Posted on Friday, 7th November 2008 by Gene Quinn
Gene Quinn
US Patent Attorney, Law Professor & Author
Education:
B.S.E.E. Rutgers University College of Engineering
J.D. Franklin Pierce Law Center
LL.M. Franklin Pierce Law Center
Gene is a US Patent Attorney, Law Professor and author. He also teaches a patent bar review course and is the lead contributing author for the IPWatchdog.com Blog, which has propelled him into the limelight as one of the most notable commentators on issues such as technology, innovation, entrepreneurship and patent protection. Gene’s particular patent specialty is in the area of business methods, software, computer and Internet applications, but he has worked with independent inventors and start-up businesses in a variety of different technology fields. He is a proud member of the Republican Party and a conservative at heart. He started this blog as a means for communicating his thoughts and view on politics, the future of America and conservative values, and as a means for attempting to do his part to combat the overwhelming and almost unbelievable media bias against Republicans and Conservatives.
Gene is also known by many as “The IPWatchdog.” Gene started the widely popular intellectual property website IPWatchdog.com in 1999, and since that time the site has received well over 3 million visitors. At least in part due to the notoriety he developed through IPWatchdog.com, Gene has been quoted in the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, the LA Times, CNN Money and various other newspapers and magazines worldwide.
Gene is also the inventor of a unique invention mining and patent drafting system, known as the Invent + Patent System™, which enables the submission of detailed answers that form the basis of an extraordinarily detailed invention disclosure and which can be filed immediately as a provisional patent application, or subsequently reviewed, modified, edited and supplemented before being filed as a non-provisional patent application. This system is the outgrowth of years of teaching law students how to write patent applications and has been adapted for use by individual inventors since 2004. Since its inception the system has helped over 10,000 inventors to create both non-provisional and provisional patent applications.
Gene is a member of the Board of Directors of the United Inventors Association, which is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization with the mission of coordinating individual inventors and inventor associations for the express purpose of actively addressing their issues and challenges at both the national and international levels.
Between 2003 and 2007 Gene wrote a monthly column for Patent World and served on the Patent World editorial board. He has also previously taught a variety of intellectual property courses at the law school level, including patent law, patent claim drafting, patent prosecution, copyright law, trademark law and introduction to intellectual property. Between 1998 and 2008 Gene taught at Syracuse University College of Law, Temple University School of Law, The University of Toledo College of Law, Franklin Pierce Law Center and Whittier Law School.
Prior to moving into the academic world, Gene was employed at a general civil litigation firm, where he primarily engaged in representing clients involved in complex litigation matters. In addition he was a founding member and managing partner of Smith, Quinn & Associates, a small intellectual property boutique firm located in Concord, New Hampshire. He also spent two years as Vice President and General Counsel for an independent record label in Orlando, Florida.
Gene is admitted to practice law in New Hampshire, is a Registered Patent Attorney licensed to practice before the United States Patent Office (Reg. No. 44,294) and is also admitted to practice before the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. Gene’s primary areas of expertise are in the areas of patent and trade secret law and patent prosecution.