Patent Attorney

 Michael Eisenberg-Patent Attorney

Mr. Eisenberg is a U.S. Patent & Trademark Office licensed patent attorney and specialist in intellectual property law.  He represents clients with industries in the mechanical and electrical arts, including medical device, software, business methods and e-commerce.

 

Mr. Eisenberg holds a law degree from the UCLA School of Law, a Master of Science in Biomedical Physics from the UCLA School of Medicine and a Bachelor of Science in Physics from UCLA. While pursuing his graduate and professional studies, Mr. Eisenberg was a section instructor at UCLA for undergraduate courses in the physics department.  In graduate school, his concentration included work with medical radiation devices such as medical accelerators and medical imaging and studies in radiation biology.

 

Following completion of his legal education, Mr. Eisenberg was an associate in an intellectual property specialty law firm and, more recently, at a 500-plus attorney international law firm.

 

Michael Eisenberg is registered to practice patent cases in all 50 states and territories of the United States and is a member of the State Bar of California.

 

Testimonials

"My company offers products in the health industry and we found a patent lawyer who could provide a creative solution for our company’s particular intellectual property needs. We got a great work product with added value. Thanks Michael."

–Tiffany Chopardi

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Michael Eisenberg - Patent Attorney

 

 

Terminology

Licensing: Licensing is the freedom of parties to privately contract and have those contracts enforced by a government in a neutral arena.

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Intellectual Property Protection

The protection of intellectual property is one of the most important considerations when starting and maintaining a successful business.  For individuals and startup companies it will often be the only asset of significance. For businesses competing to enter into the marketplace currently dominated by established firms intellectual property may be the only weapon a small business has to gain entry.

 

Why Choose me as your patent attorney?

Why choose me to handle such an important asset? The typical patent attorney working in a law firm may not invest the time required to develop a thorough understanding of your invention.  Law firms require their attorneys to bill a certain large number of hours each month.  Often the effort required to obtain this number is debilitating and results in patent attorneys churning through large numbers of patent applications, giving short shrift to quality to meet their monthly quota of billable hours. In contrast, my practice permits me to devote as much time as necessary to achieve positive results for you, as I only commit to a workload on which I can maintain a high standard of service.

 

Clients who retain me will receive high quality service at a highly competitive price compared to most law firms and practitioners.  You will find that my pricing structure and rates allow you to be in control of the legal costs.  Click on Fees for some examples of my prices for various services. 

 

In other words, you will receive better service at a fraction of the typical cost. 

 

Contact me for a free consultation.

Phone: (858) 812-0820

Email: info@mdepatents.com

 

All consultations are held in strict confidence.


Michael Eisenberg - Patent Attorney Blog

  • Protecting Inventions Outside the United States I
  • Obtaining location updates about a mobile entity for use in a location-sensitive application
  • Motion Sensor Activated Rock Light
  • A Patent On A Stick, Literally
  • Patents For Recipes
  • A Recent Application of KSR And Obviousness
  • Claim Rejections Based On Large References
  • List of Patent Attorneys
  • First Action Interview Program
  • Publishing Patent Applications
  • Errors In Issued Patent Claims

  • The intermittent windshield wiper was invented by an individual inventor by the name of Robert Kearns.  None of the major automakers wanted to do business with Kearns, but they used his idea anyway.  Although simple, this concept was the basis for a $30,000,000 award to Kearns for the automakers' infringements on his patents.

    -Source Washington Post; Saturday, February 26, 2005; Page B01

    Patent-Robert-Kearns