Several ways to protect a website

How does one protect a website with great functionality and excellent design? The default is to obtain copyright on the expressive elements of the website. However, these other means are also used:

Utility patents can secure innovative functionality as a method/algorithm. For example, Netflix obtained this patent to secure the way its website guides users to create lists and queues for renting items.

Design patents can secure any ornamental or aesthetic design features on a website. For example, Google obtained this design patent on its clean search interface design.

Trademarks can secure any distinctive names, symbols or icons that are displayed on a website. Twitter does this, for example, by trademarking its stylized blue bird, the words “tweet” and “retweet” and its iconic “t” shaped logo. All of these are then used on the website.

Independent Designers: Here’s a Powerful Tool to Combat Knock-Offs

I’m always troubled when I hear stories about independent designers who are ripped off by knock-off artists, large retail chains and unscrupulous exporters who take advantage of low-cost manufacturing costs to catch a free ride from a designer’s work.

Reporter Christina Binkley wrote an interesting article on this very topic in The Wall Street Journal on April 29. The article discusses how the small, independent makers of the popular Shashi bracelet saw their unique fashion accessory imitated and sold for a fraction of the cost by a large corporate retailer shortly after the product gained mass appeal.

Innovators often fall victim to this type of intellectual property theft as free riders imitate a design and exploit a cost-based advantage that erodes the original design’s exclusivity, leading to brand erosion and foregone sales. From numerous articles I have read, it seems that this happens all too often to designers, and that all they can do is throw their arms up and accept this sorry state of affairs. As The Wall Street Journal article reports, most designers believe that the only response is to keep designing and hope their new creations will keep them above water.

I’d like to offer designers another solution based on strategic knowledge of intellectual property. Designers can register and protect their designs as numerous forms of intellectual property (IP), including trademarks, design patents, copyrights and trade dress. The Wall Street Journal article mentions this fact and discusses how these IP assets rarely prevent the flood of copycats.

The Wall Street Journal article, however, does not discuss a little-known procedure that IP owners can initiate that could offer them a powerful shield in their arsenal. The procedure is IP recordation with the U.S. Customs and Border Enforcement Authorities.

The process is actually quite simple. After you have registered your IP as a trademark, design patent, copyright or trade dress, all you need to do is file a short form with Customs and pay a $190 fee. The form is extremely simple and asks the IP owner to provide a registration number, describe the intellectual property, list parties authorized to use the mark, and provide an image of the intellectual property.

To access a screen shot of the actual form, click here.

Once your IP is recorded with Customs, you may then notify the office of any suspected parties that may be importing goods that infringe your IP. Customs may then decide to seize and impound the knock-off goods at any U.S. port while it conducts an infringement assessment. Impoundment creates a difficult scenario for the alleged infringers, including the foreign manufacturer and the domestic importers, which may include distributors and retailers. The procedure creates a cost for all these parties, buys the designer precious time to retain exclusivity for their designs (especially important when the design in question ties into a current fashion trend), and sends a clear signal that the designer means business.

The Wall Street Journal article mentions that designers may send cease-and-desist letters, and this is an important weapon in the independent designer’s arsenal. However, large companies tend not to respect these letters as much as when a big corporation with deep pockets is behind the letter. For an up-and-coming designer, having knock-off goods impounded is a much stronger weapon, especially when many companies that sell imposters have those items manufactured in China or other locations overseas.

Customs provides statistics on what types of goods have been seized under this impoundment procedure. In 2009, it conducted 14,841 separate IP-related seizures with confiscations worth $260.7 million. To view the statistics, click here.

To learn more about the impoundment procedure and how you can take advantage of it to protect your intellectual property, visit the Customs website here.

Designers, please consider using this legal tactic to protect your hard work and creativity under a system of fair trade for everyone.

Entrepreneurship Week at Michigan Tech & Poppy King Video

Michigan Tech joined hundreds of other academic institutions by celebrating entrepreneurship week. This week-long event celebrated the spirit of entrepreneurship on campus by inviting famous and inspiring speakers like Poppy King, author of the entrepreneurship book “Lessons of a Lipstick Queen“.

Too see the video of Poppy’s Library reading and lecture click here:

An on-campus elevator pitch competition drew in 16 entries with thousands of dollars awarded in prize money. The spirit of entrepreneurship is alive and well!

Top 10 Places for Tech Jobs…And Their Patents

U.S. News and World Report lists the Top Ten Places for Tech Jobs. The list includes: Atlanta, Boston, Houston, Huntsville, New Yok, Phoenix, San Diego, San Francisco, Seattle, Washington.  It’s an interesting list, and I thought I would do a patent search for inventors based out of these cities. Here are the results I obtained and a chart that lists the patents for each area. The West Coast is still dominant with the top three and nearly 60% of the total share of patents. The East Coast is not doing too shabby with nearly 20%.  I was surprised by the relatively large share of Houston and Phoenix. It’s nice to see some other areas of the Nation gaining some traction in the high tech sector. My main question is, why didn’t the Research Triangle of the Durham North Carolina area make the list?

patentstats

To the Folks at Twitter: Use Trademarks to Monetize Your Traffic

I just read an article on a packaging blog that mentions how companies are adding their Twitter ID on product packaging. I agree with the article’s conclusion that it’s a smart marketing move that allows a company using this strategy to stay in touch with customers. Pepsi, for example, added “twitter.com/pepsiraw” to its Pepsi Raw beverage packaging.

Here’s an idea for the folks at Twitter, who have been criticized for not monetizing their customer base. Try licensing your trademarks to companies who want to add the Twitter ID to their product packaging. After all, you own the Twitter trademarks! You can license the brand name and logo for premium royalties, in my opinion.

I ran a quick search and found six live trademarks federally registered to Twitter.

Recession is the Perfect Time to Innovate

“Recessions signal end of an era; out goes the old way of doing things and room is made for the entrepreneurs to come with new innovative ideas.”

This is according to Kanwal Rekhi, a legendary Silicon Valley entrepreneur and graduate of Michigan Technological University’s electrical engineering program. Dr. Rekhi made this intriguing statement in an article recently published by SiliconIndia Magazine. In this article, he also compares India with the U.S. in the 70’s and 80’s, when many great start-ups were created.

How to think like an i-preneur

I define an i-preneur as someone who can extract value from intellectual assets. An i-preneur has clear goals and procedures to generate income from their knowledge-based assets.

Understanding how intellectual assets generate wealth is the biggest challenge today’s entrepreneurs face. It is also among the biggest opportunities for wealth creation.

I’ve seen many i-preneurs in action. Here is a brief list of the traits that make them stand out and win in a competitive market:

1. They understand how intellectual assets fit within their big picture strategy.

2. They link up their key intellectual assets with their business model, e.g. licensing, exclusive manufacturing, trademarking and branding.

3. They know how to trade their intellectual assets for valuable resources with critical partners. The best i-preneurs I have met trade their intellectual assets for critical and scarce resources like distribution channels, manufacturing capacity, exclusivity and co-branding opportunities.

4. They understand how to bundle their assets and manage patents, trade secrets, designs, copyrights and trademarks to build a strong overall portfolio.

5. They invest in intellectual assets that have the promise of commercial value.

6. They survey the intellectual landscape to secure a strong position.

7. They understand the ins and outs of the options granted by intellectual rights.

8. They manage their intellectual properties, and never expect others to do so.

9. They realize that intellectual assets are only one piece of a larger business coordination puzzle.

10. They can put a dollar value on their rights.

The Patent Piler

I met Allan Tokuda when I was a Teaching and Research Fellow at Northwestern University. I was helping teach a course on Innovation and Invention in the engineering program. Allan was one of the brighter and more inquisitive students. I knew he had some remarkable qualities when, before class one day, he took out a Rubik’s Cube. He could consistently scramble the puzzle and solve it in less than two minutes.

Allan and I eventually put our minds together to attack the problem of patent claim language and its obfuscating qualities. Allan brought top notch software coding and logical analysis. I brought my knowledge of claims and claim structures and the problems lay people and inventors routinely face when they try to read these sentences. Patent claims, for those new to patents, are the legal definition that describes the property boundaries of a patented invention. Patent claims are what get litigated in court and are located at the very end of the patent document.

The result of our combined efforts is something called the Patent Piler (at this Website). It is an open source project and resource guide that allows anyone to look up a patent by the patent number, search and compare any of that patent claims with other claims in the patent. Here is an image of how it works.

Patent Piler
Patent Piler

The tool, as shown above, highlights the differences between claims in the same patent.

Why is this useful? Oftentimes the most confusing thing about reading patent claims is distinguishing why one claim is different from another. One claim might be different from another due to a difference of just a few words.

The software also does useful things like break down claims by their type, for example methods, products, chemical compounds  or machines. The software also allows you to select independent claims, those claims which stand by themselves and are modified by subsidiary claims, called dependent claims.

Try it out for yourself. If you don’t have a specific patent to analyze, try inputting this curious patent number in the box: 6584450

If you like to code and want to make reading patent claims easier, try improving the source code, it is freely available at this site.

A quick note: for now the software runs great on Firefox, not so great on Internet Explorer.