If you think your idea, product, brand, or creative work has been copied, the right time to call an IP litigation lawyer is before you take any action on your own. The first moves you make after discovering infringement can either strengthen your case or hurt it. Here is how to know when you need legal help and what to do first.
The moment you realize someone copied your idea is not the time to send an angry email. It is the time to call an IP litigation lawyer. Richard Gearhart, founding partner of Gearhart Law, has spent nearly 30 years helping startups and business owners respond to infringement. The businesses that come out ahead are the ones that call an attorney first, before doing anything that could hurt their position.
This post covers how to recognize when your intellectual property has been copied, what the right first steps are, and when you need a lawyer in your corner.
How to Know When Your IP Has Actually Been Copied
Not every similarity is infringement. Someone selling a product that looks vaguely like yours is not automatically a legal problem. The question is whether what they are doing crosses a legal line, and that line is different depending on what type of intellectual property you hold.
Patent Infringement
If you hold a patent and a competitor is making, selling, or using your patented invention without your permission, that is infringement. It does not matter if they claim they developed it independently. Your patent gives you the right to stop others from using the claimed invention.
Watch for:
- A competitor launching a product that performs the same function using the same method your patent describes
- A former employee or business partner who had access to your technology now selling something suspiciously similar
- A product in the market that your patent claims would cover
Trademark Infringement
If someone is using a name, logo, or brand element that is confusingly similar to your registered trademark, customers may be misled into thinking there is a connection between the two businesses. That confusion can be enough to prove trademark infringement.
Watch for:
- A competitor using a name or logo that looks or sounds like yours in the same or a related industry
- Online sellers using your brand name in product listings or ads without your permission
- A new business registering a name that is a minor variation of your trademark
Copyright Infringement
If someone copies, distributes, or displays your copyrighted work without permission, that is infringement. This covers website content, software code, marketing materials, product photography, and any other original creative work you have produced.
Watch for:
- A competitor’s website that contains text, images, or design elements copied directly from yours
- Your software or digital product appearing on a platform or in a competing product without your authorization
- Marketing materials, product descriptions, or original content reproduced without credit or permission
Trade Secret Misappropriation
If a former employee, contractor, or business partner is using confidential business information they had no right to take, that may be trade secret misappropriation. This is covered under both the New Jersey Trade Secrets Act and the federal Defend Trade Secrets Act.
Watch for:
- A former employee who joined a competitor, and whose new employer suddenly has access to your processes, pricing, or client relationships
- A contractor who kept access to your systems or files after a project ended
- A competing product that replicates methods that were never publicly disclosed
If you think your intellectual property has been copied, the IP litigation team at Gearhart Law can assess your situation quickly and help you take the right steps before the window closes. Get in touch for a free half-hour consultation.
The Difference Between a Cease and Desist Letter and Actual Litigation
Most infringement situations do not start in a courtroom. They start with a cease and desist letter. One puts the infringer on notice. The other takes them to court. Where you start depends on how the infringer responds.
When a Cease and Desist Letter Is the Right Move
A well-drafted cease and desist letter puts the infringer on formal notice, documents the dispute, and opens the door to settlement without the cost of litigation. In many cases, it stops the infringement entirely. The cease and desist process makes sense when:
- The infringement appears unintentional, or the infringer may not know about your rights
- The damage is limited, and a fast resolution is in your interest
- You want to open licensing discussions rather than pursue damages
- The infringer is a smaller party that is likely to comply once formally notified
When Litigation Makes Sense
A cease and desist is not always enough. If the infringer ignores it, disputes your rights, or keeps infringing after receiving it, IP litigation may be the only way to enforce your rights and recover what you are owed. Scenarios where this might be necessary include:
- The infringement is ongoing and causing significant financial harm
- The infringer has ignored or rejected a formal demand
- The other party is a well-resourced competitor unlikely to back down without court intervention
- You need emergency relief to stop the damage immediately
- The dispute involves a core asset where precedent matters for future enforcement
Emergency Relief for When You Cannot Wait for Trial
In some situations, the damage happening right now cannot wait for a trial that is months or years away. Courts can grant emergency injunctive relief to stop ongoing infringement while a case is resolved. For trade secrets specifically, the federal Defend Trade Secrets Act allows for an emergency civil seizure order in extraordinary circumstances before the other party is even notified.
Talk to a New Jersey IP Litigation Lawyer Before You Make Your Next Move
If someone has copied your idea, your product, your brand, or your creative work, you have rights. But those rights only protect you if you act on them correctly and in time.
Gearhart Law handles intellectual property litigation for startups and businesses throughout New Jersey, including Summit, Millburn, Westfield, New Brunswick, and beyond. If you think your IP has been infringed, send us a message or call 908.273.0700 to book a free half-hour consultation.
Frequently Asked Questions About IP Litigation for Startups and Business Owners
1. What does an IP litigation lawyer do?
An IP litigation lawyer helps you enforce your intellectual property rights when those rights have been violated. This includes figuring out whether infringement has actually occurred, sending cease and desist letters, seeking emergency court orders, negotiating settlements, and representing you in federal court when litigation is necessary.
2. How do I know if my idea has been legally copied?
It depends on what type of IP you hold. For patents, the question is whether someone is making, selling, or using your patented invention without permission. For trademarks, it is whether a competitor is using a confusingly similar name or logo. For copyrights, it is whether your original work has been reproduced without authorization. For trade secrets, the question is whether confidential information was taken and used by someone who had no right to it.
3. Should I send a cease and desist letter myself?
You can, but a poorly drafted letter can create problems. It may tip off the infringer to cover their tracks, weaken your legal position, or lock you into a description of the dispute that does not serve you later. A cease and desist letter from an attorney carries more legal weight, is drafted to protect your position, and opens the door to resolution without giving anything away.
4. How long do I have to take legal action after my IP is copied?
It depends on the type of IP. Patent infringement claims generally must be filed within six years of the infringing act. Copyright infringement claims have a three-year statute of limitations. Trademark infringement does not have a fixed federal deadline, but delay can work against you. Trade secret claims under both the federal Defend Trade Secrets Act and the New Jersey Trade Secrets Act carry a three-year limitations period from the date you discovered the misappropriation.
5. Can I stop someone from selling a copied product while the case is pending?
Yes, in some cases. Courts can grant preliminary injunctions to stop ongoing infringement while litigation is resolved. You generally need to show you are likely to win on the merits and that you will suffer real harm without relief. In trade secret cases, emergency relief may be available even faster. Talk to an IP litigation attorney right away if the infringement is ongoing and causing active damage.
6. What damages can I recover if my IP has been infringed?
It depends on the type of IP and whether you registered your rights. For patents, you may recover lost profits or reasonable royalties, and a court may increase that amount up to three times at its discretion in cases of egregious infringement. For copyrights with prior registration, you may be entitled to statutory damages of up to $30,000 per work, or up to $150,000 for willful infringement, without needing to prove specific financial loss. Attorney’s fees may also be available.
7. Can I still take action if I don’t have a patent yet?
It depends. Unregistered trademarks may have common law protection if you have been using the mark in commerce. Copyright protection is automatic from the moment of creation, though registration unlocks the full range of remedies. Trade secrets do not require registration but do require that you have taken reasonable steps to protect the information. Patents are different: without a granted patent, your enforcement options are very limited.
