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Hey, that is very cool! I know in my research on Valentino, I found a design patent done by Valentino's second wife, even her biographer did not know about it, that was cool too! |
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Wow. Bob Gurr deserves a coffee table book all his own. Theme parks wouldn't be the same without him. (I met Bob once back in the day. Very interesting guy!)
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When we saw Charles Phoenix's Disneyland slideshow last year, we were treated to a wonderful surprise...Bob Gurr was in the audience. It was truly eye opening to see slide after slide of different Disneyland vehicles and hear, "Bob Gurr designed this one too," over and over. He had great stories about going to junk yards and salvaging parts from old Buicks and Chevys to piece together everything from the Autopia cars to the Monorails. He had real vision to be able to take existing forms that were recognizable in their own right and come up with something new out of them with their own unique character.
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I'm surprised - not by how many cool things Bob Gurr designed - but by how little I apparently understand patent law. Why did WED allow an individual's name on a patent (I note that it does say "Assignor to Wed Enterprises") - do they still do that? How does patent for a design differ from copyright on, say, a show script?
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I don't know any details, but I do see a lot of patents get awarded to software and hardware engineers in my company. While the IP does belong to the company, those that develop the patentable innovation are credited by name on the patent. So that much continues to be standard practice.
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