eprintid: 2704 rev_number: 14 userid: 15 dir: disk0/00/00/27/04 datestamp: 2009-06-03 14:19:17 lastmod: 2018-12-20 00:55:21 status_changed: 2009-06-03 14:19:17 type: article metadata_visibility: show contact_email: gpike@pitt.edu item_issues_count: 0 eprint_status: archive creators_name: Pike, George H. title: Legal Trends (Part II): Global Technology and Local Patent ispublished: pub divisions: sch_law_law divisions: sch_law_law_facultypub full_text_status: public keywords: patent, law, patent, protection, U.S., patent, law, international, patent, law, multi-national, patents, infringement, global, technology, patent, territoriality, Paris, Convention, TRIPs, reform abstract: The Internet is generally perceived as an American invention, and this is largely true. The global interconnection of computers using shared protocols was based on the cold war inspired ARPANET, developed by the U.S.’s Advanced Research Projects Agency in the 1960's. But as ARPANET evolved from a Department of Defense-oriented system to a research-oriented system, non-US research interests began to take a more active role in the development of the Internet’s protocols and features. The Worldwide Web and the first web browsers, for example, were developed at the CERN European Particle Physics Laboratory in Geneva Switzerland. Now, the Internet is truly global, both in its reach and in its continuing development. As outlined in last month’s Legal Trends: Patenting the Internet article, a very large number of the technologies and processes that underlie the Internet are protected by patents. Given a worldwide Internet, these patented processes control functions that operate both inside and outside U.S. borders. In a similar vein, there are a large number of Internet patents that were awarded outside the U.S. that impact Internet functions within the U.S. This article addresses the challenges presented by these cross-border patents. date: 2005-05 date_type: published publication: Information Today volume: 22 number: 5 publisher: Learned Information, Inc., Medford, NJ pagerange: 1 - ? institution: University of Pittsburgh refereed: FALSE issn: 8755-6286 official_url: http://www.infotoday.com/ elements_deleted: 2018-12-19T19:55:21EST citation: Pike, George H. (2005) Legal Trends (Part II): Global Technology and Local Patent. Information Today, 22 (5). 1 - ?. ISSN 8755-6286 document_url: http://d-scholarship-dev.library.pitt.edu/2704/1/Legal_Trends_%28Part_II%29-Global_Technology_and_Local_Patents_May05.pdf document_url: http://d-scholarship-dev.library.pitt.edu/2704/8/licence.txt