Insurance IP Bulletin
An
Information Bulletin on Intellectual Property
activities in the insurance
industry
A Publication of - Tom Bakos Consulting, Inc. and Markets, Patents and Alliances, LLC |
PRIOR
ISSUES Links |
Feature Article:
Which Came First: The Chicken or the Patent?
by Frank Cuypers, IP Head, Group Intellectual Property, Swiss Re, ZurichPatent Watch:
Don't Count on Copying Your Competitor's Great New Product Ideas
The use of patents to protect intellectual property in the insurance industry is growing.Patent Tech:
Sources of Information
Where to find information on patents and patent applications.Patents in Action:
Story of a Reversionary Annuity
The story of patent #5,754,980.Finding Innovation:
How Do You Know You've Invented Something?
Invention is a solution to a problem.
Second Issue: August 15, 2004 -
VOL:2004.2
Feature Article:
Ignorance Will Be No Excuse
by Phil Hargrove, VP, Intellectual Asset Management, GE Employers Reinsurance Co., Kansas City, MOPatent Watch:
AIG Joins the Patent Club
AIG gets their first internally generated patent issued.Patent Tech:
Broad Thinking - Yes, But Will it Fly?
The Wright Bros. example.Finding Innovation:
Can You Patent an Insurance Product?
Right now, you can't. Find out why.
Feature Article:The Impact of Intellectual Property Rights on Insurance Product Innovation
Patent Watch:
Progressive Builds a Fortress of
Patent Protection
Progressive Casualty Insurance Company's use of patents to
protect its intellectual property.
Patents in
Action:
Why Isn't the World Beating a Path to My
Door?
Guidelines on how individual inventors can market
their inventive new insurance ideas.
Feature Article:
Barbarians at the Gate
by Tom Bakos, FSA, MAAA - President, Tom Bakos Consulting, Inc.
and
Mark Nowatarski, Patent Agent, - President, MPA LLC
Patent Tech:
USPTO Examination Process for Business Method Patent Applications
A briefing on how the patent office handles patent applications.Patent Watch:
Stable Value Protected Life Insurance - Update of Bancorp Patent
How Bancorp has kept its patent application involving stable value funds alive.
Feature Article:
Direct Insurance Patents Could Trigger a Boom
by Mark Clare - President, Knowledge Dynamics and Director, Parkview Health
Patent Futures:
Alternate Risk Transfer - Finite Risk Hits the Boundaries of Insurance
Finite insurance has brought attention to the insurance industryPatent (Pending) In Action:
No Charge Auto Insurance
A patent application for free car insurance.
Feature Article:
Lessons from a First Time Patent Applicant
by Matt Schoen- President, MB Schoen & Associates, Inc.
Patent Tech:
What Do Computers Do?
The Specification of a patent requires a written description of the patent to be clear, concise, and exact.Patent Value:
What's a Patent Worth?
A patent's value is derived from the fact that a patent gives the inventorthe right to exclude others from making, using, or selling the invention.
Seventh Issue: June 15, 2005 - VOL:2005.3
Feature Article:Eigth Issue: August 15, 2005 - VOL:2005.4
Patent Trolls
by Tom Bakos
A somewhat humorous look at what a "patent troll" is all about.
Patent Q&A:
Improving the efficiency of patent examination
Addresses the situation of business method patent examination in the USPTO.Patent Value:
Ignoring Patent Value
The monetizing of intellectual property, in general, and patents, in particular, has long been a subject of interest. This article looks at the consequences of ignoring IP value.
Feature Article:
An Insurance Patent Experience
by Jerry Wilson, President, Washington Health Services
An early inventor's personal experience with patenting his Long Term Care insurance innovative benefit design approach.
Patent Law:
The Patent Act of 2005 - A Summary of Major Provisions
Introduced to Congress on June 8, 2005, this new law is intended to improve the quality of patnets and reduce the costs associated with their enforcement. These are the most significant changes to patent law since the 1952 Patent Act.Patent Tech:
Prospects for Getting Insurance Patents in Europe
The monetizing of intellectual property, in general, and patents, in particular, has long been a subject of interest. This article looks at the consequences of ignoring IP value.
Ninth Issue: October 15, 2005 - VOL:2005.5
Feature Article:
Will it Fly?
by Tom Bakos & Mark Nowotarski
Addresses the question of what it means for an insurance product to work.
In Re Lundgren:
A major barrier to the possibility of directly patenting new insurance products in the U.S. has just been removed.Patent Q&A:
Who Gets the Patent?
Question: If I make an invention as part of my job, who owns the patent, me or my employer?