IP Infringement Analysis
Generates an element-by-element infringement memorandum covering rights identification, type-specific analysis, defenses, and remedies quantification.
Prerequisites
- IP registrations/filings — patents (with claims), trademark registrations, copyright registrations, or trade secret identification documents
- Accused instrumentality — product specs, screenshots, source code, marketing materials, or service descriptions
- Prosecution history (patents) — file wrapper, claim amendments, examiner rejections
- Relevant agreements — licenses, NDAs, employment/non-compete agreements, assignments
- Correspondence — cease-and-desist letters, licensing negotiations, admissions
- Jurisdiction and procedural posture — forum, statute of limitations status
If any prerequisite is missing, pause and ask — do not assume or fill gaps.
Quick Start
- Identify the IP right(s) at issue (Step 1)
- Characterize the accused activity (Step 2)
- Apply the type-specific framework: Patent (A), Trademark (B), Copyright (C), or Trade Secret (D) (Step 3)
- Assess defenses and vulnerabilities (Step 4)
- Evaluate available remedies (Step 5)
- State overall assessment with confidence level (Step 6)
Analyze each IP type separately when multiple types are at issue.
Output Structure
Step 1: IP Rights Identification
| Field | Detail | |-------|--------| | IP Type | Patent / Trademark / Copyright / Trade Secret | | Registration/Application No. | | | Filing/Priority Date | | | Owner/Claimant | | | Key Claims/Mark/Work Description | | | Status | Active / Expired / Pending |
Step 2: Accused Activity
| Field | Detail | |-------|--------| | Accused party | | | Product/service/activity | | | Date of first use | | | Geographic scope | | | Commercial context | |
Step 3: Type-Specific Analysis
Apply the applicable framework(s):
A. Patent Infringement
- Claim construction — construe disputed terms under Phillips v. AWH Corp., 415 F.3d 1303 (Fed. Cir. 2005) [VERIFY]
- Literal infringement — all-elements rule, limitation-by-limitation comparison using claim chart below
- Doctrine of equivalents — function-way-result or insubstantial differences test; check prosecution history estoppel per Festo [VERIFY]
- Means-plus-function — identify § 112(f) limitations, map corresponding structure
- Indirect infringement — induced (§ 271(b)): knowledge + specific intent; contributory (§ 271(c)): material component, no substantial non-infringing use
- Validity challenges — anticipation (§ 102), obviousness (§ 103), enablement/written description (§ 112)
Claim Chart:
| Claim Element | Accused Feature | Literal? | DOE? | Notes | |---------------|----------------|----------|------|-------| | [Limitation 1] | | Y/N | Y/N | | | [Limitation 2] | | Y/N | Y/N | |
A single missing limitation defeats literal infringement on that claim.
B. Trademark Infringement
Identify the correct circuit's likelihood-of-confusion test (Polaroid, Sleekcraft, Lapp, etc.) and apply:
| Factor | Analysis | Weight | |--------|----------|--------| | Similarity of marks (sight, sound, meaning, commercial impression) | | | | Relatedness of goods/services | | | | Strength of senior mark (inherent + acquired distinctiveness) | | | | Evidence of actual confusion | | | | Defendant's intent | | | | Consumer sophistication | | | | Channels of trade / marketing convergence | | | | Likelihood of expansion into related markets | | |
If famous mark: assess dilution by blurring or tarnishment (§ 1125(c)). Evaluate defenses: descriptive fair use, nominative fair use, First Amendment.
C. Copyright Infringement
- Ownership — valid registration, chain of title
- Access — direct or circumstantial evidence
- Substantial similarity — extrinsic test (objective, filterable elements) + intrinsic test (subjective, ordinary observer)
- Idea/expression filtration — exclude ideas, facts, scènes à faire, merger doctrine elements before applying substantial similarity
- De minimis — whether copying falls below actionable threshold
Fair Use (17 U.S.C. § 107):
| Factor | Analysis | Favors | |--------|----------|--------| | Purpose and character (transformative?) | | P / D | | Nature of copyrighted work | | P / D | | Amount and substantiality used | | P / D | | Market effect | | P / D |
D. Trade Secret Misappropriation
- Identification — describe each claimed trade secret with specificity
- Qualification — independent economic value from secrecy + reasonable secrecy measures
- Misappropriation method — improper means (theft, breach of duty, espionage) or breach of confidentiality obligation
- Inevitable disclosure — applicable only in jurisdictions recognizing the doctrine; requires high similarity between roles
- Restrictive covenants — NDA/non-compete scope, enforceability, temporal/geographic limits
Step 4: Defenses & Vulnerabilities
| Defense | Applicability | Risk Level | |---------|--------------|------------| | Statute of limitations / laches | | High/Med/Low | | Estoppel (prosecution, equitable, licensee) | | | | Exhaustion / first sale | | | | Independent creation / reverse engineering | | | | Invalidity / unenforceability | | | | Fair use / nominative use | | | | Unclean hands | | |
Step 5: Remedies Assessment
| Remedy | Availability | Estimated Range | |--------|-------------|-----------------| | Lost profits | | | | Reasonable royalty | | | | Disgorgement of profits | | | | Statutory damages | | | | Enhanced/treble damages (willfulness) | | | | Attorneys' fees (exceptional case) | | | | Preliminary injunction (eBay factors) | | | | Permanent injunction | | |
All damages estimates are preliminary — validate with economic expert analysis.
Step 6: Overall Assessment
| Item | Assessment | |------|-----------| | Infringement likelihood | Strong / Moderate / Weak | | Strongest arguments for infringement | | | Greatest vulnerabilities | | | Recommended course of action | Litigate / Settle / License / Monitor | | Settlement valuation range | |
Do not state ultimate legal conclusions without qualifying confidence level.
Troubleshooting
| Issue | Resolution | |-------|-----------| | Uncertain claim construction | Flag ambiguous terms explicitly; present competing constructions with likelihood assessment | | Circuit split on LOC factors | Identify the controlling circuit; note split and flag if forum selection could change outcome | | Mixed literal/DOE results across claims | Analyze each claim independently; a single claim suffices for infringement | | Incomplete accused instrumentality info | Note gaps; qualify analysis as preliminary; request missing specs before finalizing | | Foreign IP rights implicated | Flag when Paris Convention, Berne Convention, or TRIPS may apply; analyze domestic and foreign rights separately |
Guidelines
- Cite controlling authority from the relevant jurisdiction; flag persuasive-only authority from other circuits
- Use
[VERIFY]for any citation not confirmed against source documents - Flag privilege, work-product, or ethical issues (e.g., conflict of interest in analyzing a current client's competitor)
- Output is draft work product — include explicit notation that it does not constitute legal advice
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