By Richard E. Neff
One of the most fought-over issues in technology development and licensing agreements concerns intellectual property ownership. Superficially, who owns the intellectual property should be easy to resolve. The developer or publisher of a proprietary computer software program virtually always owns the computer program (except for possible open source components). Nobody contests Microsoft's ownership of Excel, or Autodesk's owners...
To continue reading, please subscribe.
For only $95 a month (the price of 2 article purchases)
Receive unlimited article access and full access to our archives,
Daily Appellate Report, award winning columns, and our
Verdicts and Settlements.
Or
$795 for an entire year!
For only $95 a month (the price of 2 article purchases)
Receive unlimited article access and full access to our archives,
Daily Appellate Report, award winning columns, and our
Verdicts and Settlements.
Or
$795 for an entire year!
Or access this article for $45
(Purchase provides 7-day access to this article. Printing, posting or downloading is not allowed.)
Already a subscriber?
Sign In