Season 4, Episode 6. A Conversation with AI about Artificial Intelligence and Intellectual Property

Who truly owns the creations of artificial intelligence? Explore this compelling question as Leticia Caminero (AI version) and Artemisa, her delightful AI co-host, navigate the intriguing intersection of AI and intellectual property law. Uncover the legal complexities when AI is the creator, questioning if these digital minds should be granted the same rights as human inventors. From dissecting the Dabus patent saga to the enigmatic Zarya of the Dawn comic book case, you’ll gain a comprehensive understanding of how these legal battles are challenging traditional notions of ownership and creativity.

Join us for a thought-provoking journey that questions if the absence of IP rights might stifle AI advancements and innovation. We ponder the implications of AI-generated works in an ever-evolving legal landscape and draw historical parallels, such as the disruption caused by the printing press. Whether you’re a tech aficionado, legal enthusiast, or simply curious about the future, this episode promises to expand your perspective on AI’s profound impact on innovation and intellectual property. 

Tune in and rethink the future of creativity and ownership in an AI-driven world.

The Afterlife of Innovation: Can IP Outlive the Business That Created It? Intangiblia™

A company can vanish from your pocket and still show up in court and that is not a metaphor. We take a hard look at the afterlife of innovation and the real business question behind it: can intellectual property outlive the company that created it, and if so, what legal structures make that possible?We trace six vivid case studies that turn “failed products” into ongoing value. BlackBerry shows how patent monetization and portfolio restructuring can create immediate liquidity while keeping a long royalty tail and upside participation. Nokia shows what happens when IP moves from consumer devices into network infrastructure, where standards essential patents and FRAND commitments can produce durable, recurring IP licensing revenue. Ericsson takes the same idea and makes it operational, using deals that shift ownership to specialist entities while retaining tiered revenue shares, aligning incentives and keeping the program disciplined.Then the tone gets sharper: Nortel reveals how bankruptcy restructuring can turn patents into the centerpiece of an estate, driving auctions and creditor recovery. Kodak demonstrates how timing, litigation risk, title clarity, and negotiation pressure can reshape patent portfolio valuation, even when the underlying innovation is strong. Technicolor closes the loop with a deal engineered like a financial instrument: cash up front, future revenue participation, and a license back to keep operating.If your business changed tomorrow, would your intellectual property still be creating value? Subscribe, share this with your team, and leave a review with the one IP strategy you want us to unpack next.Send us Fan MailCheck out "Protection for the Inventive Mind" – available now on Amazon in print and Kindle formats.The views and opinions expressed (by the host and guest(s)) in this podcast are strictly their own and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of the entities with which they may be affiliated. This podcast should in no way be construed as promoting or criticizing any particular government policy, institutional position, private interest or commercial entity. Any content provided is for informational and educational purposes only.
  1. The Afterlife of Innovation: Can IP Outlive the Business That Created It?
  2. Case Study: Lindt’s Gold Bunny Trademark Saga
  3. What Kind of Negotiator Are You, Really?
  4. Founders, Funders, Futures: Rising at Start Summit 2026
  5. The Legal Dugout: Baseball’s Intellectual Property All Stars

Comment | Comentario

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.