HOW THE WORLD DOES IP: Inside WIPO, Lessons from Taiwan & Dominican Republic, and the Misconceptions We Need to Unlearn
Host: Abdi Lopez, 2L, Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law
Co-Host: Professor Jon Kappes, Teaching Professor, ASU Law
Featured Guest: James “Jim” Pooley, Former Deputy Director General, WIPO
What happens when 200,000 of the world's most cutting-edge inventions flow through a single office in Geneva — and you're responsible for keeping them secret?
In this episode, Abdi Lopez speaks with Jim Pooley — IP Hall of Famer, 50-year Silicon Valley trial lawyer, and former Deputy Director General of the World Intellectual Property Organization — alongside ASU Law Professor Jon Kappes, patent practitioner and nationally recognized IP educator.
Together, they pull back the curtain on how intellectual property actually works at the global level: the North-South divide that turned "harmonization" into a dirty word, why TRIPS left developing nations feeling betrayed, and what a 12-person patent office in the Dominican Republic can teach Big Law about mission-driven practice.
They also go deep on the strategic realities practitioners face every day — from talking clients out of filing in 200 countries, to why most granted patents are worth less than $5,000, to how Taiwan's TSMC built the world's most sophisticated trade secret program from the ground up.
Whether you practice IP or not, this conversation will reshape how you think about innovation, sovereignty, and what the patent system is really for.
Key topics: the Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT) explained, trade secrets as the dominant IP asset, global patent enforcement gaps, TSMC's Golden Trade Secret Award, the economics of patent value, and why Jim Pooley thinks law schools should teach improv.