It makes a significant difference whether the business is creating IP or using IP.
For some businesses, paying for intellectual property would be considered part of their ongoing overhead costs (such as getting a license from ASCAP to pipe in music). For others, there might be a significant initial outlay to commission and register a logo, but few continuing costs from that. A manufacturer might need a venture capitalist to help out with the first invention, but would expect to use income from the first patent to fund research on the next idea (a movie studio functions much the same way: one year's summer release funds production of the next one).
Russell L. Parr has written: 'Valuation of Intellectual Property and Intangible Assets, 2001 Supplement (Intellectual Property-General, Law, Accounting & Finance, Management, Licensing, Special Topics)' 'Valuation of Intellectual Property and Intangible Assets' 'Valuation of Intellectual Property and Intangible Assets, 1997 Cumulative Supplement' 'Intellectual Property' 'Intellectual Property Infringement Damages (Intellectual Property S.)'
Intellectual property law defines intellectual property rights.
Intellectual Property Attorney
Intellectual property rights is the legal right to property owned by a content creator, and often protected through the use of a trademark or copyright. This content is the creator's intellectual property.
Intellectual property refers to ideas, which have no physical form.
Intellectual Property - film - was created in 2006.
Managing Intellectual Property was created in 1990.
Intellectual Property Watch was created in 2004.
Robert P. Merges has written: 'Intellectual property in the new technological age' -- subject(s): Intellectual property, Technological innovations, Law and legislation 'Justifying intellectual property' -- subject(s): Intellectual property, Philosophy, Intangible property 'Intellectual property in the new technological age' -- subject(s): Intellectual property, Technological innovations, Law and legislation
Intellectual property is a third party property being owned by a person or entity. This means that intellectual property can, in fact, be owned by someone.
what is the importance of intellectual property rights?
Intellectual property comes from the intellect: imagination, creativity, etc.