Intellectual Property Attorneys
About BEAUMONT
BEAUMONT is a firm of IP Attorneys located in Grenoble, France. The firm was founded in 1985.
We accompany a broad range of clients, including companies, individuals and institutions, operating across France and abroad.
Our team associates engineers and lawyers, all specialized in Intellectual Property Law, allowing us to offer services in all fields of IP, in particular patents, trademarks, contracts, domain names, designs, licences and software registrations.
Our engineers have the technical background to assist you in most fields of technology.
Office info
Our office will be closed on French bank holidays, which in 2026 fall on:
1st January / 6 April / 1st, 8, 14 May / 14 July / 11 November / 25 December
News
GenAI Innovation Soaring, With Patent Activity Nearly Tripling in Two Years
The generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) patent landscape has reached a new milestone, with more new patents published in 2024 and 2025 than in the entire preceding ten years combined, according to new data published today by the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO).
WIPO 2026 Global Awards Winners: Eleven Companies Recognized for Using IP to Build and Scale Their Businesses
The World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) today announced the 11 winners of the WIPO Global Award 2026, celebrating companies that demonstrated excellence in using intellectual property (IP) to bring to market products including drugs to regenerate lung tissue, semiconductors that cut energy loss, AI-guided crop spraying devices and helmet sensors promoting athletes’ brain health.
Intangible Investment Tops USD 10 Trillion for the First Time, Growing More Than Three Times Faster Than Tangible Investment
Investment in intangible assets crossed the USD 10 trillion mark for the first time in 2025, with the United States alone accounting for nearly half of the total, as investments in software, data, brands and other intellectual property-backed assets rose even as spending on machinery and buildings lagged under tight financing conditions and economic uncertainty.