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IP Street Blog


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Announcing the IP Street Amazon Alexa Skill

[fa icon="calendar'] Apr 6, 2017 4:53:55 PM / by Reed Jessen posted in Example Use Cases, Announcements, Patent Tools

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The modern API ecosystem promises that everything should be connected. At IP Street, we take this as a personal challenge and work hard to develop interesting new ways of connecting our patent data and patent analytics API service to the world around us.

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Hit-By-A-Bus Syndrome at Magic Leap: Inventor Network Analysis with Neo4j and IP Street

[fa icon="calendar'] Jan 6, 2017 1:48:38 PM / by Reed Jessen posted in Patent analytics

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Graph databases excel at modeling data where relationships are first class citizens. The relationships exist as a permanent aspect of the data set rather than as an ephemeral join created only when a query is run. This presents a wide diversity of interesting analytical opportunities which aren’t natural in a traditional “relational” database. Once you understand graph data structures, you start to see graphs everywhere.

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Using IP Street's Semantic Search API as a Prior Art Search Tool

[fa icon="calendar'] Nov 25, 2016 3:52:16 PM / by Reed Jessen posted in Example Use Cases, Patent Tools

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Measuring Law Firm Patenting Success with IP Street

[fa icon="calendar'] Sep 16, 2016 7:23:00 AM / by Reed Jessen posted in Patent Tools, Case Studies

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The world of patent law is highly opaque to most observers.  To have authority in this world, not only must one be a member of legal priesthood, one must be a member of the engineering priesthood as well.  This high barrier to entry makes it very difficult for clients to make data-driven distinctions between patent law firms.  Firms are traditionally selected by reputation or based on relationships and the quality of their work rarely enters the equation.  IP Street's Patent Claim Scope algorithm enables users to transcend this word-of-mouth analysis by providing measurable quality metrics for a patent law firm's actual work product, the claim text.

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Analyzing the Panama Papers with IP Street

[fa icon="calendar'] Apr 14, 2016 7:01:31 PM / by Reed Jessen posted in Data Journalism, Case Studies, Code Examples

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In early 2015, an anonymous source leaked 11.5 million confidential documents relating to offshore entities represented by Panamanian corporate services firm, Mossack Fonseca. The International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) has been diligently working their way through this glut of documents for the last year and published their first findings on April 3rd, 2016.

While journalists and law enforcement comb the documents for hints of financial irregularities, we at IP Street can't help be realized that there is an intellectual property angle to this story as well. Assigning patent assets to offshore companies has long been used as an effective tax mitigation strategy and privacy laws in many of the tax haven countries makes it nearly impossible to identify who owns what patents. Patent privateering is a very real thing but analyzing the scope of its use is exceeding difficult.  The Panama Papers offer us a unique opportunity to look behind the curtain  and see how these shell games really work and who's playing them.  

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Patent Analysis APIs- A new direction for IP Street

[fa icon="calendar'] Mar 30, 2016 5:20:36 PM / by Reed Jessen posted in Announcements

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IP Street was founded nearly 6 years ago by some of the most progressive thinkers in the intellectual property world with the goal of enabling our users to rapidly understand patents as an asset class and their role in the greater economy.  Our goal is the same today but advancements in modern software architecture have caused the diversity of use-cases for our advanced patent analytics algorithms to expand beyond anything we could have hoped for.

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