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#ip lawyer
leadindia011 · 6 months
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I Want The Best Intellectual Property Lawyer Near Me
Because intellectual property law is still developing, there are still many unopened boxes, this area of law has had significant advances, but it also confronts multiple challenges that must be addressed in order to eliminate barriers to its development. 
When it comes to dealing with these sorts of problems, the work of an intellectual property lawyer is extensive and multifaceted, thus an ip lawyer must be competent and recognized for possessing certain fundamental abilities that can assist them flourish in this new area of law.
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Fundamental Skills to Find: Intellectual Property Lawyers
Skills to Deal with Oppositions:
There have been a lot more challenges and opposition since pre-registration. Therefore, legal advice is an all-time requirement for many filing trademark applications. 
The amount of work is increasing considerably more quickly than lawyers as well as law firms can now handle. As a result, both the charges and the margins are relatively substantial.
Being efficient with trademark registration, especially for handling oppositions and dealing with them, is a surefire way to secure an excellent position as an IP lawyer.
Skills for Conducting Due Diligence
Due diligence in this particular domain is specialized. Many significant companies that are for auction, have sought to list, or are even searching for substantial amounts of financing require the service for due diligence in IP. 
The buyer, investor, or financier usually becomes the one who benefits from the services being provided. Therefore, various law firms are frequently used to carry out IP due diligence.
Skills to Calculate the Damages Incurred
Calculating damages in cases of intellectual property infringement is one of the most challenging responsibilities. 
In the majority of instances, if someone's violates your intellectual property, you are entitled to all of your damages in addition to whatever financial losses you may have endured as a consequence of the infringement. 
The need for lawyers who can use financial frameworks to estimate or measure such damages and then prove them in court is always high.
Skills to Register Trademarks that are non-conventional
Usually, any traditional word or image marks the most valuable trademarks. 
For example, there has been an effort to register Mother Teresa's Missionaries of Charity nuns' blue-bordered sarees. Sandesh's textures, etc. are all excellent examples of such trademarks. 
The unusual accomplishment of registering such trademarks can make or break your professional record if you have the expertise and experience involved.
Skills to Draft a Franchising Deal
Franchise deals are becoming more and more prevalent. You probably notice a lot of franchised businesses these days. 
McDonald's, Kidzee, Apple stores, and Cafe Coffee Day are just a few examples that are well-known. These franchisee agreements are very complicated, and the paperwork must be in excessive detail. 
As an ipr lawyer if you work for the franchisor, you may easily bill lakhs for creating and providing advice on a franchisee contract.
Skills to Draft an Application for a Patent
Although only a registered patent agent is allowed to file a patent application, lawyers have developed an ingenious workaround. They managed to have the inventor self-file the application. 
However, regardless of whether or not you meet the requirements for a patent attorney, if you know how to create patent claims, how to plan to guarantee that the application gets approved, or if you can secure provisional patents for applicants, these abilities are uncommon and in high demand. 
If you are an ip attorney, you must undoubtedly make it a point to acquire these abilities.
How to Find the Most Desirable intellectual property rights lawyer?
There are some established ways to find such a desired lawyer for your specific need. They are:
Obtain recommendations from friends, colleagues, or close relatives who have in the past employed an IP attorney.
To get a suggestion for an intellectual property lawyer, you get in touch with your jurisdictions or local bar association to get an exhaustive list of top IP lawyers in your area.
To find a lawyer with expertise in intellectual property that will satisfy your demands, you can make use of online legal services like Lead India to connect with the top ipr attorney in India.
To preserve and defend your IP rights in every area and against rising market competition, you should hire a qualified intellectual property lawyer. 
One can talk to a lawyer from Lead India for any kind of legal support. In India, free legal advice online can be obtained at Lead India. Along with receiving free legal advice online, one can also  ask a legal question to the experts online free through Lead India.
SOURCE:-
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sstevenhawkin · 11 months
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IP lawyer It’s vital for you to protect your business’ Intellectual Property (IP) to ensure long term financial success and brand building, which often a lot of business owners forget. It’s only when the IP of a business has been stolen or under attack, is it really clear how important that is. An IP lawyer can help protect your IP. Get in touch with Intellectual property lawyers sydney.
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sdigion · 1 year
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machel11 · 1 year
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"Meet the IPL 2023 Captains: A Team-by-Team Guide"
The IPL 2023 schedule has been designed to ensure that all the teams play an equal number of matches, and that there is a good balance between home and away matches. This is important to ensure that there is a fair and competitive environment for all the teams, and that the best teams qualify for the playoffs.
One of the key features of the IPL 2023 schedule is the fact that it has been designed to minimize travel for the teams, in order to reduce the risk of COVID-19 transmission. This means that teams will play multiple matches at the same venue before moving on to the next one, rather than criss-crossing the country and increasing the risk of exposure.
Another interesting aspect of the IPL 2023 schedule is the fact that it includes matches in some lesser-known venues, such as the Barabati Stadium in Cuttack and the Sardar Patel Stadium in Ahmedabad. This is part of the BCCI's efforts to promote cricket in different parts of the country, and to ensure that fans in these regions get a chance to watch their favorite teams in action.
In addition to the on-field action, IPL 2023 is also expected to generate significant revenue for the BCCI and its partners. This is due to the huge popularity of the tournament, as well as the fact that it attracts some of the biggest names in world cricket.
Overall, the IPL 2023 schedule promises to be a thrilling and exciting tournament, with some of the best T20 cricket action you're likely to see anywhere in the world. Whether you're a die-hard fan or just a casual observer, there's sure to be something in this year's IPL schedule that will capture your attention and keep you coming back for more.
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lsdavar · 1 year
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toskarin · 3 months
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glass houses and all, I've made bad deals in my time and I've failed to consult IP lawyers in cases where I probably should have, but putting your entire codebase up as collateral on a loan that you're paying more or less entirely through someone else's charity feels like it really shouldn't be fucking Plan A
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Wizards don’t care about copyright but they care deeply about trademark, that’s why so many spells have the wizard’s name in them
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thecurioustale · 10 months
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Art Begets Art and the Law Should Respect This
I believe in the tradition of folk art, which is to say: Borrow liberally and lovingly.
It's a practice we've been mostly sterilized from embracing in our modern corporatist society, where all of the big-name, commonly-recognizable "IPs" are imprisoned behind layer after layer of obnoxious lawyers with nothing better to do than torment the innocent. It's a terrible thing, a deprivation of our cultural oxygen—a crime against art and ethics.
As an artist myself, I often have to thread the needle of building upon the inspiring works of others while still remaining within the letter of our outrageous IP laws. It's something I think about a lot.
In Galaxy Federal, for instance, I mentioned last time that the name "Galaxy Federal" was inspired, among other things, by the mention of the "Galaxy Federal Police" title screen of the original Metroid game. When I was settling on this title for my series, I also found that Galaxy Federal is the trademarked name of a bank. I spent considerable time and mental resources, years ago, to determine to my satisfaction that it is permissible under the law for me to use this title.
I have to do way too much of this bullshit, and I know it'll still be for naught: If I ever do become an even remotely successful author, I'm sure I'll be sued anyway, probably for something I never even realized was an "infringement" despite all my vigilance. Because, at the end of the day, for big corporations and for IP trolls, our IP laws are just a racketeering scheme—a side hustle. I mean, Best Western trademarked the word "seniority." If someone wants to sue you, they're gonna find a way.
I am not really a "from scratch" writer. I don't sit down at a blank page and just come up with prose from first principles. My art is almost always inspired by things that I experience in my life, or by the ideas that result from those experiences. Sometimes—frequently, even—my inspirations come from things that are copyrighted or trademarked. I have written in the past about the influence of the video game The Secret of Mana on me as a kid. Among many other inspirations, that game has a neat sandship in it, and that's why the desert easts of Relance are prevalent with sandships.
Over the years I've become a pro at reinterpreting IP-blocked inspirations into usable, original ones—both in terms of the legal research I've done and the skills I've developed at transforming an IP-blocked inspiration into something usable. I've also become more knowledgeable about what I can get away with quoting directly: Certain things cannot be copyrighted, and trademarks have a finite zone of applicability.
It's all a very needless and skill-intensive ballet to achieve something that should be directly accessible. Obviously, there do need to be limits. As an artist myself, I am keenly aware that I wouldn't want to have no special claim to my own work. But if I were to rewrite our outrageous IP laws—and over the years I have amassed considerable material for a book on this—I would make it vastly easier for artists and the public in general to "borrow liberally and lovingly" from the sources that inspire them. Our current IP laws are like a crime-ridden police state: The security is in all the wrong places and just doesn't work. We could relax the laws considerably without hurting artists, and potentially even tighten them in other respects to better combat trolls and thieves.
But in the meantime, here's my advice: Don't let it daunt you. Dance the friggin' ballet. Get good at transformation. Liberate intellectual property from its prison in spirit if not in substance. And, when you're fearless and/or sufficiently obscure, just straight-up pirate. I think society has a duty to reject unjust laws through word and deed.
I don't usually don my pirate's hat, but I do sometimes. When I published the Prelude in 2015, for a limited time I also published a free companion soundtrack consisting entirely of, gasp, copyrighted music. Nowhere is the horror of our modern IP laws more evident than in the realm of music. What I did was basically create a curated playlist, to help set the mood of the story. I don't know if anyone even availed themselves of that soundtrack, yet for me to license all of those pieces to make my limited-time links lawful would have cost me thousands if not tens of thousands of dollars! All for something that it's possible nobody other than me even listened to. That's a crime against art. And it's a crime against artists. Our draconian IP laws hurt small artists the most. If I had had thousands of fans, I'd have been able to pay to play—and I would have done so, or perhaps I would have spent the equivalent money to hire composers to write an original soundtrack. But, as a nobody-artist and a poor person, whose own Curious Score musical compositions are long in the making, the lawful avenues are all unassailably closed off to me. This too is an injustice, of another sort.
Doing the companion soundtrack was the right thing to do in the tradition of folk art. None of those other artists (or, let's be real, the corporate goliaths that hoard most of this "content" in their treasure-vaults) was deprived of a single penny; in fact that's one of the great lies of the IP lawyers and their corporate masters: Cultural interchange usually improves income for people whose work is quoted by others. Borrow liberally and lovingly—and give credit where credit is due.
That's the way it should be.
And, one day, that's how it will be again.
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justgallifreyanthings · 6 months
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Sherman’s stance (and my reaction)
Loren Sherman (creator of Sherman’s Gallifreyan) and Sirkles (prolific Gallifreyan artist + friend of Sherman’s) posted a video a few hours ago where they talked about how to read the phrase on the new Screwdriver as well as how they feel about the BBC using Sherman’s Gallifreyan on an official prop.
Some key takeaways:
Loren noted that the use of Sherman’s Gallifreyan by the BBC does not make it canon. For it to be a canon system, the BBC needs to officially acknowledge that they are using Sherman’s Gallifreyan as the Gallifreyan on Doctor Who
Loren explained that the concept of Gallifreyan, and the concept of a circular language used by Time Lords, are owned by the BBC. Meanwhile, Loren Sherman’s system of writing, which many people call Gallifreyan, is free to use by anyone — including the BBC
Loren and Sirkles said that they aren’t offended by the BBC using the system, and in fact it’s very exciting to see the system being legitimized by being used by a show they really love and respect
It’s interesting to hear their reaction to it, and good to know Loren doesn’t feel like their toes have been stepped on. As the creator of the system, they sort of have the final say on who can use it and how, in my opinion. So if they’re giving the BBC the green light, then I’ll respect that.
I think they’ve also done a good job subtly making a distinction between the BBC using someone else’s system and the BBC canonizing a system of Gallifreyan — “canonize” here meaning to officially make a part of the Doctor Who IP. Until the BBC acknowledges that they are using Sherman’s Gallifreyan (and acknowledges Loren as the system’s creator by extension), the circles on their show, the screwdriver, and their merchandise are technically just random circles. The BBC can say these circles mean anything they want. And while this specific pattern of circles is now part of Doctor Who IP and thus protected by the copyright, any sort of “system” that could be used to ascribe meaning to the circles is NOT part of Doctor Who IP — including Sherman’s Gallifreyan. (I’m obviously not an intellectual property lawyer, so take my thoughts with a grain of salt, but this is my understanding.)
All that said, I’m still feeling a bit pessimistic about how this all shook out and what this means for the relationship between the BBC/DW showrunners and Gallifreyan artists. Regardless of the legality of using or nodding to Sherman’s Gallifreyan in an “official” capacity, I feel like it’s still….morally gray to use a fanmade system and hide behind a sort of “wink wink nudge nudge, real fans know the lore” attitude, while knowing that all the press and articles are going to think it was created by the BBC and won’t do the research to credit Loren Sherman. And especially when taken in tandem with how the BBC has explicitly stolen Gallifreyan fanart to use on the show before…. I don’t have a lot of faith in the BBC honoring the subtle distinction between them using Sherman’s Gallifreyan and then owning Sherman’s Gallifreyan.
We’ll see what this means for the future of DW and the future of the various fanmade Gallifreyan systems that exist! I’ll certainly be keeping a fearful eye on my Etsy store for the foreseeable future, but it’s been really lovely to see the community come together and get excited about this.
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casuallyirregular · 1 year
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(Disclaimer: I’m not trying to discourage anyone from pursuing law. Just trying to prepare anyone considering it)
Law School is exhausting and very difficult. Everyday the reading stacks up and it’s so easy to fall behind. First, make absolutely sure law is right for you. Talk to attorneys, try to shadow someone, work in law somehow, you can also ask current students (including me)!
That said, when you find your niche in law, things tend to work out for you!
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danglovely · 1 year
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Alright. I need to know. Did Ron conceive of the spinning tops of doom or was that a concept he had heard of before?
Assuming he didn't anticipate himself, could he get a patent for spinning tops of doom?
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todayisafridaynight · 2 years
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i keep wanting to make ace attorney x yakuza jokes cause i keep thinking AA is a sega property but no it belongs to capcom
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corvidcall · 1 year
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honestly one of the problems i have just. making decisions about my life and future in general. is that my family, though i love them, is frequently very judgy and not particularly supportive (at least, not in ways that i need and enjoy. i think they think they are being supportive??) so there are things id be interested in, or would even like a second opinion on, but i dont want to bring it up because i dont want to hear how theyll respond. either theyll shoot down my idea and I'll feel foolish, or theyll get really fixed on it and then I'll HAVE to do it. there's just not a lot of flexibility
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ritterum · 1 year
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hate hate hate how squeenix banhammered all the good nier automata remixes on youtube EVEN THOUGH they all qualified under fair use. squeenix doesnt care, and the creators are too scared to jeopardize their accounts further. so now we’re left with shitty remixes and covers. well done squeenix, you stifled creative expression. death to IP
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handsmotif · 2 years
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jim carrey as the lawyer in liar liar ran so that bob odenkirk as saul could fly
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