Key IP definition

Key IP the Intellectual Property covering the products marketed under the following brand names: “AMPYRA”, “VIVITROL”, “BYDUREON”, “RISPERDAL CONSTA” and “INVEGA SUSTENNA”, and any derivative or modified products or property thereof.
Key IP means all IP Rights described on Schedule 1.02.
Key IP means any Owned Intellectual Property Rights or Licensed Intellectual Property Rights necessary to or used in (i) the Company’s Single Molecule, Real-Time (SMRT®) sequencing technology (i.e., that certain parallelized single molecule DNA sequencing method enabled by utilization of both zero-mode waveguides and phospholinked nucleotides) or (ii) any Key Product (including the making, use, offer for sale, sale or importation thereof).

Examples of Key IP in a sentence

  • Each Loan Party and each Subsidiary of each Loan Party owns, licenses or otherwise possesses the right to use, all of the IP Rights material to such Loan Party’s business (including all Key IP) as currently conducted.

  • ADAGENE shall not abandon any of the ADAGENE Key IP (as defined below).

  • As of the Closing Date, none of the material IP Rights (it being understood and agreed that the Key IP is material) owned by any Loan Party or any of its Subsidiaries is subject to any material licensing agreement or similar arrangement except as set forth on Schedule 7.14(d).

  • ADAGENE shall timely, and at least thirty (30) days in advance, inform and consult ADCT on Patent applications and prosecution relating to ADAGENE Key IP, and provide ADCT with a copy of such Patent applications for that purpose.

  • Pieris shall, if requested by AstraZeneca, consent to opt out of the Unitary Patent in respect of any Patent within the Key IP.

  • Neither party shall invoke the Cooperative Research and Technology Enhancement Act (“CREATE Act”) in connection with the Prosecution or Maintenance of any Pieris Platform IP, Pieris Platform Improvement IP, AstraZeneca Background IP or Key IP without the prior written consent of the other Party.

  • Each Party will sign, or will use best efforts to have signed, all legal documents as are reasonably necessary to Prosecute and Maintain Patents within the Key IP.

  • AstraZeneca will furnish Pieris, via electronic mail or such other method as mutually agreed by the Parties, copies of documents filed with the relevant national patent offices or other Governmental Authorities with respect to such Patents within the Key IP.

  • AstraZeneca shall use commercially reasonable efforts to obtain all available patent term extensions, adjustments or restorations, or supplementary protection certificates (“SPCs”, and together with patent term extensions, adjustments and restorations, “Patent Term Extensions”) for each Product with respect to the AstraZeneca Background IP and Key IP.

  • AstraZeneca will consult with Pieris, on its strategy for the Prosecution and Maintenance of all such Patents within the Key IP.


More Definitions of Key IP

Key IP has the meaning set forth in Section 10.4.4.1.
Key IP has the meaning set forth in Section 9.3.2.1. “Know-How” means all technical and other information and any document in which the foregoing is recorded, which at the time it is disclosed pursuant to this Agreement is not in the public domain, including ideas, concepts, inventions, discoveries, data (including Data), formulae, specifications, information relating to any materials, procedures for experiments and tests, results of experimentation and testing, computer programs or algorithms, results of any aspect of Exploitation including laboratory records and data analyses. “Known Third-Party Obligations” means any agreement in place as of the Effective Date that licenses to Pieris Intellectual Property Rights that Cover the Commercialization of the Product. The Known Third-Party Obligations are the Product Cell Line License and the [***]. “Losses” has the meaning set forth in Section 12.1. “MAA” means a Marketing Authorization Application, in relation to any Product, filed or to be filed with the FDA, EMA or equivalent national agency, for authorization to place a medicinal product on the market in the United States, European Union, or any other territory. For avoidance of doubt, an MAA in the United States is a Biological License Application (“BLA”) as described in Section 351(a) of the United States Public Health Service Act (“PHS Act”), or an abbreviated Biological License Application as described in Section 351(k) of the PHS Act. “Manufacture” or “Manufacturing” means all activities related to the manufacture of Product, including manufacturing supplies for Research, Development or Commercialization, packaging, in-process and Finished Product testing, pharmaceutical development including process development and validation, release of product, or any component or ingredient thereof, quality assurance and quality control activities related to manufacturing and release of product, ongoing stability tests, storage, shipment, and regulatory activities related to any of the foregoing. “Marketing Approval” means all approvals, licenses, registrations or authorizations of the Regulatory Authorities in a country, necessary for the commercial marketing and sale of the Product in such country, including the approval of an MAA or a BLA and pricing. “Material Anticalin Communication” means any communication (including
Key IP has the meaning ascribed thereto in Section 4.30(a);
Key IP means the Registered trade marks specified in schedule 19;
Key IP has the meaning set forth in Section 10.4.4.1. Portions of the exhibit, indicated by the xxxx “[***],” were omitted and have been filed separately with the Securities and Exchange Commission pursuant to the Registrant’s application requesting confidential treatment pursuant to Rule 24b-2 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended.

Related to Key IP

  • Licensed IP means the Intellectual Property owned by any person other than the Corporation and to which the Corporation has a license which has not expired or been terminated;

  • Company IP means all Intellectual Property Rights and Intellectual Property owned by or exclusively licensed to the Company.

  • Third Party Technology means all Intellectual Property and products owned by third parties and licensed pursuant to Third Party Licenses.

  • Vendor IP means all tangible or intangible items or things, including the Intellectual Property Rights therein, created or developed by Vendor (a) prior to providing any Services or Work Product to Customer and prior to receiving any documents, materials, information or funding from or on behalf of Customer relating to the Services or Work Product, or (b) after the Effective Date of the Contract if such tangible or intangible items or things were independently developed by Vendor outside Vendor’s provision of Services or Work Product for Customer hereunder and were not created, prepared, developed, invented or conceived by any Customer personnel who then became personnel to Vendor or any of its affiliates or subcontractors, where, although creation or reduction-to-practice is completed while the person is affiliated with Vendor or its personnel, any portion of same was created, invented or conceived by such person while affiliated with Customer.

  • Licensor Technology means the Licensor Patents, the Licensor Know-How, Licensor Materials, Product IP, and Licensor’s rights in the Program IP and Joint Patents.

  • Company Technology means all Technology owned or purported to be owned by the Company.

  • Foreground IP means all intellectual property and Intellectual Property Rights generated under these Terms; and

  • Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) (11/18) means any patent rights, copyrights, trade secrets, trade names, service marks, trademarks, trade dress, moral rights, know-how and any other similar rights or intangible assets to which rights of ownership accrue, and all registrations, applications, disclosures, renewals, extensions, continuations, or reissues of the foregoing now or hereafter in force. “Key Personnel” (11/18) means the specific individuals identified in Section 3.11 to fill Key Positions.

  • Foreground IPR means any IPRs that are generated as a result of the activities conducted within the framework of the Project concerned as specified in the corresponding Project Agreement;

  • Proprietary Technology means the technical innovations that are unique and

  • Developed IP means any Intellectual Property Rights that are conceived or reduced to practice, or otherwise created or developed, by or on behalf of a Party, its Affiliates or sublicensees, alone or together with one or more Third Parties, during the Term in connection with the Development, Manufacture, or use of the Compound or any Product.

  • Customer Technology means Customer's proprietary technology, including Customer's Internet operations design, content, software tools, hardware designs, algorithms, software (in source and object forms), user interface designs, architecture, class libraries, objects and documentation (both printed and electronic), know-how, trade secrets and any related intellectual property rights throughout the world (whether owned by Customer or licensed to Customer from a third party) and also including any derivatives, improvements, enhancements or extensions of Customer Technology conceived, reduced to practice, or developed during the term of this Agreement by Customer.

  • Intellectual Property (IP) means all copyright, rights in relation to inventions (including patent rights and unpatented technologies), plant varieties, registered and unregistered trademarks (including service marks), registered designs, confidential information (including trade secrets and know-how), mask-works and integrated circuit layouts, and all other rights resulting from intellectual activity in the industrial, scientific, literary or artistic fields;

  • Transferred Technology has the meaning set forth in Section 2.3(a).

  • Licensed Technology means the Licensed Know-How and Licensed Patents.

  • Product Intellectual Property means all of the following related to a Divestiture Product (other than Product Licensed Intellectual Property):

  • Background IP means all IP and IP Rights owned or controlled by Seller prior to the effective date or outside the scope of this Contract.

  • Background IPR means any Intellectual Property Rights (other than Project IPR) belonging to either party before the Commencement Date or not created in the course of or in connection with the Project;

  • New Technology means any invention, discovery, improvement, or innovation that was not available to the District on the effective date of the contract, whether or not patentable, including, but not limited to, new processes, emerging technology, machines, and improvements to or new applications of existing processes, machines, manufactures and software. Also included are new computer programs, and improvements to, or new applications of, existing computer programs, whether or not copyrightable and any new process, machine, including software, and improvements to, or new applications of, existing processes, machines, manufactures and software.

  • Licensee Technology means the Licensee Know-How and Licensee Patents.

  • Licensed Intellectual Property Rights means all Intellectual Property Rights owned by a third party and licensed or sublicensed to either the Company or any of its Subsidiaries.

  • Background Technology means all Software, data, know-how, ideas, methodologies, specifications, and other technology in which Contractor owns such Intellectual Property Rights as are necessary for Contractor to grant the rights and licenses set forth in Section 14.1, and for the State (including its licensees, successors and assigns) to exercise such rights and licenses, without violating any right of any Third Party or any Law or incurring any payment obligation to any Third Party. Background Technology must: (a) be identified as Background Technology in the Statement of Work; and (b) have been developed or otherwise acquired by Contractor prior to the date of the Statement of Work, or have been developed by Contractor outside of its performance under the Statement of Work. Background Technology will also include any general consulting tool or methodology created by Contractor, which will not be required to be identified in the Statement of Work.

  • Developed Technology means any Technology including, without limitation, any enhancements, substitutions or improvements to the Core Technology that is (a) discovered, developed or otherwise acquired by DURA pursuant to the terms of the Development Agreement or (b) otherwise acquired by or on behalf of Xxxxxx Corp. II during the term of the Development Agreement.

  • Business IP means all (i) Intellectual Property used in, held for use in, or necessary for the operation of the Company Group’s business as currently conducted and (ii) Company Intellectual Property.

  • Licensed IP Rights means, collectively, the Licensed Patent Rights and the Licensed Know-How Rights.

  • Third Party IP means the Intellectual Property Rights of any third party that is not a party to this Contract, and that is not a Subcontractor.