Intellectual Property Law Services in Marion County

Intellectual Property Law Services in Marion County

Marion Trademark Registration Services

Having a registered trademark can be valuable for protecting a company's intellectual property and brand identity. Marion Countytrademark registration services are the process of obtaining official legal protection for a unique symbol, design, phrase, or name used to identify a brand. It is important to register a trademark to prevent others from using similar marks that could cause confusion for consumers. A registered trademark also grants the owner the right to take legal action against infringement. The trademark registration process typically involves a search for existing trademarks, filing of the trademark application, examination by the trademark office, and final approval or denial. The attorneys at Axenfeld Law Group specialize in registering trademarks and can help you navigate the process and increase the chances of successful registration.

Marion Trademark Registration Services

What is Marion County trade dress?

Trade dress is the overall commercial look and feel of a product and can include the product’s packaging, features, or a combination of features. In order to be protectable, the Marion County trade dress must identify the source of the product and distinguish it from the look and feel of other products. A product’s trade dress must also be (1) distinctive – it must identify and distinguish the source of the product; and (2) non-functional – it must not be essential to the use of the product or affect its cost or quality. If the trade dress is not inherently distinctive, it can still be registered if the owner can show that it has acquired secondary meaning.

Marion County trade dress
Registered Marion County Patent Attorney

What is a registered Marion County patent attorney?

A registered patent attorney is an attorney who is, in addition to their state law license, also licensed to represent clients before the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO). Generally, only practitioners who are specifically qualified by the USPTO may file and prosecute patent applications. In order to be registered by the USPTO, a patent attorney must have a Bachelor’s degree or higher in a technical field (e.g. engineering, physics, chemistry, biology) and must pass a special USPTO exam, often called the “Patent Bar,” separate from the bar exam that all lawyers must take. Not all patent practitioners are lawyers; patent agents are practitioners who are qualified to file patent applications but are not licensed to practice law. Unlike patent agents or unregistered attorneys, a registered patent attorney can both render legal advice and also file and prosecute patent applications.

What if someone posted my photo and removed my Marion copyright information?

What if someone posted my photo and removed my Marion copyright information?

“Copyright Management Information” (or CMI) includes the identifying information about a work’s copyright owner, among other things. Digital Millennium Copyright Act created a separate prohibition from knowingly removing or altering Copyright Management Information. If someone has knowingly removed your watermark, the title of the artwork, the year it was created, your name, or certain other identifying information from your photo before posting it to social media, you may have a cause of action against that person. The key is that the other person must have known, or had reason to know, that their actions would induce, enable, facilitate, or conceal an infringement. The attorneys at Axenfeld Law can assess your options and determine the best course of conduct to enforce your rights.

Intellectual Property Law Services in Marion County

Protect your Marion Intellectual Property!

How do I protect an invention in Marion County?

Inventions can be protected by patents. Patents are a form of intellectual property right that give a patent owner the exclusive right to make, use, or sell an invention for a specific period of time. A patent owner has the right to sue someone for patent infringement who is making, using, or selling their invention without their. In order to obtain a patent in the United States, you must file a patent application with the U.S. Patent and Trademark office (USPTO), disclosing enough information about your invention to satisfy the USPTO that your invention has some useful purpose, is novel, and is not obvious to ordinarily-skilled people in your field. U.S. patents can last for up to 20 years, after which your intellectual property rights expire, but unlike with trade secrets, Marion County patent owners do not have to maintain the confidentiality of their invention.

How do I protect an invention in Marion County?