
Eugene Vamos
Jennings Strouss & Salmon
Eugene Vamos counsels individuals, small business and start ups with their intellectual property law and business formation issues, including patents, trademarks, copyrights and internet domains throughout Tucson and Southern Arizona.
Mr. Vamos is a Member of the Firm’s Intellectual Property Department. He has over 11 years of patent, trademark, and copyright experience. Prior work experience and academic knowledge provides Mr. Vamos with the ability and competence to counsel clients through technology development, the inventive process, and business issues with a financial analysis perspective.
- Intellectual Property
- Patents
- Patent Appeals, Patent Litigation, Patent Prosecution
- Trademarks
- Trademark Litigation, Trademark Registration
- Business Law
- Business Contracts, Business Formation, Franchising
- Communications & Internet Law
- Internet Law, Media & Advertising
- Licensing, SaaS Agreements, MSA, Software Contracts
- FaceTime
- Google Meet
- Skype
- Zoom
- Free Consultation
- Arizona
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- Arizona-Bankruptcy
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- US Patent and Trademark Office
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- 9th Circuit
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- Spanish: Spoken, Written
- Member
- Jennings, Strouss & Salmon
- - Current
- Attorney
- Law Office of Eugene Vamos
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- Attorney
- Altfeld Battaile & Goldman
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- James E. Rogers College of Law, University of Arizona
- J.D.
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- Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- M.S. | Technology and Policy, Energy Focus
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- Stanford University
- B.S. | Industrial Engineering
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- American Intellectual Property Law Association
- - Current
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- Q. will the name 'milky way electric' cause any copyright infringement on milkyway the chocolate bar company?
- A: It depends on the context of your proposed usage. The words "Milky Way Electric" can not be copyrighted, but they can probably be used in a trademark, that is, associate it with a good/service. You will have to seek out a trademark attorney to guide you on the specific areas of permissible usage (HINT: Not candy and chocolate)
- Q. Can a distributor ship products of another brand who has permission to use a 3rd companies logo on the product w theirs
- A: Those third party logos are someone's intellectual property, and I would advise you to obtain some kind of proof from your customer that these third party logos are allowed/licensed to be used in the particular product.
- Q. What process would I have to go through to get permission to use Miller logo on some of my clothing brand designs?
- A: Most prudent way is to contact Miller's licensing department and obtain an license for the use of their logo.
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