices.

Daewoong Pharma s Nabota: US ITC scraps import ban on botulinum toxin products

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