1. (for senior management & stakeholders) "IP Trends in Asia"This Kat opted for the one in the middle: Entrepreneurs and IP Managers: Seminar on IP Rights Registration in a Constantly Changing World, Part B: Corporate Patents Management, Idit Ophir (Arad Ophir) and moderated by Sandy Colb (Sanford T. Colb & Co.)
2. (for entrepreneurs and IP managers) Seminar on IP Rights Registration in a Constantly Changing World, Part B: Corporate Patents Management
3. (for entrepreneurs and IP professionals) Trends and Rulings Regarding Service Inventions
First to speak was Noam Mushkin (Perrigo) on "Managing a global corporate patent portfolio". Noam gave a brisk and effective overview of how a generic pharma company gets a product to market, looking not just at IP factors but at outside issues that have an impact on IP -- particularly regulatory issues. If you couldn't tell your ANDA from your DMF, or didn't know that your QBD emerged from your PDR, you'd have been pretty well KO'd.
Noam painted a picture of a constantly changing task of reaching a moving target, in which there is a constant input of commercial, technical and legal information, including the impact of third party patents that address means of new product testing and putting products into use. Product development has to be carefully managed, for example to take testing and safety data from one territory where there is a brand and deploying it another where there is no brand. Ultimately what one needs is a well-integrated multidisciplinary task-force.
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| Europe: more languages than colours |
Micaela told us a tale of the bewilderment of some European patent examiners who were astonished that some patent applicants weren't prepared to press to grant and get their applications translated after receiving their notice of allowance: they had to persuaded that sometimes a patent that looks quite exciting, an indeed commercially viable, when it's applied for but was no longer of much use by the time the grant approached.
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| An EPO examiner reacts to a PPH search report |
Yoav Sin-Malia (Senior Patent Examiner in the pharmaceutical sector of the Israel Patent Office) then presented a paper, "Different search approaches by applicants and the Israeli Patent Office", covering accelerated examination and reduced application fees for small applicants. He warned that broad claims in a patent might make an adequate search impossible to perform. Next, Yoav reviewed some of the major advanced search databases -- STN, Thomson Innovation and EPOQUE Net and Questel -- and their areas of particular value. There are different types of search, he pointed out, and that of the patent examiner, for example, is limited to the area of the claims while that of the applicant is not. In conclusion, a good search opinion was of great value in taking the application on to its second stage.
Idit Ophir (Arad Ophir) then mentioned the types of patent search and their functions: novelty, patentability, freedom to operate, validity/infringement, legal status and family information, and so on. Most of these do not concern the patent examiner at all. Even for the applicant who doesn't have a lot of money, it's worth spending plenty to ensure a good search, since it can save a fortune.
Sharon Hausdorff (Deputy General Patent Counsel, Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd) then addressed "Due diligence". When it comes to due diligence, "You're the legal counsel and your job is to suck the fun out of everything", but it's tough for lawyers: "the time available for due diligence is always inversely proportional to the value of the deal", but deal-breakers must be rooted out -- even if it's only something as trivial as the earliest date on which a competing product can lawfully enter the market. You can't do due diligence properly without knowledge of exactly what the facts of the deal and its subject matter are; if not, you can't identify those issues that are truly relevant from those that are not.
Due diligence can't be stretched from one territory to another: "what's good to go in the US may not be good to go in the UK". Likewise, apparently 'safe' IP might come with strings attached, especially where the invention is supported by public funding or constitutes a service invention in which rights are disputed or compensation payable. Doing due diligence requires some degree of understanding of the technology covered by the target IP: a vendor's description of the gap between its patents and the prior art can't be taken at face value, however earnestly it's expressed.
The regulatory environment must also be appreciated, especially since different regulatory authorities have a different tolerance of what is allowed or not. "Diligence is the mother of good luck", said Benjamin Franklin -- and that applies equally to due diligence. Do it carefully, but trust your instincts and be prepared to take that risk.












