Evolutionary shifts in the intellectual property (IP) space spurred by
billion-dollar patent wars, the perilous patent cliff, and fallout from
both the America Invents Act and controversial Prometheus decision have
many professionals wondering what is required to survive and thrive in
this rapidly-changing landscape. More than 1,000 of the world’s leading
IP, licensing and business development leaders will find answers at the
Licensing Executives Society (U.S.A. and Canada), Inc. Annual Meeting
October 14-17 at the Sheraton Centre Toronto.
“This is a defining time for our industry,” said LES (USA & Canada)
President Thomas Filarski. “And my colleagues in the field are
unrelenting in their quest for inspired perspectives, cutting-edge
strategies and tools, and the latest trends and information to maximize
their productivity and success in the marketplace. The Annual Meeting
will offer all of these things and more. It is unquestionably the
premier licensing event of the year.”
Speakers and attendees of the meeting will include executives and
thought leaders from top companies, research institutions, government
labs and other technology-oriented organizations including Acacia,
ARPA-E, Boeing, Bose, Eli Lilly, Cornell University, Johnson & Johnson,
Merck & Co., Microsoft, Lawrence Livermore National Lab, National
Institutes of Health, Procter & Gamble, Research in Motion, Tessera,
University of Toronto and others.
Attendees will select from an array of networking events, leading edge
interactive plenary, cross-sector and mini-plenary discussions, as well
as over 40 workshops that promote industry-specific education. “We have
designed a program that is interactive, diverse and relevant to all
sectors of the IP, licensing, business development and technology law
communities,” said LES Annual Meeting Co-Chair Tim Lowman. “Our goal is
to maximize content offerings to allow attendees to customize their
experience and to meet their professional needs and interests.” Click here
for the meeting program, and visit www.les2012.org/podcast
to hear event co-chairs Tim Lowman and Gary Fedorockho discuss
highlights and new features of the 2012 Annual Meeting.
Select Meeting Highlights:
Called the “Most Influential Physician Executive in Health Care” by Modern
Healthcare, “Doctor of the Decade” by the Institute for Scientific
Information, and a “Rock Star of Science” by GQ Magazine,
renowned cardiologist, genetic researcher and technologist Dr. Eric
Topol is leading the movement to modernize medical treatment using the
latest technologies. In a keynote address, “Connecting & Collaborating:
The Convergence of Life Sciences and High Tech,” Dr. Topol will share
his vision for the future and discuss the complicated implications of
change.
“Carving Out Your Commercial Space – Strategies and Trade Offs” Securing
necessary space to implement corporate product and marketing strategies
(freedom to operate) can be challenging. Innovative crowd-sourcing will
assemble a virtual ‘town hall meeting’ to extract broad-scale input on
this important topic from both on- and off-site attendees. Attend
On-site or Virtually!
“Is High Tech Crazy? Are We Experiencing a Patent Bubble?” Rockstar
Bidco and Nortel, Motorola and Google, Microsoft and AOL -- will this
trend end or are deals like these here to stay? Are these transactions
speculative or part of a new strategy for doing business that could be
applied to other sectors? An all-star panel will bring a diverse and
compelling set of perspectives to this debate.
“Benches Unleashed: Judicial Views on Fixing the System” Outspoken
Honourable Judge Roger Hughes of the Federal Court of Canada and
ever-candid Honorable Paul Michel, retired Chief Judge of the U.S. Court
of Appeals for the Federal Circuit will discuss Canadian and U.S. patent
environments in a global context, and raise and address issues they
perceive will positively or negatively impact inventiveness over the
next decade.
“The Role of IP in Rebuilding Economies Following the Arab Spring” Secretary
of State of Investment & International Cooperation Alaya Bettaieb will
discuss road maps for economic recovery of post-revolution North Africa
following a year of turmoil. Specifically Mr. Bettaieb will focus on the
role of partnerships and IP-based developments in rebuilding economies.
“How Outcomes of Patent Fights have Changed the Course of History” History
books focus on the value of inventions in bettering society, but what if
the rights associated with cornerstone inventions like the cotton gin,
light bulb and telegraph had been treated differently? University of
Rhode Island Professor Emeritus of History Maury Klein will explain the
significance of key historical patent decisions.
Register for the meeting by July 31 and save $200. Visit www.les2012.org.

Source(s) : Licensing Executives Society (U.S.A. and Canada), Inc.