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Intellectual Property Strategy β€” Lantern ​

Overview ​

This document outlines Lantern's approach to trademark, patent, and trade secret protection. The goal is to establish defensible IP while balancing costs, timeline, and long-term strategic value.


1. Trademark Strategy ​

1.1 Brand Name: "Lantern" vs. Domain "ourlantern.app" ​

Status: App will be branded as "Lantern" with domain ourlantern.app.

Why this works:

  • Trademark protection is based on the brand name users know, not the domain
  • Many successful apps have domain β‰  brand name (e.g., Instagram uses instagram.com but is owned by Meta; Signal uses signal.org but is the Signal Foundation)
  • "ourlantern.app" domain serves as a sub-brand and prevents domain squatting

Key principle: Clear in-app and marketing materials that the product is called "Lantern" (not "Our Lantern"). Homepage and onboarding should establish this naming convention consistently.

1.2 Trademark Search & Availability ​

Required action (URGENT):

  • [ ] Conduct comprehensive WIPO (World Intellectual Property Organization) trademark search for "Lantern"
    • Search in US (USPTO), EU (EUIPO), Canada, and any other key expansion markets
    • Cost: ~$200–400 for professional search, or free via WIPO/USPTO databases (requires diligence)
    • Timeline: Do this within 1–2 weeks before filing

Possible scenarios and workarounds:

ScenarioStatusWorkaroundTimeline
"Lantern" available in all classesβœ… IDEALFile trademark immediately1–2 weeks filing
"Lantern" partially available (e.g., Class 35/42 available, not Class 43)⚠️ ACCEPTABLEFile in available classes; use different name for food/beverage partnerships if needed; consider "Lantern App" as secondary mark2–3 weeks
"Lantern" fully unavailable❌ PROBLEMRebrand to: "Beacon," "Glow," "Ember," "Haven," "Venue" (and repeat search); consider acquiring rights from existing holder (expensive)2–4 weeks + potential cost

1.3 Filing Plan ​

Near-term (within 6 months of first commercial use):

  • [ ] File US trademark (USPTO) for "Lantern"

    • Classes: 35 (advertising/business), 42 (software/SaaS), 43 (food/beverage services for partnerships)
    • Cost: ~$300–500
    • Timeline: 6–12 months to grant
  • [ ] File EU trademark (EUIPO) if expansion to Europe is planned

    • Cost: ~$400–600
    • Timeline: 6–12 months to grant
  • [ ] File Canadian trademark if relevant

    • Cost: ~$300

Logo/visual mark (optional but recommended):

  • If you develop a distinctive icon, file it as a secondary mark
  • Helps prevent lookalikes even if word mark is contested

Maintenance:

  • Renew trademark every 10 years in each jurisdiction
  • Monitor for infringing uses and issue cease-and-desist letters if needed

2. Patent Strategy ​

2.1 Patent Feasibility Assessment ​

Potential defensible innovations:

  1. Geofence + check-in + redemption verification flow

    • Combined system integrating GPS validation, venue verification, fraud detection, and offer redemption
    • Novel if implementation differs materially from Foursquare/Groupon/Swarm
  2. Wave discovery algorithm

    • Specific weighting/ranking for users to discover connections at venues
    • Only patentable if truly novel (not just "matching people who check in at same venue")
  3. Zero-knowledge encryption for location data

    • Client-side encryption pattern for location-sensitive data
    • Only if implementation includes novel cryptographic techniques (standard encryption is not patentable)
  4. Merchant fraud detection system

    • ML-based or rule-based system to detect spoofing, velocity violations, coordinated fraud
    • Patentable if algorithm is novel

Not patentable:

  • "Check-in based offers" (prior art: Foursquare, Yelp, Groupon)
  • "Location-based matching" (prior art: many dating/social apps)
  • "PWA architecture" (PWAs are standard tech, not a novel invention)
  • "Encrypted user profiles" (encryption itself is not patentable; only novel crypto algorithms are)

2.2 Cost-Benefit Analysis ​

OptionCostTimelineValueRecommendation
Provisional Patent$300–500File immediatelyLow β†’ Mediumβœ… DO THIS NOW (buys 12 months)
Full Utility Patent (US only)$5,000–10,0002–4 years to grantMedium (if defensible)⏳ WAIT until post-pilot
Full Utility Patent (US + EU)$15,000–25,0002–4 years per jurisdictionMedium β†’ High⏳ WAIT until revenue justifies
No patent (rely on trade secrets)$0N/AHigh (faster to market)βœ… RECOMMENDED for pilot

Now (Pilot Phase):

  • [ ] File a provisional patent application (PPA) for your most defensible innovation
    • Cost: ~$300–500
    • Establishes priority date (you have 12 months to convert to full utility patent)
    • Allows you to claim "patent pending" in marketing
    • Buys time to validate product-market fit before investing in full patent prosecution
    • Most likely candidate for PPA: Combined geofence + fraud detection + redemption verification system

Post-Pilot (6–12 months after launch):

  • If pilot shows strong product-market fit and defensible innovation, file full utility patents in US + EU
  • If innovation turns out to be too similar to existing patents, abandon the idea or pursue different angle
  • Total cost: ~$15,000–25,000 for comprehensive protection

Alternative: Skip patents and rely on trade secrets (see section 3) + network effects (user base, merchant relationships)


3. Trade Secrets & Competitive Advantage ​

Trade secrets are often MORE valuable than patents for software startups because:

  • No public disclosure required (unlike patents, which are published)
  • No expiration date (lasts as long as you keep it secret)
  • No expensive prosecution/defense required
  • Faster to protect (immediate upon creation)

3.1 What to Protect as Trade Secrets ​

  • [ ] Proprietary algorithms: Wave discovery ranking, fraud detection scoring, geofence validation logic
  • [ ] Merchant data insights: Aggregate patterns, seasonality analysis, offer ROI benchmarks
  • [ ] Customer acquisition strategies: Channel performance, cohort analysis, retention metrics
  • [ ] Technical implementation details: Specific encryption key management, server architecture, data pipeline design
  • [ ] Business model data: Pricing tiers, margin analysis, unit economics

3.2 How to Maintain Trade Secret Status ​

  • [ ] Confidentiality agreements: Have all employees and contractors sign NDAs covering trade secrets
  • [ ] Access controls: Limit access to sensitive code, data, and business metrics to need-to-know basis
  • [ ] Code repositories: Use private GitHub repos; never commit secrets to public repos
  • [ ] Documentation: Keep proprietary algorithm docs in encrypted, access-controlled storage
  • [ ] Onboarding: Brief new hires on what constitutes trade secrets and confidentiality expectations
  • [ ] Exit procedures: Ensure departing employees return all materials and reaffirm confidentiality obligations

4.1 Terms of Service & IP Ownership ​

  • [ ] Clearly state in ToS that all user-generated content (offers, lantern messages, check-ins) is owned by Lantern with license from user
  • [ ] Explicitly state that merchants cannot copy/reverse-engineer Lantern's matching/verification algorithms
  • [ ] Prohibit bot/automated access to Lantern data (prevents scraping)
  • [ ] Include DMCA takedown notice procedures for IP violations

4.2 Licensing & API Terms ​

  • [ ] For any future API (mobile SDKs, merchant APIs), use restrictive licensing:
    • Non-commercial use only (for dev/testing)
    • No reverse engineering or decompilation
    • Geographic/domain restrictions (prevent competitors using your API)

4.3 Attribution & Branding Guidelines ​

  • [ ] Document official "Lantern App" branding guidelines
  • [ ] Publish partner/merchant badge usage guidelines (prevent unauthorized use of Lantern branding)

5. Monitoring & Enforcement ​

5.1 Competitor Monitoring ​

  • [ ] Quarterly search for apps/services using "Lantern" name or confusingly similar branding
  • [ ] Set up Google Alerts for:
    • "Lantern" + "app" + "venue"
    • "Lantern" + "check-in"
    • "Lantern" + "offers"
  • [ ] Monitor app stores (Apple App Store, Google Play) for copycat apps
  • [ ] If copycat found: assess likelihood of confusion β†’ consider cease-and-desist letter β†’ potential opposition

5.2 Enforcement Actions ​

  • [ ] Trademark infringement: Cease-and-desist letter (DIY or via lawyer ~$500–2,000)
  • [ ] Patent infringement: Detailed analysis required; enforcement is expensive (~$50,000+) and only worthwhile if infringer is well-capitalized
  • [ ] Trade secret misappropriation: Legal action if former employee violates NDA (requires proof of bad faith)
  • [ ] Copyright infringement: DMCA takedown notices for code/design copying (free to issue)

Note: Enforcement is costly. Most startups focus on defending against direct clones, not minor variations.


6. Timeline & Action Items ​

Immediate (This Month) ​

  • [ ] Trademark search: WIPO/USPTO search for "Lantern" availability (~2 weeks, $200–400)
  • [ ] Provisional patent (optional): If you want "patent pending" protection, file PPA for geofence + fraud detection system (~$300–500, takes 1 day)
  • [ ] Legal consultation: Spend 1 hour with startup IP lawyer (~$300–500) to review trademark/patent strategy

Short-term (Before Pilot Launch, 1–2 months) ​

  • [ ] Trademark filing: If "Lantern" is available, file US trademark (and EU if expanding internationally)
    • Cost: $300–500 per jurisdiction
    • Timeline: 6–12 months to grant, but you can use "β„’" immediately
  • [ ] Terms of Service: Draft ToS mentioning IP ownership, API restrictions, and brand guidelines
    • Cost: $2,000–5,000 if using startup lawyer (or DIY using Termly/iubenda templates)

Medium-term (Post-Pilot, 6–12 months) ​

  • [ ] Convert provisional to full utility patent: Only if defensible innovation and product-market fit proven
    • Cost: $5,000–15,000
    • Timeline: 2–4 years to grant
  • [ ] Trade secret documentation: Formalize list of trade secrets, access controls, and employee training
    • Cost: Internal time only (~10 hours)

Long-term (Year 2+) ​

  • [ ] International trademark expansion: File in additional markets (Canada, Australia, Japan, etc.) if business scales
    • Cost: ~$500 per jurisdiction
  • [ ] Patent enforcement strategy: If competitors emerge, assess whether litigation is worth it
  • [ ] Brand equity monitoring: Periodic searches and competitive analysis

7. Cost Summary ​

ItemCostTimingRequired?
Trademark search$200–400Nowβœ… YES (2–3 weeks)
Provisional patent$300–500Now⏳ Optional but cheap
US trademark filing$300–500This monthβœ… YES (if available)
EU trademark filing$400–600This month⏳ If expanding to EU
Legal consultation (1 hour)$300–500Nowβœ… Highly recommended
Terms of Service (DIY)$0 (time only)Next monthβœ… YES
Terms of Service (lawyer)$2,000–5,000Next month⏳ Optional if budget allows
Full utility patent (US only)$5,000–10,000Post-pilot⏳ Only if defensible
Full utility patent (US + EU)$15,000–25,000Post-pilot⏳ Only if defensible
Total (minimal path)~$800–1,500Now–next monthβœ…
Total (with lawyer help)~$3,500–7,500Now–next monthβœ…

8. What Actually Stops Competitors? ​

Based on analysis, IP alone does not prevent competitors from entering the space. Your real moats are:

  1. Network effects: User base + merchant relationships create lock-in
  2. Merchant relationships: Your co-founder's industry connections = trust, low CAC, high retention
  3. Product velocity: Iterate faster than competitors; first-mover advantage in San Diego
  4. Frictionless UX: PWA, one-tap check-in, no app install β†’ hard to replicate quickly
  5. Unit economics: Healthy margins on offers + recurring revenue = sustainable growth
  6. Data advantages: Over time, you'll have more merchant performance data than competitors

IP protections (trademark, patent, trade secret) are table stakesβ€”they provide legal tools if someone copies you, but they're not your primary competitive advantage.


References & Resources ​

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