The Illusion of "Offer to Sell" Patent Infringement: When an Offer Is an Offer but Is Not an Offer
نویسندگان
چکیده
منابع مشابه
When Should an Employer Offer an Opaque Contract?∗
In many cases, an employer has private information about the potential productivity of a worker, who in turn has private information about the effort she exerts on the job. Much of the literature on this subject restricts the employer to offer contracts that leave her no discretion once a contract is accepted, while more general mechanisms may allow the employer to exercise discretion after acc...
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Current Web-based electronic commerce systems are lacking in efficient electronic brokerage. Over the past few years significant research has been done in the area of electronic commerce, based on distributed object technology. Distributed object systems provide a key to building interoperable applications that can execute on a range of platforms. However, this new generation of electronic comm...
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When firms go public in an IPO, they must choose a number of shares to offer and a price level for those shares. Given an estimated total value, this division would seem to have little economic significance. Casual empiricism and the evidence from stock splits, however, suggest that firms do not choose their IPO share price level arbitrarily. We ask whether IPO prices are informative, in the se...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: University of Pennsylvania Law Review
سال: 2006
ISSN: 0041-9907
DOI: 10.2307/40041324