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Innovation, Intellectual Property, and Entrepreneurship in The Information Industries

@ Wolf Law Building, University of Colorado at Boulder
March 4, 2008

Click here for a post-event report.

The pace of innovation in the information industries continues to keep businesses on their toes. The rise of Google, for example, underscores the opportunities for upstart firms to capitalize on new opportunities. Well before Google, other firms like Qualcomm saw and capitalized on the potential of innovative technologies that incumbent firms either missed or wrote off. Indeed, the pace of innovation in the information industries has led some commentators to suggest that today's Internet-enabled economy reflects Schumpeter's vision of creative destruction where the important battles are not for customers of today's products, but developing new technologies that can create a new market.

The importance of technological change to our economy raises a series of important questions for policymakers. One important set of questions revolve around government investment in basic research and the nature of the technological landscape. In a number of technology markets today, including wireless communications, the Internet, and biotechnology, government support for basic research as well as basic research by dominant firms laid the foundation for later innovations. Today, however, there is an increasing level of concern that such basic research is not adequately being supported.

A second set of questions revolves around whether and how start-up firms contribute to the pace of innovation. On one view, these firms are able to conduct risky experiments and basic research with the promise of being bought out by more established firms. In other cases, upstart firms worry about the ability of established firms to undermine their success once the upstarts establish the popularity of a new product-particularly where the upstart must rely on the platform of an established firm. In some cases, upstarts call for regulation, such as the call for open access to wireless phones, to prevent such conduct and to foster innovation.

A final set of important questions related to innovation revolves around the role of intellectual property protection. On one view, including that of "neo-Schumpeterians," strong patent rights enable firms to develop a firm position in today's market and provides those firms with powerful incentives to invest in innovations. Others, however, are concerned that today's incumbents-or even others who strategically invest in patents and not innovation per se-are able to abuse the patent system for their advantage.

To evaluate the appropriate role for government policy in facilitating entrepreneurship and innovation, this conference will bring together a group of industry leaders to examine these questions.

Introduction and Overview
2:00pm - 2:15pm
  • Phil Weiser
    Executive Director
    Silicon Flatirons
    Professor
    University of Colorado Law School
Keynote Address
2:15pm - 3:00pm
Welcome
  • Don Elliman
    Director
    Office of Economic Development and International Trade
Keynote
  • Paul Jacobs
    CEO
    Qualcomm
The Dynamic Nature of the Information Industries
3:00pm - 4:00pm
  • David Goodfriend
    Vice President
    Echostar
  • Richard Green
    Silicon Flatirons Senior Adjunct Fellow
    University of Colorado
    Former President and Chief Executive Officer
    CableLabs
  • Jennifer Manner
    Vice President
    Mobile Satelite Ventures (MSV)
  • Jennifer L. Richter
    Co-Chair, Communications and Technology Group
    Patton Boggs, LLP
Break
4:00pm - 4:15pm
The Uses and Abuses of Intellectual Property
4:15pm - 5:15pm
  • Tom Franklin
    Partner
    Townsend, Townsend & Crew
  • Geoff Manne
    Director
    LECG
  • Jason Mendelson
    Managing Director
    Foundry Group
  • John Posthumus
    Partner
    Greenberg Traurig
The Opportunities and Strategies for Successful Start-ups
5:15pm - 6:15pm
  • Don Gips
    Group VP for Corporate Strategy
    Level 3 Communications
    Former Domestic Policy Advisor
    Vice President Gore
  • Jason Haislmaier
    Partner
    Holme, Roberts & Owen
    Adjunct Faculty
    University of Colorado
  • Peter Mannetti
    Managing Director
    iSherpa Capital
  • Bill Mooz
    Legal Director
    Oracle
Reception
Sponsored by Greenberg Traurig
6:15pm - 7:15pm

Conference Videos

Download videos of select prior conferences here.

Videos of select prior Silicon Flatirons conferences can also be ordered on DVD, VHS, or CD by contacting videos@silicon-flatirons.org

Conference Papers and Speech Texts

Select papers from our conferences are published in the Journal on Telecommunications and High Technology Law. To subscribe, contact the journal at jthtl@colorado.edu.