Company: FTII
Filing Date: 2025-02-14
Form Type: S-4
Source: 0001493152-25-006997
Chunk: 171

Company: FutureTech II Acquisition Corp.
Filing Date: 2025-02-14
Form: S-4
Chunk 171
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we may become party to adversarial proceedings regarding our patent rights or third-party patent portfolios. Such proceedings could include
supplemental examination or contested post-grant proceedings such as post-grant review, reexamination, inter partes review, interference
or derivation proceedings before the USPTO, and challenges in U.S. district courts. Patents may be subjected to opposition, post-grant
review or comparable proceedings lodged in various foreign, both national and regional, patent offices. The legal threshold for initiating
litigation or contested proceedings may be low in certain forum, so that even lawsuits or proceedings with a low probability of success
might be initiated. Litigation and contested proceedings can also be expensive and time-consuming, and our adversaries in these proceedings
may have the ability to dedicate substantially greater resources to prosecuting these legal actions than we can. We may also occasionally
use these proceedings to challenge the patent rights of others. We cannot be certain that any particular challenge will be successful
in limiting or eliminating the challenged patent rights of the third party.

An unfavorable outcome in
above mentioned lawsuits and proceedings could require us to pay substantial damages, to lose our patent protection, to cease using the
technology or to license rights, potentially at a substantial cost, from prevailing third parties. There is no guarantee that any prevailing
party would offer us a license or that we could acquire any license on commercially acceptable terms. Even if we can obtain rights to
a third-party’s intellectual property, those rights may be non-exclusive, and therefore our competitors may obtain access to the
same intellectual property. Ultimately, we may have to cease some of our business operations because of infringement claims, which could
severely harm our business. To the extent we are found to be infringing on the intellectual property rights of others, we may not develop
or otherwise obtain alternative technology. If we need to redesign our products to avoid third-party intellectual property rights, we
may suffer significant regulatory delays associated with conducting additional studies or submitting technical, manufacturing or other
information related to any redesigned product and, ultimately, in obtaining regulatory approval. Further, any such redesigns may result
in less effective or less commercially desirable products or both.

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Even if we were
ultimately to prevail, any of these events could require us to divert substantial financial and management resources that we would otherwise
be able to devote to our business. Intellectual property litigation, regardless of its outcome, may cause negative publicity, adversely
impact prospective customers, cause product shipment delays, or