Business

Protecting Intellectual Property

You may not realize it, but you deal with intellectual property (IP) every day. If you own a website, that website is your intellectual property. The way you deal with IP — yours and others — can directly impact the success of your business.

What’s Intellectual Property?

Registered patent attorney Patricia McQueeney of Brinkleymcnerney.com explains, “Intellectual property can be broken down into four types: patents, trademarks, copyrights and trade secrets.”

  • A patent deals with a completely new invention – a useful item, a novel look on an already-existing item or a new plant species. Depending on the type, patents are good for between 14 and 20 years. The scope of a patent is defined by its claims. Each claim is only one sentence but the claims of a patent may go on for pages, which is why it’s best to hire an experienced patent attorney.

  • A trademark designates an object’s source; it’s a mark or name associated with quality. In trademark law, arbitrary names are encouraged (i. e. Kodak, Kleenex, Apple). The less your trademark describes your product, the stronger it is. Conversely, if you sell film, using “Film” as a trademark won’t hold up in court.

Again, there are common-law trademarks but they’re hard to prove and offer less protection than a state or federal trademark.

  • Copyrights protect creative expression – websites, songs. There is such a thing as common-law copyright, which means that when you create something, you automatically have certain rights. The difficulty lies in proving you were first to create it.

For only $30 you can register with the U.S. Copyright Office. The forms aren’t complicated, and once they’ve been filed you have a lot more protection in an infringement suit. The copyright is good for your lifetime and 70 years after you die, and you can make it assignable to anyone upon your death.

Copyrights don’t protect the information found in a book or on a website, but they protect the layout and presentation. For websites, registering your first and last 25 pages of code protects the code for your entire website and the creative expression of your display screens.

  • Trade secrets are governed by state laws and vary from state to state. They encompass a variety of things from formulas (think Coca-Cola) to customer lists to product sources. Many companies have contracts that expressly prohibit their employees and vendors from giving away any information they’re exposed to while doing business with them. Commonly known facts aren’t considered trade secrets so it’s good to be discreet with your valuable information.

Get it in writing

It’s important to remember that copyrights and patents give rights to the person who comes up with the idea, not the company that employs that person. So if you hire someone to design your website, the creator owns the design unless you have the copyright assigned to you in writing. That’s why many business owners state in their employee agreements that any works or useful inventions created on company time with company funds will be assigned to the company. Cautions McQueeney, “You don’t own it unless you get it written over to you.”

PEC Staff
PEC Staff
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