Intellectual property rights business management practices: A survey of the literature
TLDR
In this paper, a survey of the empirical literature regarding the use and management of Intellectual Property rights (IPRs) is presented, focusing on the US, Canada, EU, Japan and Australia and the protection of IP in specific industry groups.About:
This article is published in Technovation.The article was published on 2006-08-01 and is currently open access. It has received 232 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Intellectual property & Valuation (finance).read more
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Analysis and Application of Port Enterprise Management Mode Based on Profit Mode Analysis
Rong Liu,Wenqi Shen,Meng Zhang +2 more
TL;DR: Gong et al. as discussed by the authors analyzed a domestic port enterprise and found that the operating income and net profit of the target port enterprise have declined to a certain extent, and its overall profitability is not good.
Journal ArticleDOI
A Legal Perspective of E-Businesses and E-Marketing for Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs)
TL;DR: In this article, a novel approach is proposed to promote legal risk management culture in organizations by revising current state of regulations surrounding eBusinesses and electronic marketing, which includes risk mitigation strategy, educating people and use of information technology.
Book ChapterDOI
Do IPRs Promote Innovation
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present evidence for the above hypothesis based on examples of firms from both the USA and India and the role of IPRs (patents, designs, copyrights, trademarks, trade secrets, and geographical indications).
Journal ArticleDOI
Lifting the hood of supply and demand for trademarks of start‐ups: Partial observability estimates
Bernadette Power,Gavin C. Reid +1 more
TL;DR: In this article , the authors use a partial observability econometric model to estimate the supply and demand determinants of the trademark adoption decision made by start-ups, as non-adoption is unobserved.
References
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ReportDOI
Patent Statistics as Economic Indicators: A Survey
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a survey on the use of patent data in economic analysis, focusing on the patent data as an indicator of technological change and concluding that patent data remain a unique resource for the study of technical change.
The core competence of the corporation’, Harvard Business Review, Vol. pp. .
CK Prahalad,G Hamel +1 more
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Patent Statistics as Economic Indicators: A Survey
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a survey on the use of patent data in economic analysis, focusing on the patent data as an indicator of technological change and concluding that patent data remain a unique resource for the study of technical change.
Journal ArticleDOI
Appropriating the Returns from Industrial Research and Development
Richard C. Levin,Alvin K. Klevorick,Richard R. Nelson,Sidney G. Winter,Richard Gilbert,Zvi Griliches +5 more
TL;DR: A patent confers, in theory, perfect appropriability (monopoly of the invention) for a limited time in return for a public benefit as mentioned in this paper, however, the benefits consumers derive from an innovation, however, are increased if competitors can imitate and improve on the innovation to ensure its availability on favorable terms.
Journal ArticleDOI
A Penny for Your Quotes : Patent Citations and the Value of Innovations
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors put forward patent counts weighted by citations as indicators of the value of innovations, thereby overcoming the limitations of simple counts, and found that simple patent counts are highly correlated with contemporaneous RD, however, the association is within afield over time rather than cross-sectional.