This presentation highlights the "best of" for new media and technology. We focus on a variety of topics relating to protecting your business from day one. Information on contracts, terms, IP and everything in between- a great resource for start-ups.
Navigating contracts can be treacherous. This presentation highlights the "need to knows" when reading and writing any contract. Specification from the start can help prevent headaches, extra expenses and lawsuits later on whether you´re subscribing to a cloud-based service or doing business with a friend. NDAs, Terms of Use and software licensing are also discussed.
Ever wonder what the pros and cons to stock options are? Well, wonder no more- that information is here for you! In addition, this presentation provides valuable information for both emploees and employers and fast facts about non-statutory or non'qualified stock options which may be issued to employes as well as non-employees such as contractors and freelancers. Andrew Cooper, CPA (Quinn Lobel & Associates, P.C.) co-hosts.
This document discusses legal issues related to social media content and conduct. It addresses when online content can be regulated as conduct, the concept of vicarious liability for employers, and provides examples of content that has constituted conduct. It also summarizes key components of effective social media policies for employers, such as addressing proprietary information, respectfulness, and copyright issues. Finally, it discusses legal issues regarding employer access to employee social media passwords and political speech on social media.
Simplified content design for legal content: Presentation for GatherContent 2...Frances Gordon
Watch this on-demand webinar for practical steps you can take to bring the legal content on your website up to the standard of the rest of your content.
Who is the webinar recording for?
If you have a suspicion that legal content does not have to be full of legalese to be legal, and you want to do something about it, this workshop is for you. Suitable for agencies working with clients, and for in-house teams, the webinar talks through practical steps you can take to bring the legal content on your website up to the standard of the rest of your content. We assume some understanding of plain English – this is not for complete beginners.
About this webinar recording
Is your legal content letting your website down? This webinar recording takes a serious look at the ‘final frontier’ of good content: the terms and conditions. Although plain language is nothing new, most traditional organisations – from banks to universities – still suffer from legalese and legalisms in their user agreements, privacy policies and other contracts.
This webinar recording will give you the basics of what a contract is from a content design point of view, how to adopt a collaborative relationship with legal and compliance teams, and how to deal with legalese and legalisms. The webinar recording is about the content design of legal content – but we will also mention the new field of ‘legal design’.
What will I learn?
From this webinar recording, you'll learn:
Why your users need to read and understand your online agreements, privacy statements and cookie policies (even if they don’t want to)
How to run a workshop that will enable your team to work with legal and compliance to tackle legalisms and legalese, from deeming provisions to liability clauses, from herein to thereafter (not to mention notwithstanding)
When to use legal definitions and how to write them
Contact Frances Gordon for more information.
This document summarizes a seminar on social media and changing operational spaces for the food and drink sector. Regarding social media, it discusses areas of corporate risk, third party terms of use, employee social media policies, defamation, privacy rights, and content for social media policies. On changing operational spaces, it addresses managing redundancies including selection criteria, agency workers, pay cuts, property sale and lease options, and alternatives to redundancy like reducing headcount.
Lead share alternative_financing_presentationmehtanuj
Small business owners face challenges accessing traditional bank financing. This document discusses alternative financing options for small businesses, including accounts receivable financing, friends and family loans, purchase order financing, angel investors, merchant cash advances, peer-to-peer lending, and equipment leasing. It also introduces Compound Profit, an alternative financing provider that offers various financing solutions to help small businesses grow and become profitable.
This workshop, led by intellectual property attorney and founder of Smartup, Yuri Eliezer, will help you understand what options are available to secure your work and how you can cover all your bases at a reasonable cost. Attendees will leave with an understanding of the difference between patents, trademarks, and copyrights, how to protect their software, how to preserve their rights, and who owns their contributions.
It will also cover the understanding of who owns your contributions:
-What if my Partner and I made our project together?
-Does my Employer own my intellectual property?
-How do I make sure I keep my rights when I’m doing contract work?
The document outlines the top 10 intellectual property mistakes made by emerging companies, including failing to properly assign intellectual property rights to contractors, not filing patent applications within statutory deadlines, and underestimating the importance of freedom to operate analyses and trademark registrations to protect the value of a company's innovations and brand. It emphasizes the need for startups to develop an intellectual property strategy and budget that focuses on commercially valuable intellectual property and properly establishes ownership of employee and contractor work.
Navigating contracts can be treacherous. This presentation highlights the "need to knows" when reading and writing any contract. Specification from the start can help prevent headaches, extra expenses and lawsuits later on whether you´re subscribing to a cloud-based service or doing business with a friend. NDAs, Terms of Use and software licensing are also discussed.
Ever wonder what the pros and cons to stock options are? Well, wonder no more- that information is here for you! In addition, this presentation provides valuable information for both emploees and employers and fast facts about non-statutory or non'qualified stock options which may be issued to employes as well as non-employees such as contractors and freelancers. Andrew Cooper, CPA (Quinn Lobel & Associates, P.C.) co-hosts.
This document discusses legal issues related to social media content and conduct. It addresses when online content can be regulated as conduct, the concept of vicarious liability for employers, and provides examples of content that has constituted conduct. It also summarizes key components of effective social media policies for employers, such as addressing proprietary information, respectfulness, and copyright issues. Finally, it discusses legal issues regarding employer access to employee social media passwords and political speech on social media.
Simplified content design for legal content: Presentation for GatherContent 2...Frances Gordon
Watch this on-demand webinar for practical steps you can take to bring the legal content on your website up to the standard of the rest of your content.
Who is the webinar recording for?
If you have a suspicion that legal content does not have to be full of legalese to be legal, and you want to do something about it, this workshop is for you. Suitable for agencies working with clients, and for in-house teams, the webinar talks through practical steps you can take to bring the legal content on your website up to the standard of the rest of your content. We assume some understanding of plain English – this is not for complete beginners.
About this webinar recording
Is your legal content letting your website down? This webinar recording takes a serious look at the ‘final frontier’ of good content: the terms and conditions. Although plain language is nothing new, most traditional organisations – from banks to universities – still suffer from legalese and legalisms in their user agreements, privacy policies and other contracts.
This webinar recording will give you the basics of what a contract is from a content design point of view, how to adopt a collaborative relationship with legal and compliance teams, and how to deal with legalese and legalisms. The webinar recording is about the content design of legal content – but we will also mention the new field of ‘legal design’.
What will I learn?
From this webinar recording, you'll learn:
Why your users need to read and understand your online agreements, privacy statements and cookie policies (even if they don’t want to)
How to run a workshop that will enable your team to work with legal and compliance to tackle legalisms and legalese, from deeming provisions to liability clauses, from herein to thereafter (not to mention notwithstanding)
When to use legal definitions and how to write them
Contact Frances Gordon for more information.
This document summarizes a seminar on social media and changing operational spaces for the food and drink sector. Regarding social media, it discusses areas of corporate risk, third party terms of use, employee social media policies, defamation, privacy rights, and content for social media policies. On changing operational spaces, it addresses managing redundancies including selection criteria, agency workers, pay cuts, property sale and lease options, and alternatives to redundancy like reducing headcount.
Lead share alternative_financing_presentationmehtanuj
Small business owners face challenges accessing traditional bank financing. This document discusses alternative financing options for small businesses, including accounts receivable financing, friends and family loans, purchase order financing, angel investors, merchant cash advances, peer-to-peer lending, and equipment leasing. It also introduces Compound Profit, an alternative financing provider that offers various financing solutions to help small businesses grow and become profitable.
This workshop, led by intellectual property attorney and founder of Smartup, Yuri Eliezer, will help you understand what options are available to secure your work and how you can cover all your bases at a reasonable cost. Attendees will leave with an understanding of the difference between patents, trademarks, and copyrights, how to protect their software, how to preserve their rights, and who owns their contributions.
It will also cover the understanding of who owns your contributions:
-What if my Partner and I made our project together?
-Does my Employer own my intellectual property?
-How do I make sure I keep my rights when I’m doing contract work?
The document outlines the top 10 intellectual property mistakes made by emerging companies, including failing to properly assign intellectual property rights to contractors, not filing patent applications within statutory deadlines, and underestimating the importance of freedom to operate analyses and trademark registrations to protect the value of a company's innovations and brand. It emphasizes the need for startups to develop an intellectual property strategy and budget that focuses on commercially valuable intellectual property and properly establishes ownership of employee and contractor work.
Legal mistakes can doom even the best startup concepts and founding teams. This workshop prepares you with a legal road map to successfully safeguarding your product or idea. Yuri Eliezer, Founder and Patent Attorney at SmartUp, will show you how to reserve your Intellectual Property rights.
Prenuptial Patenting: Responsible Engagement with Engineering FirmsAurora Consulting
You have your big idea and now it’s time to breathe it into existence, but you need some help with the development. Like many others, you may turn to the aid of an engineering firm or dev shop. This relationship is a marriage of sorts. But it’s a marriage that is designed to inevitably end in divorce. How cleanly, smoothly, and successfully this separation goes depends on the steps that you take before it officially begins.
Dr. Ashley Sloat, President and Director of Patent Strategy at Aurora, leads a discussion into Responsible Engagement with Engineering Firms, or what we affectionately refer to here as “Prenuptial Patenting”. Ashley and our all star patent panel walk you down the aisle and explore everything you need to know to experience marital bliss and an amicable divorce with your engineering partners. This talk covers the full life cycle from vetting partners to post development concerns and everything in between – with particular focus on relationship complexities like IP ownership, assignment from engineering firm inventors back to you, and how to avoid the traps of viral IP.
Blog post: https://www.aurorapatents.com/blog/prenuptial-patenting
Podcast Episode: https://patentlystrategic.buzzsprout.com
The document discusses the top 3 traps that inventors often fall into: public disclosure, lack of prior art searching, and unclear patent ownership. It provides guidance on how to avoid these traps, such as using provisional patent applications before public disclosure to establish an early priority date; thoroughly searching prior art to assess patentability and freedom to operate; and using employment agreements, assignment agreements, and work-for-hire provisions to clearly establish ownership rights. The presentation emphasizes establishing clear ownership of intellectual property early in the invention and partnership process through upfront contracts.
This document discusses maximizing and protecting intellectual property. It defines intellectual property as patents, copyrights, trademarks, and trade secrets. It emphasizes the importance of intellectual property for companies and provides examples of how companies have benefited from or lost value due to their intellectual property. Finally, it discusses best practices for protecting intellectual property, such as patents, non-disclosure agreements, and employee agreements.
This document discusses maximizing and protecting intellectual property. It defines intellectual property as patents, copyrights, trademarks, and trade secrets. It emphasizes the importance of intellectual property for companies and provides examples of how intellectual property adds value. Finally, it discusses strategies for protecting intellectual property, such as patents, non-disclosure agreements, and employee contracts, as well as generating revenue from intellectual property through licensing.
This document provides an overview of copyright and key terms in IT contracts. It begins with an introduction to intellectual property and different types of IP protections. It then discusses common copyright problems that can arise, such as misunderstanding the scope of rights granted in a software license. The document also covers important contract terms for various types of IT agreements, such as those related to development, licensing, services, pricing, and limitations on liability. Key considerations for contract terms like ownership, IP licenses, and warranties are also outlined.
How, as a burgeoning company, should you fit intellectual property investment into your business strategy? We outline Typical IP strategies for startups and help advise how to value factors such as risk, counter assertions and more.
FDGL, John Haggis - Making Your Facebook App LegalTodd Chaffee
This document provides an overview of legal and commercial matters to consider when setting up a company and building an app or product. It discusses topics such as incorporating a company, protecting intellectual property through copyright, trademarks and patents, complying with data protection laws when handling personal user data, and other legal agreements like terms of use. The document emphasizes identifying, protecting, exploiting and enforcing intellectual property, being transparent about data collection and use in privacy policies, and seeking proper legal advice.
This document summarizes a presentation given by Mary Juetten, founder and CEO of The PIP Vault, LLC, about intellectual property strategies for entrepreneurs. The presentation covered identifying intellectual property, protecting intellectual property through registration or as trade secrets, and using intellectual property to raise funding. It provided examples of different types of intellectual property like patents, copyrights, and trademarks. It also discussed challenges around intellectual property ownership and strategies for protecting ideas without legal advice. The presentation emphasized starting with identifying intellectual property before creating business plans or fundraising campaigns.
This document outlines the top 5 patent issues that innovating companies should consider:
1. Sort out ownership of intellectual property from the start of projects to avoid costly disputes later.
2. Do not publicly disclose inventions before filing a patent application to preserve novelty.
3. Software can be patented if it does something technical beyond just being a better program.
4. Do due diligence on patents to ensure freedom to operate and avoid infringing existing patents.
5. Filing a patent application provides benefits like protecting the company's asset, attracting investors, and reducing tax rates.
What do businesses need to know about Intellectual Property? This presentation covers the basics of Trade Secrets, Patents, Trademarks, and Copyrights for entrepreneurs, business owners, freelancers, and creative professionals.
This IP Strategy Overview was presented at a conference of innovators at Georgia Tech's College of Architecture in October 2013. The goal of this presentation is to go beyond the usual lawyer-generated content to highlight not only the positive aspects of IP, but also to give a reality check as to the likely ROI of investment in protection. A basic overview of IP (patents, copyrights, trademarks, trade secrets) is provided. Additionally, commonly overlooked forms of intangible asset value are presented. A case study of an innovation protection strategy is highlighted. Recommendations for business relevant IP and patent protection strategies are also included.
This document provides an agenda and overview of key topics related to contracts for technology and the internet. It discusses the basic elements of a contract, as well as types of contracts like licenses, partnerships, and proprietary agreements for software. Specific cases are referenced to illustrate legal principles for contracts in technology. Licensing models for software including open source and copyleft are also covered, along with policy issues around intellectual property protection for software.
This document discusses key intellectual property issues for new business leaders. It covers the main types of intellectual property - patents, trade secrets, copyrights, and trademarks. For each type, it describes what they are, how to obtain them, their value, and important considerations. The overall message is that business leaders need to understand intellectual property in order to protect their ideas and brands through the appropriate legal means. They must also be aware of enforcement and ownership issues related to intellectual property.
Start-Up Basics for Artistic Entrepreneursronaldbarabas
This document provides information for creative professionals starting their own business. It discusses advantages and disadvantages of entrepreneurship, initial business considerations like market opportunity and competitive advantages, and choosing an entity type. Key legal considerations for starting a business are also outlined, including intellectual property protection, copyright ownership, and using nondisclosure agreements. The speaker is an entertainment attorney who will provide legal guidance on these business start-up topics.
This document summarizes a workshop on hackers' codes of collaboration. It discusses common issues that arise like ownership disputes when working on projects together. The workshop included an expert panel discussing cases like Snapchat and Facebook where founders later disputed ownership. It also covered intellectual property basics and suggested solutions like unanimous consent requirements or licensing agreements to avoid future disputes. The goal was to help collaborators protect their work and understand their rights when working together.
The document provides an overview of intellectual property issues that are important for startups, including what types of intellectual property exist, how to determine ownership of intellectual property, and common contractual provisions and other legal issues that startups should be aware of such as open source licensing, restrictions on business, and privacy concerns. It was presented by attorneys from Fenwick & West LLP, a law firm that focuses on technology companies, to provide a basic introduction to intellectual property issues relevant to startups.
Presentation given to the Chicago Lean Startup Circle on Dec. 1, 2011.
In a lean startup, getting product-to-market-fit is everything. Along the way, consider core IP issues to make sure your startup owns all of the value that you are adding. You can also have lean IP, just make sure you fully understand the implication of bootstrapping.
As always, consult with a lawyer if you have questions or concerns.
B2B payments are rapidly changing. Find out the 5 key questions you need to be asking yourself to be sure you are mastering B2B payments today. Learn more at www.BlueSnap.com.
SATTA MATKA SATTA FAST RESULT KALYAN TOP MATKA RESULT KALYAN SATTA MATKA FAST RESULT MILAN RATAN RAJDHANI MAIN BAZAR MATKA FAST TIPS RESULT MATKA CHART JODI CHART PANEL CHART FREE FIX GAME SATTAMATKA ! MATKA MOBI SATTA 143 spboss.in TOP NO1 RESULT FULL RATE MATKA ONLINE GAME PLAY BY APP SPBOSS
Legal mistakes can doom even the best startup concepts and founding teams. This workshop prepares you with a legal road map to successfully safeguarding your product or idea. Yuri Eliezer, Founder and Patent Attorney at SmartUp, will show you how to reserve your Intellectual Property rights.
Prenuptial Patenting: Responsible Engagement with Engineering FirmsAurora Consulting
You have your big idea and now it’s time to breathe it into existence, but you need some help with the development. Like many others, you may turn to the aid of an engineering firm or dev shop. This relationship is a marriage of sorts. But it’s a marriage that is designed to inevitably end in divorce. How cleanly, smoothly, and successfully this separation goes depends on the steps that you take before it officially begins.
Dr. Ashley Sloat, President and Director of Patent Strategy at Aurora, leads a discussion into Responsible Engagement with Engineering Firms, or what we affectionately refer to here as “Prenuptial Patenting”. Ashley and our all star patent panel walk you down the aisle and explore everything you need to know to experience marital bliss and an amicable divorce with your engineering partners. This talk covers the full life cycle from vetting partners to post development concerns and everything in between – with particular focus on relationship complexities like IP ownership, assignment from engineering firm inventors back to you, and how to avoid the traps of viral IP.
Blog post: https://www.aurorapatents.com/blog/prenuptial-patenting
Podcast Episode: https://patentlystrategic.buzzsprout.com
The document discusses the top 3 traps that inventors often fall into: public disclosure, lack of prior art searching, and unclear patent ownership. It provides guidance on how to avoid these traps, such as using provisional patent applications before public disclosure to establish an early priority date; thoroughly searching prior art to assess patentability and freedom to operate; and using employment agreements, assignment agreements, and work-for-hire provisions to clearly establish ownership rights. The presentation emphasizes establishing clear ownership of intellectual property early in the invention and partnership process through upfront contracts.
This document discusses maximizing and protecting intellectual property. It defines intellectual property as patents, copyrights, trademarks, and trade secrets. It emphasizes the importance of intellectual property for companies and provides examples of how companies have benefited from or lost value due to their intellectual property. Finally, it discusses best practices for protecting intellectual property, such as patents, non-disclosure agreements, and employee agreements.
This document discusses maximizing and protecting intellectual property. It defines intellectual property as patents, copyrights, trademarks, and trade secrets. It emphasizes the importance of intellectual property for companies and provides examples of how intellectual property adds value. Finally, it discusses strategies for protecting intellectual property, such as patents, non-disclosure agreements, and employee contracts, as well as generating revenue from intellectual property through licensing.
This document provides an overview of copyright and key terms in IT contracts. It begins with an introduction to intellectual property and different types of IP protections. It then discusses common copyright problems that can arise, such as misunderstanding the scope of rights granted in a software license. The document also covers important contract terms for various types of IT agreements, such as those related to development, licensing, services, pricing, and limitations on liability. Key considerations for contract terms like ownership, IP licenses, and warranties are also outlined.
How, as a burgeoning company, should you fit intellectual property investment into your business strategy? We outline Typical IP strategies for startups and help advise how to value factors such as risk, counter assertions and more.
FDGL, John Haggis - Making Your Facebook App LegalTodd Chaffee
This document provides an overview of legal and commercial matters to consider when setting up a company and building an app or product. It discusses topics such as incorporating a company, protecting intellectual property through copyright, trademarks and patents, complying with data protection laws when handling personal user data, and other legal agreements like terms of use. The document emphasizes identifying, protecting, exploiting and enforcing intellectual property, being transparent about data collection and use in privacy policies, and seeking proper legal advice.
This document summarizes a presentation given by Mary Juetten, founder and CEO of The PIP Vault, LLC, about intellectual property strategies for entrepreneurs. The presentation covered identifying intellectual property, protecting intellectual property through registration or as trade secrets, and using intellectual property to raise funding. It provided examples of different types of intellectual property like patents, copyrights, and trademarks. It also discussed challenges around intellectual property ownership and strategies for protecting ideas without legal advice. The presentation emphasized starting with identifying intellectual property before creating business plans or fundraising campaigns.
This document outlines the top 5 patent issues that innovating companies should consider:
1. Sort out ownership of intellectual property from the start of projects to avoid costly disputes later.
2. Do not publicly disclose inventions before filing a patent application to preserve novelty.
3. Software can be patented if it does something technical beyond just being a better program.
4. Do due diligence on patents to ensure freedom to operate and avoid infringing existing patents.
5. Filing a patent application provides benefits like protecting the company's asset, attracting investors, and reducing tax rates.
What do businesses need to know about Intellectual Property? This presentation covers the basics of Trade Secrets, Patents, Trademarks, and Copyrights for entrepreneurs, business owners, freelancers, and creative professionals.
This IP Strategy Overview was presented at a conference of innovators at Georgia Tech's College of Architecture in October 2013. The goal of this presentation is to go beyond the usual lawyer-generated content to highlight not only the positive aspects of IP, but also to give a reality check as to the likely ROI of investment in protection. A basic overview of IP (patents, copyrights, trademarks, trade secrets) is provided. Additionally, commonly overlooked forms of intangible asset value are presented. A case study of an innovation protection strategy is highlighted. Recommendations for business relevant IP and patent protection strategies are also included.
This document provides an agenda and overview of key topics related to contracts for technology and the internet. It discusses the basic elements of a contract, as well as types of contracts like licenses, partnerships, and proprietary agreements for software. Specific cases are referenced to illustrate legal principles for contracts in technology. Licensing models for software including open source and copyleft are also covered, along with policy issues around intellectual property protection for software.
This document discusses key intellectual property issues for new business leaders. It covers the main types of intellectual property - patents, trade secrets, copyrights, and trademarks. For each type, it describes what they are, how to obtain them, their value, and important considerations. The overall message is that business leaders need to understand intellectual property in order to protect their ideas and brands through the appropriate legal means. They must also be aware of enforcement and ownership issues related to intellectual property.
Start-Up Basics for Artistic Entrepreneursronaldbarabas
This document provides information for creative professionals starting their own business. It discusses advantages and disadvantages of entrepreneurship, initial business considerations like market opportunity and competitive advantages, and choosing an entity type. Key legal considerations for starting a business are also outlined, including intellectual property protection, copyright ownership, and using nondisclosure agreements. The speaker is an entertainment attorney who will provide legal guidance on these business start-up topics.
This document summarizes a workshop on hackers' codes of collaboration. It discusses common issues that arise like ownership disputes when working on projects together. The workshop included an expert panel discussing cases like Snapchat and Facebook where founders later disputed ownership. It also covered intellectual property basics and suggested solutions like unanimous consent requirements or licensing agreements to avoid future disputes. The goal was to help collaborators protect their work and understand their rights when working together.
The document provides an overview of intellectual property issues that are important for startups, including what types of intellectual property exist, how to determine ownership of intellectual property, and common contractual provisions and other legal issues that startups should be aware of such as open source licensing, restrictions on business, and privacy concerns. It was presented by attorneys from Fenwick & West LLP, a law firm that focuses on technology companies, to provide a basic introduction to intellectual property issues relevant to startups.
Presentation given to the Chicago Lean Startup Circle on Dec. 1, 2011.
In a lean startup, getting product-to-market-fit is everything. Along the way, consider core IP issues to make sure your startup owns all of the value that you are adding. You can also have lean IP, just make sure you fully understand the implication of bootstrapping.
As always, consult with a lawyer if you have questions or concerns.
B2B payments are rapidly changing. Find out the 5 key questions you need to be asking yourself to be sure you are mastering B2B payments today. Learn more at www.BlueSnap.com.
SATTA MATKA SATTA FAST RESULT KALYAN TOP MATKA RESULT KALYAN SATTA MATKA FAST RESULT MILAN RATAN RAJDHANI MAIN BAZAR MATKA FAST TIPS RESULT MATKA CHART JODI CHART PANEL CHART FREE FIX GAME SATTAMATKA ! MATKA MOBI SATTA 143 spboss.in TOP NO1 RESULT FULL RATE MATKA ONLINE GAME PLAY BY APP SPBOSS
Storytelling is an incredibly valuable tool to share data and information. To get the most impact from stories there are a number of key ingredients. These are based on science and human nature. Using these elements in a story you can deliver information impactfully, ensure action and drive change.
The Evolution and Impact of OTT Platforms: A Deep Dive into the Future of Ent...ABHILASH DUTTA
This presentation provides a thorough examination of Over-the-Top (OTT) platforms, focusing on their development and substantial influence on the entertainment industry, with a particular emphasis on the Indian market.We begin with an introduction to OTT platforms, defining them as streaming services that deliver content directly over the internet, bypassing traditional broadcast channels. These platforms offer a variety of content, including movies, TV shows, and original productions, allowing users to access content on-demand across multiple devices.The historical context covers the early days of streaming, starting with Netflix's inception in 1997 as a DVD rental service and its transition to streaming in 2007. The presentation also highlights India's television journey, from the launch of Doordarshan in 1959 to the introduction of Direct-to-Home (DTH) satellite television in 2000, which expanded viewing choices and set the stage for the rise of OTT platforms like Big Flix, Ditto TV, Sony LIV, Hotstar, and Netflix. The business models of OTT platforms are explored in detail. Subscription Video on Demand (SVOD) models, exemplified by Netflix and Amazon Prime Video, offer unlimited content access for a monthly fee. Transactional Video on Demand (TVOD) models, like iTunes and Sky Box Office, allow users to pay for individual pieces of content. Advertising-Based Video on Demand (AVOD) models, such as YouTube and Facebook Watch, provide free content supported by advertisements. Hybrid models combine elements of SVOD and AVOD, offering flexibility to cater to diverse audience preferences.
Content acquisition strategies are also discussed, highlighting the dual approach of purchasing broadcasting rights for existing films and TV shows and investing in original content production. This section underscores the importance of a robust content library in attracting and retaining subscribers.The presentation addresses the challenges faced by OTT platforms, including the unpredictability of content acquisition and audience preferences. It emphasizes the difficulty of balancing content investment with returns in a competitive market, the high costs associated with marketing, and the need for continuous innovation and adaptation to stay relevant.
The impact of OTT platforms on the Bollywood film industry is significant. The competition for viewers has led to a decrease in cinema ticket sales, affecting the revenue of Bollywood films that traditionally rely on theatrical releases. Additionally, OTT platforms now pay less for film rights due to the uncertain success of films in cinemas.
Looking ahead, the future of OTT in India appears promising. The market is expected to grow by 20% annually, reaching a value of ₹1200 billion by the end of the decade. The increasing availability of affordable smartphones and internet access will drive this growth, making OTT platforms a primary source of entertainment for many viewers.
At Techbox Square, in Singapore, we're not just creative web designers and developers, we're the driving force behind your brand identity. Contact us today.
Navigating the world of forex trading can be challenging, especially for beginners. To help you make an informed decision, we have comprehensively compared the best forex brokers in India for 2024. This article, reviewed by Top Forex Brokers Review, will cover featured award winners, the best forex brokers, featured offers, the best copy trading platforms, the best forex brokers for beginners, the best MetaTrader brokers, and recently updated reviews. We will focus on FP Markets, Black Bull, EightCap, IC Markets, and Octa.
Event Report - SAP Sapphire 2024 Orlando - lots of innovation and old challengesHolger Mueller
Holger Mueller of Constellation Research shares his key takeaways from SAP's Sapphire confernece, held in Orlando, June 3rd till 5th 2024, in the Orange Convention Center.
3 Simple Steps To Buy Verified Payoneer Account In 2024SEOSMMEARTH
Buy Verified Payoneer Account: Quick and Secure Way to Receive Payments
Buy Verified Payoneer Account With 100% secure documents, [ USA, UK, CA ]. Are you looking for a reliable and safe way to receive payments online? Then you need buy verified Payoneer account ! Payoneer is a global payment platform that allows businesses and individuals to send and receive money in over 200 countries.
If You Want To More Information just Contact Now:
Skype: SEOSMMEARTH
Telegram: @seosmmearth
Gmail: seosmmearth@gmail.com
buy old yahoo accounts buy yahoo accountsSusan Laney
As a business owner, I understand the importance of having a strong online presence and leveraging various digital platforms to reach and engage with your target audience. One often overlooked yet highly valuable asset in this regard is the humble Yahoo account. While many may perceive Yahoo as a relic of the past, the truth is that these accounts still hold immense potential for businesses of all sizes.
Understanding User Needs and Satisfying ThemAggregage
https://www.productmanagementtoday.com/frs/26903918/understanding-user-needs-and-satisfying-them
We know we want to create products which our customers find to be valuable. Whether we label it as customer-centric or product-led depends on how long we've been doing product management. There are three challenges we face when doing this. The obvious challenge is figuring out what our users need; the non-obvious challenges are in creating a shared understanding of those needs and in sensing if what we're doing is meeting those needs.
In this webinar, we won't focus on the research methods for discovering user-needs. We will focus on synthesis of the needs we discover, communication and alignment tools, and how we operationalize addressing those needs.
Industry expert Scott Sehlhorst will:
• Introduce a taxonomy for user goals with real world examples
• Present the Onion Diagram, a tool for contextualizing task-level goals
• Illustrate how customer journey maps capture activity-level and task-level goals
• Demonstrate the best approach to selection and prioritization of user-goals to address
• Highlight the crucial benchmarks, observable changes, in ensuring fulfillment of customer needs
Structural Design Process: Step-by-Step Guide for BuildingsChandresh Chudasama
The structural design process is explained: Follow our step-by-step guide to understand building design intricacies and ensure structural integrity. Learn how to build wonderful buildings with the help of our detailed information. Learn how to create structures with durability and reliability and also gain insights on ways of managing structures.
Discover timeless style with the 2022 Vintage Roman Numerals Men's Ring. Crafted from premium stainless steel, this 6mm wide ring embodies elegance and durability. Perfect as a gift, it seamlessly blends classic Roman numeral detailing with modern sophistication, making it an ideal accessory for any occasion.
https://rb.gy/usj1a2
How MJ Global Leads the Packaging Industry.pdfMJ Global
MJ Global's success in staying ahead of the curve in the packaging industry is a testament to its dedication to innovation, sustainability, and customer-centricity. By embracing technological advancements, leading in eco-friendly solutions, collaborating with industry leaders, and adapting to evolving consumer preferences, MJ Global continues to set new standards in the packaging sector.
1. New Media Legal Boot Camp
Andrew T. Mirsky
Mirsky & Company, PLLC
Mirsky & Company, PLLC (“Kenyon”) has provided this presentation for general informational purposes only. It is not intended as professional
counsel and should not be used as such. You should contact your attorney to obtain advice with respect to any particular issue or problem.
2. Andrew T. Mirsky, Esq.
• Principal, Mirsky & Company, PLLC, DC and NY
• Formerly in-house counsel with National Journal
and Atlantic Monthly magazines
• Clients in new media and technology, including
intellectual property, corporate and finance,
privacy, joint ventures and partnerships, and
employment and HR matters.
• Founder, Media Future Now
(www.mediafuturenow.com)
3. Contracts
What matters
when looking at
contracts?
• No matter who writes the contract, it should include:
• (i) What will be done?
• (ii) Who’s going to do it?
• (iii) What happens if and when the contract is
terminated?
4. Contracts
EXAMPLES:
• Specific responsibilities- Why this matters?
• Spend time up-front. Why? Manage expectations and pre-empt
disputes about what you said you would and would not do.
• Instead of “we will provide training”, instead define scope of training,
what is and what is not covered, time limitations, billings costs beyond
scope, etc.
• Deliverables and acceptance.
• Defining what constitutes “breach” or “failure of performance”.
• Ownership rights – who owns what?
• For service contracts, deliverables owned yes, but is there underlying
technology?
• Practical distinction between “license” and “sale”. IP Ownership –
especially licensed software, who owns new developments?
5. Trademarks
• When do trademarks
matter? (When useful?
When not?)
Trademarks • Infringement vs.
registration
• What is value of
registration?
6. Trademarks
EXAMPLES:
• “New York Trucking Company” – descriptive/generic
• Local business only – a local retail store, local market only
• Is it a unique name or logo? Something that would be
threatened by name copies, uniquely associated with the name
or brand
7. Employees and Contractors
• Interns and freelancers/ICs
• Risks and problems: Just because you don’t withhold taxes/provide
benefits/grant vacation, doesn’t make the worker an IC
• Can you get away with unpaid interns? Maybe. Same with ICs versus
employees (i.e. not providing benefits). But … risk: DOL audit (and big
penalties), lawsuits from former interns and staffers. Plus … potential
IP ownership problems.
• “Work for hire” agreements: Always always always … plus
assignment clauses (why?)
• Must be in writing BEFORE work begins.
• Needed for ICs, not needed for employees.
• No written agreement -- any IP developed prior to joining the company
will be property of the individual
8. Employees and Contractors
EXAMPLE:
• Employment offer letter (problem!): “The Company adheres to a policy of
employment-at-will that allows either the Company or you to terminate
the employment relationship at any time for any reason. A minimum of
two weeks of notice should be provided to your supervisor in the event
that either party wishes to exercise the option of termination. Although
you are an employee at will, it is expected that you are committing to
being part of this venture for at least the next two years.”
9. Idea Protection
Copyrights? Patents? Yes
• But is that practical?
How do you prevent people
from stealing your idea?
• Possible investors
• Competitors
• Employees
• Contractors
10. Patents
Copyright vs. Patent
Ideas
versus
expression
of ideas –
Invention must be:
Novel
Is this speed Useful
something I versus long
process. Non
can patent? Obvious
11. Patents
Novelty: Must invent before (i) Filing Mechanics:
known, used or filed by others in • 20 years from filing, extended
U.S. or (ii) published or patented for delays
anywhere. • Ordinary time to patent is
• U.S. allows one year to apply about 3.5 years
for patent after item (i) sold or • Cost: Expensive to obtain,
used in public in the U.S. or maintain, defend
(ii) described in print or • To file: $10-$20K
patented anywhere. • To prosecute: $10K-$15K
• Publication before filing is • To maintain: $10K-$15K
absolute bar except in U.S., • Total Cost: $30-$50K
Canada, Japan and a few
other countries.
• Utility: Beneficial use
• Non-obviousness: Not obvious to
one of ordinary skill in the art
12. Copyrights
What does it mean to copyright software?
What kind of protection does it get you?
What kind of protection does it NOT get you?
13. Privacy
Must you have a
privacy policy?
Should you?
Usually the
problem is
CONTRACT and
NOT privacy laws.
14. Privacy
Difference between privacy (disclosure and use) and data
security.
• Must you comply with data security? Yes. What standards?
• Why does it matter?
What about tracking? Part legal, part practical.
• Part legal
• Part Practical
User consent:
• Baseline user expectations.
• Why does this matter?
Voluntary commitments: In US: Saying what you’re going to
do with personal information, and then actually doing that.
PII (meaning: not just ID, but also anything that could be
used to make ID).
15. Fair Use
Facts are not
always
clearly public
domain,
Ask whether especially in
the “heart” of cases where When
the original unusual copying, if at
work is being creative effort all possible
used, (e.g. limit your
regardless of proprietary use to facts
the seemingly market and ideas,
small physical analysis not original
amount of the algorithms) expression.
copying. went into
their
compilation.
16. Fair Use
• Facts are not always clearly public domain, especially in cases where
unusual creative effort (e.g. proprietary market analysis algorithms) went
into their compilation.
17. Partnership/Corporate Issues
Failure to everyone has
Document Default rule is equal
Management quasi-general ownership
and partnership – and equal
Ownership: voting rights
18. Partnership/Corporate Issues
• Failure to Document Management and Ownership
• Default rule is quasi-general partnership – everyone has equal
ownership and equal voting rights
• Can give minor players unwarranted veto power
• Easier to negotiate at early stage
• Risk of piercing corporate veil through lack of business formalities
• Situation where one partner does all the work, even
though plan was 50/50 split of work. What to do?
19. Type of entity
LLC
All usually want limited
liability, flexibility and
minimized taxes
C Why form a company at Limited
Corporation all? Partnership
What benefits do sole
proprietors get from
company formation?
S
Corporation
20. Terms of Services/Terms of Use:
• Comments are not • Ownership: When you
necessarily the views post content, you give
of [org name] [org] license to display
such material OR …
• Infringing and who owns content?
inappropriate material
will be removed
Ownership:
Typical What MUST Who owns
Provisions be covered? content?
21. Terms of Services/Terms of Use:
(YouTube) “For clarity, you retain all of your ownership rights in your Content.
However, by submitting Content to YouTube, you hereby grant YouTube a
worldwide, non-exclusive, royalty-free, sublicenseable and transferable license
to use, reproduce, distribute, prepare derivative works of, display, and perform
the Content in connection with the Service and YouTube's (and its successors'
and affiliates') business, including without limitation for promoting and
redistributing part or all of the Service (and derivative works thereof) in any
media formats and through any media channels. You also hereby grant each
user of the Service a non-exclusive license to access your Content through the
Service, and to use, reproduce, distribute, display and perform such Content as
permitted through the functionality of the Service and under these Terms of
Service. The above licenses granted by you in video Content you submit to the
Service terminate within a commercially reasonable time after you remove or
delete your videos from the Service. You understand and agree, however, that
YouTube may retain, but not display, distribute, or perform, server copies of
your videos that have been removed or deleted. The above licenses granted by
you in user comments you submit are perpetual and irrevocable.”
22. Andrew T. Mirsky
andy@mirskylegal.com
(202) 339-0303
www.mirskylegal.com
@mirskylegal
2301 N Street, NW 318 West 14th Street
Suite 313 4th Floor
Washington, DC 20037 New York, NY 10014