143 legal [2, *]questions have been posted about intellectual property by real users in California. Ask your question and dive into the knowledge of attorneys who handle your issue regularly. Similar topics to explore also include copyrights, intellectual property licensing, and patents. All topics and other states can be accessed in the dropdowns below.
Recent Legal Answers
If a company owns a copyright in a work and you use that work without permission, you have violated their copyright. Even after the work has been... Read Answer
I experienced something like this 7-8 years ago. We had an employment link on our web site, identifying that we were open to lateral hires and the... Read Answer
It would be copyright infringement to copy a copyrighted design and place it on anything. I would question whether you are copying the entire design,... Read Answer
The short answer is NO. There are two reasons why this guy has no copyright to enforce. First, individual word and short phrase are not... Read Answer
Intellectual property is copyrights/trademarks/trade secrets. Your question has to do with real property or criminal law. I would call the police to... Read Answer
Ownership of the bear, in and of itself, does not give you any ownership rights to the intellectual property associated with the bear. Just like if... Read Answer
A car title is not intellectual property. Intellectual property is patents, copyrights, trademarks, and trade secrets.
I would try asking the... Read Answer
The US now has a 'first-to-file' patent system. Whoever files a patent application first on that idea, maintains the patent application (or... Read Answer
It is not clear to me what trademark you registered. Specifically, it is possible for you to register just your company name (a word mark without the... Read Answer
The issue you are raising is called a "Right of Publicity". Most states have right of publicity laws and I would expect California to be chief among... Read Answer
No, each creation requires a registration unless it is a "collection". The filing fee is so modest that it is much, much smarter to register each... Read Answer
I have reviewed your posting and don't see a question. Yes, unauthorized cashing of a check can be a crime.
The question lacks sufficient facts. Is it legal for me to store my login credentials for various websites in a password management program, of... Read Answer
He has no rights until a patent actually issues and that may never happen. Just wait and see if he gets a patent. I cannot comment on what rights he... Read Answer
Not sure how you would create a game that already exists, and assume what you mean is that you physical produce an actual game that your read... Read Answer
There is no copyright infringement if your recaps are you own original descriptions. Copyrights only protect copying.
Register the copyright in them with the United States Copyright Office. You will probably have to file a separate application for each film or... Read Answer
No you cannot. It would be considered a "derivative work" and your modification would be copyright infringement.
As long as you don't imply an affilication between you and the manufacturer of the game, or any implied endorsement by the manufacturer, you should... Read Answer
The situation you describe falls under the "fair use" doctrine, which allows someone to use all or part of a copyrighted work without having to get... Read Answer
First, you are referring to the Gold Labeling Act of 1976 which affects, gold, silver and platinum, not titanium.
The decision to trademark has... Read Answer
Your name should be listed as inventor even though your licensee is liable for the cost of filing. If you had an attorney prepare your license... Read Answer
If the name is used on a good in interstate commerce or international commerce with the US, you could file for trademark registration. If it is not... Read Answer
Your question is unclear and not enough facts are given for proper analysis.
Please see my answer to your identical question.