• Capital Can Transform Invention Rights
    Jan 14 2026

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    Why do many businesses prefer lawsuits over licensing deals — and what does IP capital mean for innovation?

    Phil Hartstein, co-founder of Soryn IP Capital and former CEO of Finjan Holdings, shares insights from orchestrating almost $500 million in licensing deals. He explains why patent licensing has shifted from corporate boardrooms to courtrooms, and discusses the economics of patent enforcement, the role of litigation finance in supporting legitimate innovators, and how AI is transforming IP strategy.

    Phil reveals what makes patents valuable, why most portfolios contain only single-digit percentages of enforceable assets, and his perspective on patent monetization as a strategic responsibility rather than defensive last resort.

    Key Takeaways:

    • Most patent portfolios derive value from only single-digit percentages of total assets
    • Corporate defendants now manage 50-100 active patent lawsuits simultaneously
    • Patent litigation costs range from $2-20+ million and take 3-5+ years to resolve
    • Licensing discussions once happened in boardrooms over 9-12 month periods
    • Modern product cycles compress multiple technology clusters into shorter timeframes
    • IP capital helps innovators compete against well-funded corporate defendants
    • AI tools like ChatGPT are transforming patent analysis and claim construction workflows
    • Patent monetization strengthens both business balance sheets and the broader innovation ecosystem
    • The U.S. patent system's constitutional foundation drives American technology development
    • Strategic patent enforcement requires demonstrating credibility, capability, and resources

    About the Guest:

    Phil Hartstein is a technology investor, inventor, and intellectual property strategist. He co-founded Soryn IP Capital and previously served as CEO of Finjan Holdings, a public company now owned by Fortress. At Finjen, he oversaw licensing and enforcement of pioneering cybersecurity patents, orchestrating more than $300 million in licensing deals. Phil holds more than two dozen pending and issued patents and has been twice recognized as a top 40 IP dealmaker.

    00:00 - Introduction to Phil Hartstein
    01:44 - Why companies prefer lawsuits to licenses
    03:03 - Boardroom licensing era vs today
    04:16 - Soryn IP Capital's role in leveling field
    06:35 - Corporate litigation dockets explained
    08:47 - Patent lawsuit economics and timelines
    10:23 - Funding plaintiffs vs bad actors debate
    13:10 - Making capital available for innovators
    15:36 - Patent quality and portfolio value
    18:07 - Supreme Court's Unwired Planet decision
    20:16 - The Alice decision's ongoing impact
    23:40 - Patent valuation and market adoption
    26:25 - PTAB's role in patent examination
    29:14 - Working with litigation finance
    31:40 - Evaluating patent portfolio strength
    34:22 - International IP enforcement landscape
    37:08 - Germany's patent system advantages
    39:30 - AI's impact on patent prosecution
    42:42 - Racing vintage cars as analog escape
    44:40 - Patent monetization as strategic duty

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    47 mins
  • 3-D Chess: AI's Race for Market Share and IP Supremacy
    Dec 10 2025

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    Allison Gaul, senior counsel at BCG-X, an invention development and commercialization company, discusses the evolving AI landscape, where intellectual awareness meets real-world strategy.

    As both a former patent examiner and litigator with a Harvard graduate degree in business analytics, she offers insider perspectives on how companies secure IP rights, why investors now prioritize AI risk policies, and how open source licensing drives market adoption.

    The conversation explores copyrighted training data challenges, how small learning models compete with foundational LLMs, and why publicly available doesn't mean free to use. Gaul shares practical IP protection strategies for startups and established companies navigating content attribution, energy-efficient blockchain solutions, and the misconceptions engineers hold about software patents.

    Key Takeaways:
    • Small, targeted-use models (SLMs) trained on specific datasets are gaining traction because of their relevance and efficiency
    • Investors are now scrutinizing AI startup' risk and compliance policies more carefully
    • Open source licensing has become a significant tool for capturing market share
    • Publicly available content is not automatically free to use; not all LLMs ascribe to this
    • Blockchain offers potentially reliable solutions for IP tracking despite energy concerns
    • IP and AI strategy require balancing innovation with responsible ethics
    • Gen AI adoption began with easy productivity wins across industries
    • Businesses that are mindful of AI risk are in a better position to attract capital

    Subscribe to Understanding IP Matters on your preferred platform or visit understandingip.org for more episodes exploring intellectual property with leading innovators and experts.

    00:00 - Introduction to Allison Gaul
    01:07 - AI race and investor expectations
    02:36 - Risk policies investors demand
    03:01 - How companies leverage Gen AI
    04:21 - Working with foundational model providers
    05:34 - Day in the life of a product attorney
    06:40 - Multi-dimensional AI competition
    08:34 - Open source as market strategy
    09:10 - Small learning models vs LLMs
    11:02 - Copyright challenges in AI training
    13:29 - Content attribution and data rights
    15:41 - Licensing deals and fair use debate
    17:34 - Legal frameworks catching up
    19:20 - Transparency in AI systems
    21:25 - Attribution standards discussion
    23:38 - Geographic variations in AI law
    25:44 - EU regulations and global impact
    27:50 - Cross-border compliance challenges
    29:33 - Energy concerns in AI development
    31:18 - IP education for engineers
    33:11 - Patents in software development
    35:27 - Ethical IP strategy and responsibility
    37:54 - Patent troll misconceptions
    39:50 - Attribution vs permission clarified
    40:54 - Blockchain solutions and limitations
    42:08 - First exposure to IP rights

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    45 mins
  • Man of 1000 Faces: The Renaissance Journey of Eric Bear
    Nov 19 2025

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    When creativity meets intellectual property, innovation has no boundaries.

    Eric Bear has licensed intellectual property to all major U.S. studios and Fortune 500 companies while maintaining a successful acting career. With over 100 patents covering software and video technology, Eric's seamless expansion invention was popularized by The Matrix and licensed to Disney, Fox, and other major studios. This conversation explores how he balances roles as inventor, entrepreneur, actor, and university professor while navigating patent litigation and startup IP protection. Discover how unconventional career paths can drive business trademark protection and commercial success.

    Key Takeaways:

    • How Eric licensed technology to all major Hollywood studios
    • The connection between acting, invention, and entrepreneurial thinking
    • Navigating patent litigation while maintaining creative pursuits
    • Building companies around intellectual property course principles
    • The role of performance capture technology in modern filmmaking
    • Protecting IP rights while collaborating with Fortune 500 companies
    • Career advice for young creators balancing art and business
    • How AI impacts creative industries and performer rights
    • The importance of following passion over financial incentives
    • Screen Actors Guild protections for digital likeness rights
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    43 mins
  • Copyright Piracy Costs America up to $71 Billion: Hollywood Producer Ruth Vitale Speaks Out
    Nov 5 2025

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    Ruth Vitale, Oscar-winning producer and CEO of Creative Future, reveals the devastating impact of copyright piracy on America's entertainment workforce. Piracy costs the economy up to $71 billion annually and threatens 560,000 jobs across film and television. Ruth explains how small business IP protection matters for the 122,000 companies serving Hollywood, why copyright law basics must evolve for the digital age, and what IP protection strategies could save the industry. From malware risks on pirate sites to AI's threat to actor rights, this conversation exposes hard truths about intellectual property education and the urgent need for site blocking legislation.


    Key Takeaways:

    • Piracy costs the US economy between $29 to 71 billion annually
    • Film and television employ 2.3 million Americans (down from 2.7 million)
    • 92% of entertainment businesses employ fewer than 10 people
    • Google receives 58 million takedown requests weekly—yet pirate sites flourish
    • 60 countries have site blocking laws; the US does not
    • Visiting pirate sites carries a 30%+ risk of downloading malware
    • Movie theaters keep 50% of box office revenue
    • Average entertainment industry salary: $141,000 vs $94,000 nationally
    • Independent filmmakers finance projects with credit cards, can lose everything to piracy
    • AI companies train models on copyrighted content without permission


    Listen to discover how intellectual property course advocates like Ruth are fighting to protect creative workers and why copyright training matters for every entrepreneur.

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    40 mins
  • AI Adoption Moves At The Speed of Trust
    Oct 22 2025

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    Award-winning educator and IP advocate Daryl Lim joins Bruce Berman to explore the intersection of artificial intelligence and intellectual property education. Broadcasting from Singapore, Daryl shares his global perspective on how AI is reshaping IP frameworks, from the $1.5 billion Anthropic settlement to the emergence of new data rights. This conversation examines IP leadership challenges, the role of blockchain in patent processes, and why marginalized communities need better access to intellectual property protection. Daryl discusses China's rapid IP development, the importance of equity by design in technology governance, and practical startup IP strategies for navigating an increasingly complex landscape.

    Key Takeaways:

    • AI and IP rights are fundamentally interconnected and evolving together
    • The $1.5 billion Anthropic case settlement sets precedent at $3,000 per book
    • IP leadership requires moving ahead of trends, not following them
    • China has transformed from IP pirate nation to major player in 20 years
    • Blockchain technology can reduce friction in IP transactions
    • Universities became IP believers after the Bayh-Dole Act enabled monetization
    • Content creators must embrace technology as ally, not enemy
    • Government frameworks should align AI development with societal values
    • Patent education and copyright training need to be more inclusive
    • Small creators need better tools to participate in large-scale licensing
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    47 mins
  • Patents Don't Block Innovation, Ignorance Does
    Oct 8 2025

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    Join host Bruce Berman for an illuminating conversation with Henry Hadad, Head of Intellectual Property Rights at Bristol-Myers Squibb. This episode explores how intellectual property education and strong patent protection drive medical breakthroughs while addressing common misconceptions about IP rights.

    Hadad shares his unique journey from a creative family background—his uncle wrote disco classics like "It's Raining Men"—to becoming a leading voice in pharmaceutical patent strategy. Learn how the patent process explained through real-world examples demonstrates why IP protection strategies are essential for developing life-saving treatments. Discover insights on startup IP challenges, the role of university research, and why patent basics matter more than ever in our innovation-driven economy.

    Key Takeaways:

    • Strong patent systems drive innovation by providing investment certainty
    • University research partnerships create vital public-private innovation bridges
    • Patent licensing enables smaller inventors to monetize their discoveries
    • AI-generated inventions pose new challenges for patent eligibility
    • China's improving IP system creates competitive pressure for US innovation
    • Clear communication about IP benefits counters harmful misconceptions
    • Patent certainty affects venture capital investment decisions
    • Pharmaceutical patents enable continued research into new disease indications
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    42 mins
  • Celebrated MIT engineer and entrepreneur develops medical devices to treat cancer and other diseases
    Jul 16 2025

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    Michael Cima is a researcher, inventor and entrepreneur who has spent 40-years creating advanced medical devices that focus on diagnostics and treatments for cancer, metabolic diseases and trauma. He is also devoted educator mentoring the next generation of creators about the broad benefits of IP rights.

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    42 mins
  • This Fashionista Doesn't Wear Fashion - She Covers It
    Jun 4 2025

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    Julie Zerbo is an editor, lawyer and business analyst who covers the business of fashion, including its evolving use of licensing and IP rights.

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    39 mins