Last September, President Obama signed into law the America Invents Act (AIA), a law that will bring about significant change in the US patent system for the first time in sixty years.
First Street Research Group, an organization that studies the forces influencing policy in Washington, recently released a report on the relationships and lobbying spending that surrounded the passage and implementation of the AIA.
The report shows that some 300 organizations lobbied the Act, both in the Senate and House. Together, these organizations spent over $400 million on all of their lobbying activity in 2011, an amount which suggests that an important segment of the entire lobbying industry was mobilized for the AIA. In fact, the Center for Responsive Politics, a non-profit research group, has valued the lobbying industry at $3.51 billion in 2010.
Over 1000 individual lobbyists lobbied the AIA, eleven of whom are former members of Congress. The top five organizations that lobbied the Act based on the number of lobbyists who lobbied the Act were: Independent Community Bankers of America, Security Industry and Financial Markets Association, AT&T, Yahoo!, Hewlett-Packard, and Research in Motion.
News, discussion, and analysis of law and policy affecting the US biotech sector
Showing posts with label America Invents Act. Show all posts
Showing posts with label America Invents Act. Show all posts
Thursday, December 15, 2011
Thursday, December 8, 2011
Provisions of the America Invents Act taking immediate effect
In an ABA-IP Section legislative update, Hayden Gregory listed the provisions of the America Invents Act taking immediate effect upon signing. President Obama signed into law H.R. 1249, the "Leahy-Smith America Invents Act," on September 16, 2011. The overall effective date of the Act is September 16, 2012. Certain provisions, however, will take immediate effect. They include:
- authority of the Director to set or adjust fees.
- ban on tax strategy patents
- ban on patenting human organisms
- reform of false marking of patents
- virtual marking
- changes to best mode
- changes to prior user defense
- standards for ex parte reexamination
- change in venue from D.C. District Court to E.D. Virginia for various patent and trademark actions
- clarification of filing deadline for applications for Hatch-Waxman patent term extension
- exclusive jurisdiction of Federal Circuit of Appeals cases with compulsory claims
- limitations on joinder of infringement defendants
- changes in statute of limitations for USPTO disciplinary actions.
- authority of the Director to set or adjust fees.- ban on tax strategy patents
- ban on patenting human organisms
- reform of false marking of patents
- virtual marking
- changes to best mode
- changes to prior user defense
- standards for ex parte reexamination
- change in venue from D.C. District Court to E.D. Virginia for various patent and trademark actions
- clarification of filing deadline for applications for Hatch-Waxman patent term extension
- exclusive jurisdiction of Federal Circuit of Appeals cases with compulsory claims
- limitations on joinder of infringement defendants
- changes in statute of limitations for USPTO disciplinary actions.
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