Patent, Copyright & Trademark: An Intellectual Property Desk Reference

  Author:    Rich Stim
  ISBN:    1413306462
  Sales Rank:    48507
  Published:    2007-06-15
  Publisher:    NOLO
  # Pages:    574
  Binding:    Paperback
  Avg. Rating:    4.0 based on 12 reviews
  Used Offers:    9 from $22.40
  Amazon Price:    $26.39
  (Data above last updated:  2008-07-05 11:25:47 EST)
  
  
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Patent, Copyright & Trademark: An Intellectual Property Desk Reference
  
The most concise and comprehensive explanations of intellectual property law available!

Whether you're an Edison, Faulkner or Jobs, you need Patent, Copyright & Trademark.

Intellectual property law has rapidly produced its own language. But don't count on understanding it right off the bat -- the language baffles lawyers and lay folk alike. Whether you're an inventor, designer, writer or programmer, you need to understand the language of intellectual property law to intelligently deal with such issues as:

  • who owns creative works or valuable information
    how these owners can protect and enforce their ownership rights
  • how disputes between intellectual-property owners can be resolved
  • how ownership rights can best be transferred to others
  • and many more

    With this essential guide, you will:
  • get clear overviews of relevant laws
  • understand the different kinds of protection offered by patents, copyrights, trademarks and trade secrets -- and which apply to your work
  • get a plain-English definition of every term you're likely to come across
  • find the information you need, quickly and easily -- all entries are organized by topic and extensively cross-referenced

    The 9th edition is completely updated to provide the latest law and court decisions, new definitions and additional resources. It also covers new topics such as "patent trolls" and the Supreme Court's decision in KSR v. Teleflex.
  • The laws covering intellectual property--those products of the imagination with commercial value, such as fictional writing, software designs, product names, and mechanical inventions--have long boggled the minds of the uninitiated. With the advent of online commerce and publishing, the issues have only gotten more confusing. The new edition of Patent, Copyright & Trademark: A Desk Reference to Intellectual Property Law, by attorney Stephen Elias, offers plain-English explanations and practical advice on this increasingly complex topic. Elias covers everything from the laws themselves to their specific applications in different media.
                      Reader Reviews 1 - 8 of 8                 
      
      
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    02-10-08 5 1\1
    (Hide Review...)  Good foundational book on Intellectual Property
    Reviewer Permalink
    This book is an excellent first place to go for people wanting a foundational knowledge of Intellectual Property. In addition to the basics it provides surprisingly comprehensive overview of the three major areas of IP. Making this book an excellent one, and not just a very good one, it also discusses trade secrets. As with most books on Intellectual Property, there is little in the book about who owns patents, how one can transfer ownership to another party, or how one can inadvertantly lose ownership. Overall, though, an excellent book for its stated purpose.
    (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-05 09:54:14 EST)
    12-28-07 4 (NA)
    (Hide Review...)  We needed this
    Reviewer Permalink
    We needed this for our small buisness. We bought this for a reference book it is a good one...
    (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-02-10 11:52:58 EST)
    09-08-07 4 (NA)
    (Hide Review...)  Great Resource
    Reviewer Permalink
    Excellent follow-up to the previous Nolo editions. Layout of the book was not as graphically pleasing, but the information is straightforward and well presented.
    (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-12-28 11:16:33 EST)
    09-24-06 1 0\4
    (Hide Review...)  The book is subpar
    Reviewer Permalink
    I bought this book as a primer reference to patents. What I got was a dictionary of words. This book pretty much is a dictionary without a lot of explanations. Really basic terms also. A lot of basic paraphrasing instead of actual text from the 35 USC manual.
    (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-10-12 16:13:40 EST)
    03-11-06 5 7\7
    (Hide Review...)  Legal Information without the Legalese
    Reviewer Permalink
    This book is easy-to-use and highly detailed with an appealing, bulleted layout and many illustrations that helped to answer most of my basic questions about the four categories of intellectual property (copyright, patents, trademarks and trade secrets). I took a graduate-level library science course on the legal aspects of information and borrowed several books on IP from the library. This Nolo Press book was the one that I kept coming back to and wound up buying. I was glad I waited for the updated 7th edition, which now includes an index. The book is divided into completely logical sections on definitions, statutes, forms and an overview, all of which make this book a joy to read. The text is written in plain English and the entries are cross-referenced and other resources are given. This is a legal book written by lawyers, but the legalese is edited out and only very useful information remains. If you need one basic legal reference book on IP, this is the one you'll keep reaching for.
    (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-10-12 16:13:40 EST)
    09-10-04 4 3\3
    (Hide Review...)  Very Good
    Reviewer Permalink
    This has a lot of detail and organized information that a patent applicant might use. However, it does not provide an overview quite as well as something like "Patents for Beginners" (PfB). For patent applicants, I would recommend getting both books, but someone like a jurist or an expert witness might be better served by PfB.
    (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-10-12 16:13:40 EST)
    09-02-03 5 58\58
    (Hide Review...)  Useful Overview of Major Areas of Intellectual Property Law
    Reviewer Permalink
    Having worked in the field of intellectual property for over 30 years and as an attorney, I was interested to see what other attorneys would decide to put into a desk reference on the subject. I was pleasantly surprised.

    Most business people I meet have a minimal understanding of intellectual property law. As a result, they make fundamental errors that could be easily avoided with a simple foundation in the law. But I didn't know of any place where they could get such a foundation until I read this excellent reference guide.

    Many law students would probably also like to have a simple reference to give them a background in the subject before they start taking courses in the subject. Most attorneys also do not have any law school training in the subject, and they will also benefit from using this reference.

    I was particularly impressed that the cost was modest for a legal reference.

    The basic subjects are trade secrets, copyright, patent and trademark law. In all but patent law, a lay person can make many of the right moves in establishing rights without too much legal help. Patent law requires legal guidance in most areas, but a lay person can also avoid mistakes by understanding some of the common pitfalls that people fall into.

    I was particularly pleased to see that trade secrets were covered well. Most business people do not realize that trade secret protection is often superior to that of copyrights, patents and trademarks. But you have to follow the rules, or your trade secret isn't going to be considered one. I only find about one business person in a hundred who is familiar with these rules.

    Most people will also improve their copyright protection by following this guide.

    In patents, it's very important to document what you've been doing, and I found those references to be very well done.

    As to trademarks, most people misunderstand what can be trademarked and this book clears that point up quite well.

    So think of this book as more than a self-help guide and less than a legal horn book. Naturally, the intricacies of appellate cases aren't fully exposed, but there's enough here to raise fundamental issues in your mind. In each area, you will see sample forms and documents along with directions for how to obtain and file them.

    Nolo also offers an on-line reference that updates the material in this book, so you don't have to take out an extra subscription like most legal sources require.

    In doing your legal planning, be sure to look at the guide on pages 9-11 to see what forms of intellectual property protection may be available to you. That guide is worth the price of the book alone.

    I was also impressed by the extensive definitions in each subject area. Be sure to read through them all. Without a legal background, you won?t know what you don?t know unless you check these out. Naturally, the primary statutes are also included, for those who do not know how to look them up.

    People who are new to these subjects will also benefit from the many references to other sources, including on-line databases.

    I would advise anyone who tries to differentiate themselves through intellectual endeavors to use this guide to become familiar with the basics of the law.

    After you finish reviewing this book, I suggest that you spend the time to think through how you can strengthen you legal protection of your most valuable forms of intellectual property.

    (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-10-12 16:13:40 EST)
    08-05-03 5 26\31
    (Hide Review...)  Excellent reference
    Reviewer Permalink
    In any profession, you'll generally find two sorts of practitioner: the "elitist" and the "populist". The former looks with disdain on customers/users/clients, the latter wants to inform and empower them.

    In computer programming, for example, the elitists are the "data priests" who think of users as somehow subhuman and refuse to design interfaces that ordinary human beings can operate or even make sense of. The populists are people like Guido van Rossum, developer of the eminently usable programming language Python (and yes, that's a plug).

    There are elitists in the legal profession too, who don't want people to rely on self-help or even to know what the law actually is. Their arguments are usually couched in terms of protecting the public (who, although this is never quite stated explicitly, are presumed to be just too stupid and ignorant to make informed, intelligent decisions without lawyers to tell them they're wrong). But the effect -- as with any legally protected cartel -- is simply to close off the legal profession to anyone who hasn't got enough time and money to jump through the hoops, thereby jacking up attorneys' fees.

    That's where Nolo Press comes in. I like Nolo a lot; for thirty years they've been doing business in direct opposition to "legal elitism", by trying to bring reliable legal information directly to their customers and, if not always obviating the need for an attorney, at least giving people a solid foundation for _deciding_ whether to pay for a lawyer. Indeed, their website contains a lot of useful information that you can get _free_; I can't post the URL here but it's "nolo" with the usual suffix.

    And I think highly of the sixth edition of their desktop reference on intellectual property law. I'm forty years old and in my fourth year of law school, specializing in IP law, and with a couple of misgivings to be stated shortly, I think this is a fine, fine reference.

    It covers the four major areas of intellectual property law: trade secrets, copyrights, patents, and trademarks. There's one big section devoted to each of these areas; each section includes a short introductory discussion in Q&A format, a big fat alphabetical glossary, and the actual text of the relevant (federal) statutes.

    The discussion is clear and intelligible, and the sixth edition is updated with up-to-the-minute accounts of stuff on which the ink is barely dry -- the latest on the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, for example, and the Supreme Court's March 2003 decision in the _Victoria's Secret_ trademark dilution case. This isn't just a nice self-help reference; it's a volume that law students could probably profit from. (And so could reporters who presume to _write_ on technology law for newspapers and magazines.) The glossaries alone will be helpful in making sense of the sometimes bewildering jargon of IP law.

    The one real oversight I spotted is its failure to deal with state-level "common law copyright" in unfixed works, one of the few sorts of work for which the federal Title 7 _doesn't_ pre-empt state law. Contrary to the opinion even of quite a few lawyers, fixation isn't a requirement for copyright protection; (_authorized_) fixation is specifically a requirement for _federal_ copyright protection. Improvisational works, for example, are still protected under state copyright even though they haven't been "fixed" (and even if they were recorded without the performers' authorization).

    Moreover, I note two misfeatures: the absence of an index, and spotty coverage around the edges of the fields in question.

    This book badly needs an index, or at least an analytical table of contents. [LATER EDIT: The author has written to me to let me know that -- in part owing to this very review -- the book DOES contain an index starting with the seventh edition. So you can ignore the rest of this paragraph.] The alphabetical glossaries are terrific, and they're very useful when you want to look up a specific term or when you just want to browse. But they're nowhere near as handy when you need something specific and you don't already know what it is. A list of contents is needed here. (This isn't as big a drawback as it may sound; the glossaries are sufficiently well cross-referenced that you can open them almost anywhere and follow the "related entries" pointers to the topic you want. But the book isn't as useful as it could be.)

    Then too, the book is a little uneven on subjects that are on the margins of intellectual property law. There's some stuff on the law of unfair competition, but there isn't much on privacy and publicity rights. Nor is there much on the law of _protectible information_ in general.

    I wasn't, for example, able to find even a single mention of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. Granted, this statute isn't exactly front-and-center in IP law. But it certainly bears heavily on a subject on which I expect many users to look to this volume for enlightenment: the use of computers, the Internet, and the World Wide Web in business, the associated risks to the security and integrity of information, and what the law says about them. The CFAA and a few other nearby subjects deserve at least a passing mention, even if only to warn the reader that they exist and this book _doesn't_ cover them.

    The book still gets five stars, though. It's an excellent, excellent reference. I expect readers (perhaps especially businesspeople) will be able to read it and come away with a good understanding of this highly complex area of the law -- enough, at least, to decide intelligently whether and when to pay a lawyer, if not to dispense with one altogether in every case. It is, in short, every bit as clear and useful as we expect Nolo Press books to be.

    If you're in business and you need to get a handle on IP law, try this one. And if you're a law student planning to specialize in IP law or -- especially -- to take some classes that presume a little _background_ in IP law, you may find this more useful than one of the Nutshell books.
    (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-10-12 16:13:40 EST)
      
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