Patent and Other Intellectual Property Rights Sample Clauses

Patent and Other Intellectual Property Rights. (a) Connetics further warrants that use of Products or sales of Products will not infringe any patent or other proprietary rights and that Connetics will indemnify, defend and hold DPT harmless from any damage, judgment, loss, cost or other reasonable expense (including reasonable attorney's fees) arising from claims that Products or the use of the Product names and any other trademarks, trade names, or trade dress used by Connetics in connection with Products infringes patent or other proprietary rights of a third party.
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Patent and Other Intellectual Property Rights. (a) Ascent shall indemnify, defend and hold harmless Upshxx-Xxxxx xxxm any damage, judgment, loss, cost or other reasonable expense (including reasonable attorney's fees) arising from claims that any change or modification of the Products by Ascent or at Ascent's direction, whether related to the formulation, delivery system, packaging, suggested method of use or ingestion or otherwise, causes the use or sales of the Products to infringe any patent or other proprietary rights or that the use by Ascent of any trademarks, trade names or trade dress in connection with the Products, other than the trademarks Feverall(R), Sprinkle Caps(R) and Uniserts(R), infringes patent or other proprietary rights of a third party.
Patent and Other Intellectual Property Rights. (a) COMPANY will indemnify, defend and hold DPT harmless from any damage, judgment, loss, cost or other reasonable expense (including reasonable attorney’s fees) arising from claims that Products or the use of the Product names and any other trademarks, trade names, or trade dress used by COMPANY in connection with Products infringes patent or other proprietary rights of a third-party.
Patent and Other Intellectual Property Rights. 8.1 Patents: FARDA INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY. Title to any invention conceived or first reduced to practice in performance of the Research solely by FARDA’s personnel without significant use of UNIVERSITY administered funds or facilities (“FARDA Invention”) shall remain with FARDA. Title to, and the copyright in, any copyrightable material first produced or composed in the performance of the Research solely by FARDA’s personnel without significant use of UNIVERSITY administered funds or facilities (“FARDA Copyright”) shall remain with FARDA. Neither FARDA Inventions nor FARDA Copyrights shall be subject to the terms and conditions of this Agreement.
Patent and Other Intellectual Property Rights. (a) [c.i.] further warrants that [c.i.] or [c.i.] will not [c.i.] and that [c.i.] will indemnify, defend and hold HARMONY harmless from any damage, judgment, loss, cost or other reasonable expense (including reasonable attorney's fees) arising from claims that [c.i.] and any other [c.i.] used [c.i.] in connection with [c.i.] or other [c.i.] rights of a third party.
Patent and Other Intellectual Property Rights. The Contractor shall be liable for the consequences of using any construction materials, building equipment or construction methods which may be subject to any intellectual property rights held by a third party that axe protected under the relevant laws of Japan~ including, but not limited to, patent, utility model, design and trademark (“Patent and Other Rights”). Provided, however that the Owner shall bear the costs and. expenses incurred, and to be paid for the Contractor's use of such construction materials, building equipment or construction methods in the case where the Owner specifies them without expressly indicating in the Design Documents that are subject to the Patent and Other Rights, ox where the Owner approves the use of such construction materials, building equipment or construction methods expressly indicated in the Design Documents that they are subject to the Patent and Other Rights,
Patent and Other Intellectual Property Rights. In the event that the PhD candidate is the sole author of the PhD thesis, the PhD candidate shall have the sole copyright to the works. If the PhD thesis consists of a collection of articles and a summary, the PhD candidate shall hold the sole copyright to the parts that are the result of their independent creative efforts. Articles authored by several people without the possibility of distinguishing individual contributions as separate works shall be considered joint works. The authors shall jointly hold the copyright to such works. If, in connection with the PhD project, the PhD candidate invents a patentable invention, the PhD candidate shall submit written notice of the invention to the University without undue delay and in accordance with Section 5 of the act dated 17/04/1970 concerning rights to employee inventions. Pursuant to Section 4, cf. Section 6-1 and 6-2 of the same act, the University shall be entitled to request that the rights to the invention be transferred to the University. If the invention has been produced in cooperation with academic supervisors, the PhD candidate and academic supervisor(s) shall jointly determine their respective shares of the patentable invention. Nevertheless, the PhD candidate shall be entitled to publish the invention pursuant to the terms and conditions set out in Section 6-3 of the Employee Invention Act. The right to publication shall apply correspondingly to the academic supervisor(s) if such an invention was jointly created and the rights of the PhD candidate or third-party rights do not preclude publication. Please refer to Part A, Clause 9 concerning the crediting of institutions/enterprises in connection with publication.
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Patent and Other Intellectual Property Rights. In the event that the PhD candidate is the sole author of the PhD thesis, the PhD candidate shall have the sole copyright to the works. If the PhD thesis consists of a collection of articles and a summary, the PhD candidate shall hold the sole copyright to the parts that are the result of their independent creative efforts. Articles authored by several people without the possibility of distinguishing individual contributions as separate works shall be considered joint works. The authors shall jointly hold the copyright to such works. The parts of the PhD thesis/work to which the PhD candidate holds the sole copyright, as well as other academic works resulting from the work on the PhD thesis and to which the PhD candidate holds the sole copyright ,may be used at no cost for the production of copies for use in the external party’s business activities. The same shall apply to the exhibition of the works for the external party’s employees (and any students if the external party is an educational institution) in connection with the ordinary activities of the external party. In the event of such use of the PhD candidate’s published PhD thesis, the PhD candidate shall be named in accordance with legislation and good practice. If, during the execution of the PhD thesis/work, the PhD candidate makes a patentable invention, written notification of the invention shall be issued without undue delay to the party with which the PhD candidate has entered into an employment contract in accordance with Section 5 of the act relating to the right to inventions made by employees of 17/04/1970. A copy shall also be sent to the other institutional party for information. The University shall be entitled to utilise such inventions for research and teaching purposes at no cost, cf. Part A, Clause 9. In addition, the parties may, in advance or otherwise, agree to transfer the rights for commercial exploitation of the invention to an external party. Such an agreement shall be archived together with this agreement. No restrictions may be imposed in relation to the publication of a PhD thesis, with the exception of a pre-agreed postponement of the publication date to allow for an external party to consider patenting/commercialisation. External parties cannot stipulate that all or parts of the PhD thesis cannot be published. Upon publication of the PhD thesis, the University shall be credited if the University has made a necessary and significant contribution to or foundation for the P...
Patent and Other Intellectual Property Rights. IPR The following is in accordance with the Copyright Act of 12 May 1961 no. 2 and its’ regulations. If the PhD student is the sole author of the PhD Dissertation, he/she has sole intellectual property rights of the product. Academic publications or other contributions which cannot be distinguished as one author’s individual work, will be considered joint products. The authors have shared intellectual property rights of such articles. Parts of the dissertation and other academic work resulting from the dissertation of which the PhD student has sole intellectual property rights, may be copied free of charge by VID for use in teaching, research and development, unless a publisher/scientific journal sets limits for this. The PhD student must be notified in advance and credited by name according to current legislation and normal practice. If the PhD student makes a patentable invention during his/her PhD project, a written notice of the invention must be immediately submitted to the University according to § 5 of the Act of 17 April 1970 no. 21 concerning the right to employees’ inventions (Act Respecting the Right to Employees’ Inventions). According to the same Act’s § 4, cf. § 6, 1. and 2. section, the University is entitled to claim the right to the invention. If the invention is created in cooperation with a supervisor, the PhD student and the supervisor must determine their respective shares of the patentable invention. Nevertheless, the PhD student is entitled to publish the invention according to the conditions specified in § 6, 3. section of the Act Respecting the Right to Employees’ Inventions. The same right to publish is also applicable to the supervisor, if the invention is a joint project and the PhD student’s or third party’s rights do not prevent it. No restrictions can be applied to the publication of a PhD dissertation, unless there is a previous agreed upon delay of the publication date, to allow a possible external party to consider the question of patenting, cf. Part C, point 7. Normally, VID should be credited if VID has provided an essential contribution to or made possible the PhD student’s contribution to the publication. If the PhD student is appointed by VID during his/her research project or parts of this, it is considered an essential contribution. The provisions in Part C, point 7, last section are applicable to PhD students who are appointed and/or have supervisor(s) at several institutions/enterprises. The Norwegian Association ...
Patent and Other Intellectual Property Rights. That Seller warrants that it has the legal right to the use of all patents or other intellectual property rights which Seller or any component manufacturers utilize in connection with the manufacturing of the F-150.
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