直 Japanese PDF Font
  • Our Professionals
  • Our Work
  • Our Insights
  • Offices
  • Firm
  • Careers
Finnegan
  • Articles & Books
    • Ad Law Buzz Blog
    • At the PTAB Blog
    • European IP Blog
    • Federal Circuit IP Blog
    • INCONTESTABLE® Blog
    • Prosecution First Blog
  • Events & Webinars
  • IP Updates
  • Podcasts
    • AI + Finnegan
    • AI + Copyright
    • AI + Patent
    • AI + Privacy
    • AI + Trade Secrets
    • AI + Trademark
  • Unified Patent Court (UPC) Hub

Webinar

How to Survive the Inevitable Inequitable Conduct Charge

October 21, 2009

Webinar

To view the recorded webinar, or download a copy of the slides, please click here. Program run time is approximately 60 minutes.

If you would like to view the webinar in German, please click here. 

Inequitable conduct is a unique defense to patent infringement in the United States, and is also one of the most commonly raised defenses in U.S. litigations. If a defendant convinces the court that the patent holder acted improperly before the USPTO, or if a potential licensee uncovers a substantial inequitable conduct risk during a due diligence, the consequences for the patent holder can be very severe. Some U.S. judges have called the frequent accusations of misconduct on the part of patent counsel to be a veritable plague on the system. This webinar will review some of the common types of patent prosecution mistakes that have led to findings of inequitable conduct and will provide patent prosecution and drafting strategies to assist European practitioners in avoiding inequitable conduct risks as often as possible. We also will provide a detailed description of the formalities for disclosing information to the USPTO.

This webinar is the second of our Strategic U.S. Patent Series for European Counsel, a series of four webinars covering the latest strategies for successful U.S. patent prosecution, designed specifically for the changing U.S. environment. If there is sufficient demand, we will also hold the webinars in French and German at times to be announced.

SERIES PROGRAM

 9 September 2009 Prosecution Strategies in View of the Severely Diminished Allowance Rate at the USPTO 
 21 October 2009 How to Survive the Inevitable Inequitable Conduct Charge
 9 December 2009 Strategies for Satisfying the Heightened Written Description Requirement in the Life Sciences and Chemical Industries
 20 January 2010 Avoiding the Perils and Pitfalls of Method Claims and Means-Plus-Function Claims in the Electrical and Mechanical Industries

Webinars will begin at 16h00 CEST/CET and will last approximately one hour. Alternative times for French and German programs will be announced if sufficient demand.

REGISTER

Registration for all webinars is free of charge, simply register through the Register link. Webinar access information will be sent upon registration.

Downloadable Files

  • How to Survive the Inevitable Inequitable Conduct Charge

Related Practices

Patent Drafting and Prosecution

Related Professionals

Michele C. Bosch
Partner
Washington, DC
+1 202 408 4193
Email
Timothy J. May
Partner
Washington, DC
+1 202 408 4447
Email

Related Insights

Charitable

Bridges From School to Work Gala 2026

June 22, 2026

Washington, DC

Charitable

Banding Together 2026

June 18, 2026

Washington, DC

Charitable

TopGolf for the Troops 2026

June 11, 2026

Ashburn

European IP Blog

UPC Central Division Revokes Patent Covering Covid-19 Treatment Remdesivir

8 June 2026

Federal Circuit IP Blog

Spotlight on Upcoming Oral Arguments – June 2026

June 8, 2026

Articles

California Reaches Record $12.75 Million CCPA Settlement with General Motors Over Driver Data

June 4, 2026

Articles

Article_D.-Mass-Patent-Litigation-Update-October-2024

D. Mass. Patent Litigation Update: April 2026

June 1, 2026

At the PTAB Blog

Consistency Is Key – USPTO Issues Three New Informative Decisions

May 29, 2026

At the PTAB Blog

Discretion All the Way Down: USPTO Uses a Discretionary IPR Denial to Justify a    
§ 325(d) EPR Denial

May 28, 2026

Due to international data regulations, we’ve updated our privacy policy. Click here to read our privacy policy in full.

  • Privacy
  • Disclaimer
  • Legal Notices
  • Fraud Alert
  • EEO Statement
  • Cookies
  • Contact Us

© 2026 Finnegan, Henderson, Farabow, Garrett & Dunner, LLP