Bruce E Burdick
The Burdick Law Firm
Mr. Burdick is an expert patent, trademark and copyright attorney who specializes in intellectual property law of all types, including litigation and prosecution for businesses and individuals alike. He is frequently retained by other patent attorneys for litigation matters due to his incredible array of corporate and private law experience and is nationally known as an advocate for independent inventors and start-up businesses. He runs one of the world's best intellectual property websites www.burdlaw.com and in keeping it current, keeps himself up to date in all areas of intellectual property practice.
He has been a Registered Patent Attorney since 1974. He is licensed to practice in Missouri, Illinois, Oklahoma and Texas, before the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, the U.S. District Court for the Western District Of Missouri, the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri, and the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Illinois. He is both a Certified Mediator in Intellectual Property and a Certified Arbitrator in Intellectual Property by the World Intellectual Property Organization of Geneva, Switzerland as well as an approved neutral for the US District Courts for the Eastern and Western Districts of Missouri.
- Arbitration & Mediation
- Business Arbitration, Consumer Arbitration, Family Arbitration
- Entertainment & Sports Law
- Intellectual Property
- Patents
- Patent Appeals, Patent Litigation, Patent Prosecution
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Free Consultation
first 1/2 hour free consultation -
Credit Cards Accepted
via PayPal -
Contingent Fees
very selective cases -
Rates, Retainers and Additional Information
hourly or fixed fee rates alternative billing methods available
- Owner, Managing Attorney
- The Burdick Law Firm
- - Current
- A full service patent trademark copyright law firm. A virtual firm with a primary attorney, Mr. Burdick, and a variable number of associate attorneys with widely varying local, national and international expertise.
- University of Texas - Austin
- J.D. | Law
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- Stevens Institute of Technology
- B.S. | Engineering
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- Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity
- Activities: Met. Eng., Mech. Eng., Sailing Team, Band
- ABA
- Member
- - Current
- Activities: Pat. TM Copr Section
- INTA
- Member
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- Activities: Licensing Committee, Administration Committee, Litigation Committee
- Burdlaw Intellectual Property Portal
- The Burdick Law Firm
- Q. I am a divorced dad of 2 boys i only get them everyother weekend do i need a bed room for them
- A: There is not a set answer. Normally NO, unless the Judge has ordered you to have a bedroom for them. It is a question that depends on related facts, such as: age of the boys, what they are used to at their mother's place, what you are providing in lieu of a bedroom, how much privacy and security they have, whether they can sleep relatively undisturbed and in relative comfort where you are putting them, whether you will have a sexual partner in the same room, etc. For example, a sleeper sofa in a LR would normally be fine so long as the boys can actually sleep soundly there.
- Q. How can I protect a new recipe I have come up with for barbeque sauce? It is really good.
- A: I would agree with the prior answer. A trademark is what you need to use. The product will sell by name once it gets established. People don't really check in detail for what's in A-1, Maul's or Masterpiece, Sweet Baby Ray's or Bob's Country Sauce. They order it by name once they decide they like the flavor. I have had several sauce clients and never recommended a patent since, to have any chance of getting it through the patent office, it would have to be so narrowly drawn as to be super simple to avoid and thus serve only to describe in great deal the secret sauce recipe. That is, a patent is a bad deal for a BBQ sauce manufacturer, unless it relates to special ... Read More
- Q. A book I wrote was pirated and published in Russia, selling 15,000 copies. Is there anything I can do?
- A: The prior answer refers to a Copyright Office brochure. The links at www.copyright.gov have changed. The circular on International Copyright is now at http://www.copyright.gov/fls/fl100.pdf.
The prior answer also says there is something you can do. The actual fact is that relative to infringement in Russia there is little you can do, unless the Russian publisher tries to sell in the US or elsewhere outside Russia or the number of copies is sufficiently large to make litigation economically viable. 15,000 copies will probably not be enough. While you can take advantage of a treaty called the Berne Convention of 1989 and the Universal Copyright Convention of 1955 which Russia joined after ... Read More