IP Panel: Protection for Nanotechnology Innovations

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IP Panel: Protection for Nanotechnology Innovations Don Featherstone October 29, 2010

Disclaimers & Contact Information These materials are not intended and should not be used as legal advice. If you need legal advice or an opinion on a specific issue or factual situation, please consult an attorney. Answering questions or the use of this material does not form or constitute an attorney-client relationship. These material are for information purposes only and should not be relied upon as a substitute for legal advice The presentation reflects only the current considerations and views of the authors, which should not be attributed to Sterne, Kessler, Goldstein & Fox P.L.L.C. or any of its current or former clients. For More Information, please contact Donald J. Featherstone 202-772-8629 or donf@skgf.com 2

A View of Commercialization Through Patent Activity 3

Topics Patent vs. Trade Secret Protection Trends for Patent Filings and by Patent Offices Statistics of Patent Filings Insights and Nuances 4

1. Trade Secrets vs. Patents Patent law protects original ideas: Anything under the sun made by man that has practical application Must be new, useful and non-obvious Patents require disclosure Publication kills trade secrets 5

Definition of Trade Secret Trade secrets protects confidential information that: Derives independent economic value, and Is kept secret 6

Duty to Maintain Secrecy Hallmark of protection is secrecy Secrecy need not be absolute owner may, without losing protection, disclose it to a licensee, an employee, or a stranger, if the disclosure is made in confidence, express or implied No use requirement: potential economic value sufficient Novelty not necessary 7

What s Not a Trade Secret? Generally not trade secrets: Common knowledge Readily ascertainable ideas Trivial advances in known formulas or processes Publicly available information Caveats: Mere fact that device or formula is susceptible of being reproduced, through material effort, does not negate trade secret status Mere presence of all elements of an idea in the technical literature does not per se destroy trade secret status Secret can be in combination of otherwise well-known principles 8

How Protection is Lost Discovery by independent invention Reverse engineering Acquiring a product by proper means and determining how it was produced does not constitute a trade secret misappropriation Anything not protected by patent or copyright Publishing 9

Violation by Misappropriation Acquisition by someone who knows or has reason to know secret acquired by improper means, or by Disclosure or use of a trade secret of another without express or implied consent 10

State and Federal Trade Secret Protection States laws recognize trade secrets Federal legislation modeled after the Uniform Trade Secrets Act (UTSA) and Economic Espionage 18 U.S.C. 1831 and theft of trade secrets 1832 11

Know-How vs. Trade Secrets Definition of know-how the informational and experiential expertise related to practical application of specifics, such as patented or unpatented inventions, formulas or processes Milgrim on Trade Secrets 1.09[3]. Broader concept that encompasses trade secrets Know-how can sometimes be a trade secret Must be more than simply knowledge and skill A reasonable degree of precision and specificity is required 12

Trade Secrets vs. Patents Best Mode Best mode requirement Requires patent application to include best mode contemplated by the inventor of carrying out his invention. Inherent conflict between trade secret and patent But trade secrets and patents not mutually exclusive Best mode contemplated by inventors Keys off the claimed invention at time of filing Improvements in practicing invention developed by others in company can be kept as trade secret At time of filing Improvements developed after filing can be kept as trade secrets No ongoing duty to update best mode 13

Nano: Disruptive or Enabling Technology? 21 st Century Nano R&D Act Nanosys files S1 Nanosys withdraws S1 14

Nanotech IP Landscape Now? 15

In Practice Enabling? It s hard to maintain TS when sharing know how Contract law vs. patent licensing Can TS be reverse engineered? Yes: consider patenting No: consider TS, if Customers don t need know how, and Adequate TS safeguards are in place 16

2. Patent Filings and Office Trends Poll of attorneys practicing globally: China (PRC) Europe Japan South Korea Singapore Taiwan United States 17

Subject Matter and Classification No per se statutory subject matter limitations Any new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new and useful improvement thereof US has only detailed NT specific classification (977) EPO tracks NT filings with special tags (Y01N) >100k in database B81 is Micro-structural technology B82 is Nano-structural technology Japan created nano-physics category in 2002 Nano-optics are categorized as "Expose/Development 18

Examination Most offices employ measures to ensure that nanotechnology applications are handled by examiners with the right experience in the specific field KIPO International Patent Classifications (IPC's) are assigned to teams within the Convergence Technology Center Criteria for evaluating patentability of nanotechnology applications are the same criteria as other technologies: novelty, inventive step, industrial application 19

Reduction to Practice Generally, proof of reduction to practice not needed But, enabling disclosure must be provided upon filing (i.e., no new matter) Working examples can become critical E.g., in EPO, if description is prima face insufficient examiner can request for evidence that the invention was put into practice In US, working examples helpful to overcome prior art of a more general nature 20

Claiming Careful not to claim too broadly File claims of varying scope Target potential infringers by envisioning future licensing fields of use Does smaller make it patentable? 21

Obviousness of Ranges In US practice, minimization alone is not enough to impart patentability Unexpected results are critical Presumption that prior art is enabled (See MPEP 2144.05) In re Aller 220 F.2d 454 (CCPA 1955) But is it? "[W]here the general conditions of a claim are disclosed in the prior art, it is not inventive to discover the optimum or workable ranges by routine experimentation. Does the art teach wanting to achieve XYZ? Does the art teach how to achieve it? 22

3. Statistics of Patent Filings US Cross Reference Class 977 Stats Just over 6000 issued patents to date Just under 6000 published applications to date Other US Stats US Gov t Funding in Nanotechnology EPO: B81 is Micro-structural technology whereas B82 is Nano-structural technology Singapore Patents issued by IPC Nanotechnology Published Patent Applications by top 15 Countries 23

U.S. Patents Classified in Class 977 U.S. Patents Granted/Published in Nanotechnology Patents Granted/Publish hed 1600 1400 1200 1000 800 600 400 200 0 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 Year Patents Published Patents Granted 24

Other US Stats Nanotech Patents: Distribution Across Technologies Electrical (TC 2800): 44% Chem/Materials (TC 1700): 29% Biotech/Pharma (TC1600): 16% Mechanical (TC 3700): 6% Nanotech Patents and Pre-grant Publications Distribution By Type of Invention Manufacture, Treatment, Or Detection Of Nanostructure: 39% Nanostructure: 33% Specified Use Of Nanostructure: 27% Mathematical Algorithms, E.G., Specifically Adapted For Modeling Configurations Or Properties Of Nanostructure: <1% Miscellaneous: <1% 25

Institutions with the Most US Filings Rank Institution No. of Patents 1 IBM 209 2 University of California 184 3 US Navy 99 4 Eastman Kodak 90 5 Massachusetts Institute Of Technology 76 6 Micron Technology 75 7 Hewlett-Packard 67 8 Xerox Corporation 62 9 3M Company 59 10 Rice University 51 26

US Gov t Funding in Nanotechnology U.S. Federal Government Funding for Nanotechnology Research 2001 464 Mil. US$ 2006 1,351 Mil. US$ 2002 697 Mil. US$ 2007 1,425 Mil. US$ 2003 863 Mil. US$ 2008 1,554.40 Mil. US$ Actual 2004 989 Mil. US$ 2009 1,657.60 Mil. US$ Estimate 2005 1,200 Mil. US$ 2010 1,639.00 Mil. US$ Proposed 27 from plunkettresearch.com

U.S. Nanotechnology Research by Agency 2007-2010 (in millions) Agency 2007 Actual 2008 Actual 2009 Estimate* 2010 Proposed Department of Defense (DOD) 450 460 464 379 National Science Foundation (NSF) 389 409 397 423 Department of Energy (DOE) 236 245 337 351 National Institutes of Health (NIH) 215 305 311 326 Department of Commerce (DOC) 88 86 87 91 National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) 28 88 86 87 91 NASA 20 17 17 17 Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) from plunkettresearch.com 12 16 18

EPO Statistics for Filings in Classes B81-B82 EP Filings in B81-B82 250 200 150 100 50 0 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 EP Filings in B81-B82 110 187 142 144 205 Year B81 is Micro-structural technology whereas B82 is Nano-structural technology 29

A: Human Necessities B: Performing Operations, Transporting C: Chemistry, Metallurgy D: Textiles, Paper E: Fixed Constructions F: Mechanical Engineering, Lighting, Heating, Weapons G: Physics H: Electricity 30

Nanotechnology Published Patent Applications The top 15 countries/regions Patent Offices from 1975 to May, 2008.* 1. United States 17,614 2. People s Rep. of China 13,618 3. Japan 9,680 4. South Korea 5,078 5. Canada 1,448 6. Taiwan 1,360 7. Australia 1,264 8. Germany 1,232 9. Russian Federation 713 10. United Kingdom 561 11. Mexico 383 12. France 379 13. Brazil 254 14. Ukraine 182 15. New Zealand 131 * Yang et al., International Patent and Patent Family Analysis for Nanotechnology, IEEE Nanotechnology Magazine, 2009, vol. 3, no. 3, pp.16-21. 31

Applications Published from 1975-2007 IEEE Nanotechnology Magazine, 2009, vol. 3, no. 3, pp.16-21. 32

Applications Shared Across the Top 15 Countries IEEE Nanotechnology Magazine, 2009, vol. 3, no. 3, pp.16-21. 33

4. Insights and Nuances Extensive nanotech patenting will continue for at least several years (integration, nano-macro interfaces, manufacturing methods) Weak patent positions may be strengthened, assuming a need for bedrock foundation (VCs will demand it, and large companies understand it) Companies will continue to strengthen commercialization position through licensing (university and companycompany) and M&A Patent litigation will mark the start of serious commercialization or vice versa This may one day slow the rate of nano innovation, due to the time and expense of litigation 34

Thank You 35

Mass. Definition of Trade Secret Mass. Gen. Laws ch.93 42 provides a cause of action for misappropriation of trade secrets Actual damages can be doubled by court Definition of Trade Secret anything tangible or intangible or electronically kept or stored, which constitutes, represents, evidences or records secret scientific, technical, merchandising, production or management information, design, process, procedure, formula, invention or improvement. Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 266, 30 36

Definition of Trade Secret (cont d) Factors most often considered by Mass. courts in determining if particular information constitutes a trade secret 1. The extent to which the information is known outside the plaintiff s business 2. The extent to which it is known by employees and others involved in the plaintiff s business 3. The extent of measures taken by the plaintiff to guard the secrecy of the information 4. The value of the information to the plaintiff and to its competitors 5. The amount of effort or money expended by the plaintiff in developing the information 6. The ease or difficulty with which the information could be properly acquired or duplicated by others Picker Int l Corp. v. Imaging Equip. Serv., Inc., 931 F. Supp. 18, 23 (D. Mass 1995) 37

Trade Secret Best Practices Trade secret owner must take reasonable measures to protect secrecy Absence of sufficient precautions will forfeit secrecy Must be reasonable under the circumstances Determination of reasonableness must consider the size and other characteristics of owner and the cost of the safeguards employed versus those that could have been employed. Key point: Evidence of intensive and extensive efforts to maintain information as a secret may be probative that the information itself is a trade secret But elaborate secrecy measures cannot elevate public knowledge to the status of a trade secret 38

Trade Secret Best Practices Practices courts focus on to preserve secrecy : Techniques used to give notice of trade secret status to employees and other confidential disclosees: Confidentiality provisions in employment agreements Use of nondisclosure agreements Posting of warning or cautionary signs or using document legends Restricting employee and visitor access to information on need to know basis Maintaining internal secrecy by dividing process into steps and separating employees/departments working on steps Using unnamed or coded ingredients Keeping secret substances and documents under lock Limiting access to computer materials by use of passwords Including trade secret policy in company manuals 39