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David is a founding partner of Kalow & Springut, LLP. He represents clients in patent, trade secret, copyright and trademark matters arising in the course of transactions, trials, appeals, licensing, and strategic counseling. Since 1976, he has litigated for and advised clients in the biotechnology, chemical, computer, electronic, nanotech, optics, medical technology and other businesses. David has prosecuted and litigated pioneering patents on DNA synthesis, pharmacogenomics, antisense, RNAi and bar codes; expedited vindication of trademark, copyright and misappropriation rights; developed creative licensing programs; acted as special IP counsel in transactions and pharmaceutical antitrust litigations; and created and implemented strategies to maximize returns on intellectual property assets. He is particularly experienced in innovative litigation strategies, portfolio analysis, IP audit design and implementation and patent validity and infringement opinions. Recently, he helped the U.S. division of an international company to evaluate two potential acquisitions involving substantial IP risks and rewards, creating the ability to complete one transaction and avoiding the hidden pitfalls of the other. David has authored on articles that include: New York Law Journal Articles (David A. Kalow and Milton Springut) David has also lectured on intellectual property issues that include:
David is an Adjunct Professor in IP at the Seton Hall University School of Law and is a frequent lecturer (LES, BIO, NYIPLA, NERA, Columbia Business School, Beihang University and other academic institutions) on how to use IP strategy and tactics to create portfolio and business value. He is a Co-Chairman of LES-New York and writes regularly for the New York Law Journal. David earned his undergraduate and law degrees from the University of Chicago. CV, BV and AV are registered certification marks of Reed Elsevier Properties Inc., used in accordance with the Martindale-Hubbell certification procedures, standards and policies. Martindale-Hubbell is the facilitator of a peer review rating process. Ratings reflect the confidential opinions of members of the Bar and the Judiciary. Martindale-Hubbell Ratings fall into two categories - legal ability and general ethical standards. AV® Peer Review Rating - An AV rating is a significant accomplishment - a testament to the fact that a lawyer's peers rank him or her at the highest level of professional excellence. A lawyer must be admitted to the bar for 10 years or more to receive an AV rating. |
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