6-Hour Program

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Overview

Why you should attend

Post-grant patent proceedings were pursued in record number at the USPTO in 2012. The substantial costs and uncertainty of patent litigation require the development of alternative case management strategies, which at least require consideration of challenging patents at the USPTO. To this end, patent reexamination remains a viable alternative to costly litigation or parallel path to enhance litigation positions. Yet due to the public outcry for even more robust USPTO post issuance proceedings, the America Invents Act (AIA) introduced entirely new options such as Post-Grant Review, Inter Partes Review (which replaced inter partes patent reexamination), Derivation Proceedings, and a special post-grant review for Covered Business Method patents. Going forward into 2013, it is anticipated that the USPTO will become an even more prominent battleground for patent disputes.

Potential benefits of post-grant patent challenges to defendants include:

  • Provide an opportunity to stay a concurrent litigation
  • Provide a low-cost alternative to district court and/or ITC litigation
  • Facilitate settlement on terms favorable to the defendant
  • Create an intervening rights defense
  • Create additional file history that provides new non-infringement and/or estoppel theories
  • Demonstrate objective evidence of a lack of willfulness
  • Lessen the probability of injunctive relief
  • Demonstrate the “but for” materiality of references applied in an inequitable conduct defense
  • Undermine or prevent damage verdicts with a USPTO invalidity ruling
  • Provide an additional basis on which to obtain a stay of judgment pending appeal

The program is taught by a faculty of judges, preeminent lawyers, and industry leaders who have earned national reputations in patent litigation and in post-grant proceedings at the USPTO.

What you will learn

The program focuses on the role of post-grant USPTO proceedings as component of a litigation strategy, including pre-trial and post-trial options. Although the course will focus on strategic considerations, common procedural traps for the unwary will also be identified. The relative advantages and disadvantages of the various proceedings are explained both from the perspective of the Patentee and Third Party. Perspectives of the judiciary are presented, including case studies of well-known disputes. Insight to the organization, operation and procedures of the USPTO’s Patent Trial and Appeal Board, Central Reexamination Unit, and Office of Patent Legal Administration are discussed.

Who should attend

Patent owners and investors involved in patent litigation or considering the initiation of patent litigation; corporate counsel responsible for managing a patent portfolio and responding to third party inquiries; patent litigators advising clients in disputes that involve or may lead to litigation; advisors, owners, and analysts involved in patent licensing, valuation, sale, or monetization; and, patent professionals representing others before the USPTO in the areas of post grant patent practice.

Credit Details