By: Charles Moster
Drifting snow, chiming bells, and rosy cheeks mark the beginning of our merry holiday season. And many businesses anticipate the greatest holiday gift of all: the economic outlook has begun to turn rosy as well.
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By Adam Frishman
One of the most fascinating and controversial legal decisions in the field of intellectual property is coming to a computer near you! Charles Moster, the firm’s Senior Partner and writer/composer of several radio musicals on NPR, is releasing his latest on August 31st. It is about the life of the brilliant Serbian inventor, Nikola Tesla, who invented radio and had a landmark Supreme Court case! (more…)
By Matt Burr
Trademarks are used to protect a name, word, or symbol that is used for the purpose of identifying the source of goods or services. Many economists have shown the direct relationship between the increasing importance of branding and the value of securing your IP - a lesson that the “Octomom” has clearly not missed! (more…)
By Shari Wynne
Health care - and who pays for it - remains an important topic for business owners. Recent legislation will require employers to pay for 65% of separated employees’ health care continuation payment for a prescribed period. Previously, employers were required to keep separated employees on their health care plans as long as the employee paid up to 110% to cover the payment and attendant administrative cost.
As a health and benefits plan (ERISA) attorney, I want employers to understand that separation notices and the amount employers are now required to pay must change. While there are tax credit reimbursements your cash flow will be impacted and you need to be prepared. (more…)
By Charles Moster
Bankruptcy is not a process that should be feared by the American people – or by General Motors. Sometimes it acts as a grim reaper. Sometimes it has the power of the Phoenix allowing failed businesses to rise from their ashes. But always it is the great equalizer which is precisely what Congress intended. (more…)
By Matthew Burr
On Tuesday, March 3, 2009 the “Patent Reform Act of 2009” was introduced in Congress. This is the latest effort to pass this legislation, which has been knocking around Washington for years, into law. The 2008 version died in the Senate last year. It is thought by many observers to have a better chance of becoming law this time around. In fact the bill was approved on April 2, 2009, in a 15-4 vote of the Senate Judiciary Committee. The bill now moves to the Senate floor. (more…)
By Charles Moster
As a bankruptcy attorney and former lawyer for the Feds, I feel compelled to point out the drawbacks of the current bailout to GM and other entities which might seek Chapter 11 protection. The bankruptcy laws afford no special protection to taxpayers in a bailout situation. As such, the massive outlay advanced by the American people may never get fully repaid in a Chapter 11 proceeding which is highly problematic.
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By Charles Moster
(Originally published by Fred Patterson, SBIR Coach)
Imagine that you just stepped off the elevator having traveled 30 floors talking to the CEO at your top prospect. You gave the most stirring elevator speech in the history of elevator speeches, and captured her imagination with your tale of cutting-edge technologies and memorable branding. (more…)
By Charles Moster
Well, Benjamin Franklin always said it best and with a unique fervor, “There is nothing certain in life except death and taxes.” However, in the topsey turvey “Alice through the Looking Glass” world of Chapter 11 bankruptcy only one thing was certain. At least for a while. (more…)
By Charles Moster
For many lawyers practicing bankruptcy law, the operation has become routine – “mechanized” is perhaps the more apt description. Particularly in the area of consumer bankruptcy (Chapter 7 and 13), there are a lot of forms being generated behind the scenes because software has made it easier to spin out what’s needed to secure a filing at rocket speed. However, the world of Chapter 11 bankruptcy has remained a bastion of creative lawyering notwithstanding the improvement in technology.
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