What is Intellectual Property? by Kelley Way
How can intellectual property protect our writing? Kelley Way returns to demystify intellectual property, trademarks, and trade secrets.
How can intellectual property protect our writing? Kelley Way returns to demystify intellectual property, trademarks, and trade secrets.
Trademarks identify your brand and help with sales, but you can wait to register it until your brand has grown enough to cover the cost.
A lawyer’s useful guide to how authors can properly, and legally, use trademarks in their books and avoid the risk of being sued.
The difference between copyrights, trademarks and patents when it comes to intellectual property can be difficult to discern. It’s vital to understand what each concept is and what it protects.
When it comes to marketing, authors and companies can use the advantages of trademarks and brands. But what’s actually the difference between these, and how do you use them? Kelley Way explains.
You want to protect your rights and your works as much as possible, so you should register a trademark, right? Lawyer Kelley Way teaches us when you should register and when you should wait.
Check out 4 tips on how to protect your trademark, by literary and estate lawyer, Kelley Way.
Get your trademark questions answered by literary and estate lawyer, Kelley Way, in this FAQ. She’s also a novelist!
There’s a lot of confusion out there about trademarks and how they work. Here are some trademark frequently asked questions that Kelley Way, lawyer for copyright and trademarks, and estate planning, sees on a regular basis.
Writers often ask literary lawyer Kelley Way if they can copyright their title. In this article, she discusses the short answer and the long answer.
Choosing a trademark to represent your business can be tricky — especially if you want to call your business something other than your own name. Here are a few pointers to get you started.
Welcome to the monthly series on legal issues for authors to empower you, the artist entrepreneur. Today we focus on trademark protection for fictional characters from our monthly guest columnist, Kelley Way, a lawyer specializing in literary law and other aspects of law.
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