Patent Litigation Finance

2023 Corporate IP Strategy Conference was a success!

The 2023 Corporate IP Strategy Conference (CIPSC) was attended by over 200 IP professionals, attorneys, and consultants with several presentations and discussions on the most thought-provoking IP issues of our current times. Find the presentations below over Brattle Groups recently concluded Wi-Fi 6 expert economic report, the meteoric rise of litigation finance and exotic insurance products, Portal updates, and slides regarding international patent strategy topics.

Our next event will be the 12th Annual Patent Administrative Law Conference (PALC) on Wednesday, April 24, 2024, in Washington, DC. We will have more information soon!

IPO hosts "IP Litigation Finance & Disclosure" Webinar, September 21

Join Unified’s GC, Jonathan Stroud, and others on Thursday, September 21st, on IPO’s IP Chat Channel. Litigation funding and prevailing secondaries markets have quickly come to undergird huge swaths of U.S. civil litigation today. This is particularly true in U.S. patent litigation, although financing efforts surrounding patents are not exclusively limited to enforcement efforts. Indeed, studies show that up to a third of all modern patent litigation is now funded, making patent litigation the highest-growth area in litigation funding. Some argue that litigation funding has enabled small players and individual inventors to realize the value of their intellectual property holdings. Others have raised concerns about the impact of funding on litigation, pointing especially to a lack of transparency in litigation financing. This webinar will explore this burgeoning field from a variety of angles, including objective facts relating to funders and their cases, insurance and lending efforts, as well as perspectives of investors, defendants, and other market participants. Bringing together these diverse perspectives will help attendees better understand this significant new development in patent litigation and IP monetization.

https://www.unifiedpatents.com/edge

EVENT INFORMATION

Thursday, September 21, 2023

12:00pm-1:00pm ET

Registration Fees

IPO Members: Free - Non-Members: $150

Litigation Funding Disclosure and Patent Litigation

In an article slated for publication in the Federal Circuit Bar Journal, Sean Keller, J.D. Candidate at Texas A&M University School of Law, and Jonathan Stroud, GC at Unified Patents, have written about the growing policy debate surrounding litigation financing disclosures.

Litigation financing is one of the most significant developments in modern litigation. Since at least the 1990s, litigation financing steadily expanded in the United States and has grown into a multibillion-dollar industry. Litigation funding—providing third-party non-recourse funding contingent upon litigation recovery and outcomes—is a modern phenomenon of relatively recent vintage that nonetheless undergirds huge swaths of U.S. civil litigation today. And one of the biggest recent beneficiaries of litigation financing has been patent litigation.

Modern patent litigation, being high-stakes, arm’s-length, and Federal in nature, is both a high-risk, high-reward prospect for litigation funding. Studies show that up to a third of all modern patent litigation is now funded, making it the highest-growth area in litigation funding; the prevalence of litigation shell companies and other procedural quirks in patent litigation present potential advantages and challenges in employing funding. As it grows into a major feature of the U.S. litigation landscape, several academics, advocacy groups, policymakers, and practitioners have raised concerns about the lack of transparency in litigation financing, given there are comprehensive rules or practices surrounding disclosure of the existence and terms of such arrangements.

Historically, litigation funding regulation in the U.S. had been barred at common law and thereafter has been largely left to the states and their legislatures, resulting in a messy patchwork of disclosure requirements. State courts, legislatures, and judges have offered piecemeal approaches that often conflict. To remedy this in other contexts, the Judicial Conference Advisory Committee on Civil Rules has debated adding disclosure requirements to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedures, resulting years ago in Rule 7.1 and its minimal upfront corporate disclosures, as well as an insurance disclosure requirement into the FRCP. Both debates at the time were akin to the current debate about litigation financing disclosure requirements. Nevertheless, advocates have resisted comparisons between insurance and litigation financing disclosures. We tackle this comparison head-on by deconstructing some of the arguments disclosure opponents have cited to undermine the comparison. We conclude that arguments for enhanced disclosure are sensible, overdue, and inevitable; indeed, in many courts and some agencies, they are already here. Clear, focused Federal disclosure requirements would go a long way to preventing an unenforceable patchwork of state regulations, and would prevent enforcement that is under- or over-inclusive.

Track LIEs (Litigation … ) in Unified’s Portal

As part of ongoing deterrence activities, Unified’s Portal is introducing the most comprehensive tracker of Litigation Investment Entities (LIEs). Tracking and reporting will be conducted on at least a quarterly basis and will attempt to shed light on this growing but nonetheless little-understood part of the patent litigation landscape. 

The LIEs tracker will consist of two components - a field for NPE Aggregator or NPE parent company of multiple NPEs, and the second is an option if a case is backed by a secured interest or by third-party financing. 

Users can use the plaintiff specific filters to search for entities such as IP Edge or Acacia. Using the Third Party Financing filter, a list of cases will be generated where a secured interest or known third party has an investment into a patent that has been litigated.

In addition to being able to search for NPE Aggregators and Third Party Financing Commitments, the case deal page will provide flags to understand if an entity is part of NPE Aggregator and Financed, such as Ridgeview IP LLC.

Also in the tracker, users can understand the true impact of LIEs and NPE Aggregators by using the Annual Report Tool for a graphical point of view. 

Click HERE for more information on the methodology and to read through Unified’s first LIEs Report. To view the LIEs Tracker in Portal, please click here.

Webinar Materials - The Rise of Patent Litigation Finance: Data & Trends

Speakers: Alyssa Holtslander – Senior Patent Counsel, Unified Patents

Joshua Harris — Vice President, Burford Capital

Russ Emerson — Partner, Haynes and Boone

Jonathan Stroud — Chief IP Counsel, Unified Patents

While speaking on data and trends within patent litigation financing, we discussed how patent litigation financing works and who is providing the funding. We also discussed privilege and confidentiality issues, ethical issues, the impact of litigation funding to actual litigations, and other hot topic issues regarding patent litigation financing.

Thank you to the panelists for covering a very thought-provoking topic.

To listen to the recorded webinar, click here: https://vimeo.com/473656670

No formal slide presentation was given during the webinar. However, the slides below along with the article, “Pulling Back the Curtain on Complex Funding of Patent Assertion Entities” written by Jonathan Stroud, go hand-in-hand with our discussion today.

Please join us at our next webinar, Reexaminations Reborn: Strategies for Filing Ex Parte Reexaminations on November 19th at 12p EST. For more information, visit our website.

Patent Litigation Finance - Oct2020 by Jennifer M Gallagher on Scribd