
Patents lie at the heart of modern competition policy. In the new economy, firms use them variously to protect their R&D, to bolster their market positions, and to exclude rivals. Antitrust enforcers thus scrutinize patentees to ensure that they do not use their intellectual-property rights to suppress competition. Today's antitrust lawyers must therefore navigate intellectual-property issues and advise clients on the procurement and assertion of patents. It is no easy task. In granting exclusive rights, patents have an uneasy relationship with competition law, which struggles in turn to apply policies developed in bricks and mortar industries to the world of technology.This book explores the acquisition and use of patents under the law of the world's two most important antitrust regimes: the United States and the European Union. It examines antitrust rules governing technology transfer, standard-essential technologies, patent aggregation, open and closed systems, coercive licensing terms that amount to misuse, evergreening tactics in the pharmaceutical industry like 'paying for delay', and patentee immunity in suing for infringement. To contextualize that analysis, the book explores the theoretical relationship between patents and competition law, addresses the U.S. 'patent crisis', the move towards unitary patents in Europe, and differences between the US and EU competition regimes. Further, the book explores idiosyncrasies governing the core antitrust questions of market definition, market power, and anticompetitive conduct in the patent setting. In doing so, the book allows those who practice, enforce, teach, or study competition law to understand the subtleties of this fascinating subject.
This book investigates the complex and often contradictory intersection between patent protection and antitrust enforcement within the United States and European Union legal frameworks. Alan Devlin, an expert in competition law, provides a rigorous analysis of how intellectual property rights interact with market competition policies. By examining the theoretical foundations and practical applications of these laws, the author addresses the challenges of applying traditional competition standards to modern technology-driven industries. The text serves as a comprehensive guide for legal practitioners and scholars navigating the procurement and assertion of patents in a competitive landscape.
What You Will Find
Legal professionals and academics frequently cite this work as a critical resource for understanding the nuances of patent-antitrust litigation. Experts highlight the text for its ability to bridge the gap between theoretical economic principles and the practical realities of modern competition law enforcement.
Page Count:
528
Publication Date:
2016-05-17
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0198728972
ISBN-13:
9780198728979
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