IP infringement lawyer software

What this page covers
IP infringement lawyer software
Software IP disputes can involve alleged copying, unauthorized use, copyright infringement, and competing claims over software-related rights.
Femida.us handles these matters with a combined corporate and IP perspective, which can be important when a software infringement dispute is tied to ownership, founders, or business agreements.
In brief
- This page is for software companies, founders, and technology teams dealing with suspected software IP infringement or related copyright disputes.
- Possible next steps may include reviewing ownership and license terms, sending a cease-and-desist letter, or considering a DMCA takedown when appropriate.
- Software IP disputes often overlap with contracts, contributor arrangements, founder conflicts, or AI-related copyright issues rather than standing alone.
What to do
A practical first step in a software IP dispute is defining the exact issue. That may involve alleged software piracy, a copycat app, unauthorized use of code or content, or a broader copyright claim involving software or AI-generated materials.
The next step is usually a document-based review of ownership, permissions, and license terms. In software matters, the legal position often depends on who created the work, what rights were assigned, whether use was authorized, and how copyright and licensing terms apply to the material in dispute.
Femida.us describes its approach as combining corporate and IP work. That can be helpful when an infringement issue is connected to company structure, founder relationships, contributor status, or commercial agreements, because those business facts may affect both enforcement options and defense strategy.
What to keep in mind
This topic is especially relevant for software companies, SaaS businesses, founders, game studios, and AI-focused teams facing allegations of copying, piracy, or unauthorized use. The same dispute may involve both technical materials and business records.
Not every software conflict is a straightforward infringement claim. Open-source obligations, license differences such as GPL versus MIT, prior permissions, and existing contracts can all affect what remedies may be available and whether a cease-and-desist or DMCA step makes sense.
Any legal assessment depends on the specific facts and documents. In software disputes, that often includes the work at issue, ownership records, license terms, contributor arrangements, contracts, and the conduct said to infringe.
