The "assignee" of a patent is the person or legal entity that has received ownership of the patent by an "assignment", i.e., a transfer of "all right, title and interest" from a previous owner having the necessary authority.
An assignee of record is an individual or entity to whom ownership rights of a patent or trademark have been legally transferred. Once an assignment is recorded with the relevant patent or trademark office, the assignee becomes the official owner of the intellectual property rights.
Be the assignee / inventor of the patent, or arrange a licencing agreement with aforementioned assignee / inventor. Neither occur quickly or easily.
US patent D536395, for "combined bubble wand and container," lists the inventor as Lisa Christine Buzzelli, and the original assignee as Wilton Industries, Inc.
Assignee is a person whom right is transferred. Assignee is usually used in bank forms.
An assignee is a person or entity who receives the transfer of rights, ownership, or interest in property, contract, or other asset from another party. In legal terms, an assignee is the recipient of an assignment.
No you do not unless specifically agreed to by the patent assignee (the inventor(s) if no assignment has been made) or unless it is by virtue of community property. In the event of community property ownership, the extent of the rights to royalties is determined by the courts who consider multiple factors, such as stage of development.
An assignee of a lien is the new lien holder.
A search at the USPTO website conducted on 31 July 2012 shows that Loctite is listed as an Assignee on 461 US patents and 100 US patent applications.
As of 25 June 2010, NASA is listed at the USPTO (under NASA or "National Aeronautics and Space Administration") as the assignee on 57 patents and 176 published patent applications.
yes
No. Until he/she has citizenship of the country, absolute assignment by them is not permissible. Even an adoptive father/mother with citizenship of the country can be an absolute assignee.
beneficiary