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Neil Wilkof

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Feb 11, 2016, 4:51:58 PM2/11/16
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Thursday, 11 February 2016

Thursday Thingies


The cat as patent star--It is rare that the IPKat and its ilk find themselves part of a patent appeal. For that reason, the IPKat thanks Kat friend Sam Adams of Müller-Boré & Partner for bringing to our attention
paragraph 18 of EPO Technical Board of Appeal 3.5.06, given on November 17, 2015, which reads as follows:
“The independent claims of the auxiliary request specify, in addition to those of the main request, that the user interacting with the virtual electronic pet moves a cursor back and forth over the display of the virtual pet and, in response to this movement and varying with it, receives as haptic sensation a periodic vibration. The claim further specifies that the virtual pet in question is meant to "be" a cat and the haptic feedback to evoke a "purring sensation".”
Apparently, the question of “to be or not to be” is not limited to Shakespeare. Kat readers who wish to find out more are invited to read the entire decision. 

Berenika Depo Prize--An IP story of a somewhat different kind has reached the IPKat from Mr. Justyn Depo, whose daughter and IKat friend, Berenika Depo, passed away suddenly in 2010, as reported by the IPKat. The Berenika family together with the Nyatri Foundation in Poland decided to honor her memory by establishing the Berenika Depo prize for talented children at the Bon Children’s Home, located in Dolanji, India. The Bon Children's Home is described on its web site as follows:
"The Bön Children’s Home provides housing, food, clothing, medical care and education to approximately 300 Bön children, aged 4 – 19 years. The Bon Children’s Home has a staff of twelve to care for the children.The children study at the local school made available by the Indian government. The children receive cultural education in their native Bon culture and Tibetan language, and also study Hindi, English, and general education courses."
Mr. Depo reports that the two winners of the first Berenika Depo Prize are Mr. Nyima Tsering (first prize) and Miss Bhirikuti Sheesh (second prize). The IPKat congratulates the winners.

Posted by Neil Wilkof at 1:41:00 pm 0 comments

Neil Wilkof

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Feb 16, 2016, 12:31:07 PM2/16/16
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Tuesday, 16 February 2016

In memoriam of Justice Antonin Scalia: something personal and something professional

 

Anyone connected to the world of law is no doubt aware of the passing away over the weekend of Justice Antonin Scalia of the United States Supreme Court. Much has https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-GP5KBZ4O3rQ/VsMkFPpbu2I/AAAAAAAAEJo/k4JZu6ueMRM/s200/scalia.jpgbeen written about Justice Scalia’s zealous form of judicial conservatism, embodied in his notion of Constitutional originalism, wherein he resisted extending the scope of the Constitution beyond the meaning imparted to it when it was enacted at the end of the 18th century. Also noted was his rapier pen, aggressive judicial questioning in Court hearings and his willingness to dissent to judgments that were contrary to his judicial world view. This Kat has no intention to add to this discussion, which Kat readers can find in abundance on a myriad of internet sites. Rather, he asks Kat readers to permit him a brief moment to reflect on Justice Scalia, the law school professor, when this Kat was a student at the University of Chicago Law School in the late 1970’s, and to consider Justice Scalia's attitude towards IP. 

As for those University of Chicago days, the shadow of Richard Posner and his law and economics orientation was broadly cast over the law school. The [then] Professor Scalia was a bit of a lone intellectual force, conservative in a sui generis fashion. But for this Kat, it was not his razor-sharp mind or tongue that was most attractive (goodness, the law school was replete with faculty brilliance), but the special attraction of his personality. In a word, Professor Scalia was approachable and affable, and this Kat took advantage on a number of occasions to meet him in his office to schmooze (maybe he would have used a different term, being the son of a Sicilian-born academic specializing in Romance languages) on various topics of mutual interest. In an environment where intellect seemed to trump personality nearly at every turn, Professor Scalia was a welcome exception. Mind you, it was not all love and kisses. This Kat recalls Professor Scalia upbraiding us for less than stellar proofreading of citations—"You have to do your donkey work." He was right. The force of his personality appears to have carried him throughout his career, and his personal friendship with fellow Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, his polar opposite as a member of the Court’s liberal wing, is legendary. 

https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-ibhyOHvzHsk/VsMkg2zHFXI/AAAAAAAAEJs/plAGf0nOWdQ/s200/u%2Bof%2Bc%2Blaw%2Bschool.jpg

And what about Justice Scalia and IP? In those days, IP was a backwater field, not only at the University of Chicago, but probably at most law schools. There was a single elective course offering in IP, which was not given by Professor Scalia. This Kat has read a number of pieces in memoriam, but none emphasizes his position on IP. It would seem that his IP did not play a major role in his thinking as he applied his staunch conservatism to a variety of subjects.

Against that background, this Kat found particularly interesting Justice Scalia's decision in the case of Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Samara Brothers, Inc., which he wrote for a unanimous Court. There, the Court held, reversing the judgment below of the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, that in an action for infringement of unregistered trade dress/product design under section 43(a) of the Lanham Act, proof of secondary meaning is necessary. The decision was characterized by an absence of the verbal fire and brimstone that characterized Justice Scalia's opinions in so many other areas. Rather, he emphasizes the importance of a balancing of interests in rejecting the claim that inherent distinctiveness is appropriate, writing that—

The fact that product design almost invariably serves purposes other than source identification not only renders inherent distinctiveness problematic; it also renders application of an inherent-distinctiveness principle more harmful to other consumer interests. Consumers should not be deprived of the benefits of competition with regard to the utilitarian and esthetic purposes that product design ordinarily serves by a rule of law that facilitates plausible threats of suit against new entrants based upon alleged inherent distinctiveness.

Scalia the staunch ideologue seems to have gone missing.

That said, this Kat was struck by Justice Scalia ’s joining liberal justices Kagan, Ginsburg, Sotomayor and Breyer (as well as centrist Justice Kennedy), in the 6-3 decision given by the Supreme Court in June 2015 in the case of Kimble v. Marvel Entertainment. The issue in that case was whether the Court should overrule its decision given in a case 50 years ago (Brulotte v. Thys Co.), that a patentee cannot continue to receive royalties post-expiry. The majority ruled, based on stare decisis, that the moving party had failed to meet the high bar for disturbing the Court's previous decision on this issue. This Kat has surmisedthat the four liberal justices had been driven by the liberal hostility to patent overreach. In this Kat's view, such a concern would not have troubled Justice Scalia. Rather, he saw the Court's previous decision as consistent with the understanding of the patent right when it was made part of the US Constitution. To now rule otherwise would do harm to this original meaning. Here, at least, IP and Justice Scalia's originalism might have found common, albeit tacit ground.

Posted by Neil Wilkof at 1:55:00 pm

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