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A Uniquely Canadian Institution: The Copyright Board Of Canada, Daniel J. Gervais Dec 2008

A Uniquely Canadian Institution: The Copyright Board Of Canada, Daniel J. Gervais

Daniel J Gervais

Several countries have fostered the growth of Collective Management Organizations (CMOs) through legislative initiatives in the belief that CMOs offer a viable solution to the problems associated with individual licensing, collecting royalties and enforcing copyright against large numbers of users. In theory, collective licensing enables creators to exercise rights in a fair, efficient and accessible manner. It ensures copyright protection when individual management of it becomes difficult or impracticable. However, collective management is not a panacea, and questions have been raised about the efficiency and the transparency of CMOs and their continued relevancy in the digital age. This Chapter attempts …


Who Are These People? New Generation Employees And Trade Secrets, Elizabeth A. Rowe Sep 2008

Who Are These People? New Generation Employees And Trade Secrets, Elizabeth A. Rowe

Elizabeth A Rowe

Traditional approaches to examining the efficacy of trade secret protection in the workplace are often focused on technological and process based measures. Indeed, much attention has focused on the use of technology, by itself, to stem trade secret misappropriation. This Article offers a novel approach to the problem by incorporating contextual factors that might be important to trade secret protection and focuses on the people. It also, for the first time, applies sociological theories about employee theft to trade secret misappropriation. Working from the outside in, the Article examines first the reported societal effects on the values of those workers …


The Duty Of Treatment: Human Rights And The Hiv/Aids Pandemic, Noah B. Novogrodsky Sep 2008

The Duty Of Treatment: Human Rights And The Hiv/Aids Pandemic, Noah B. Novogrodsky

Noah B Novogrodsky

This article argues that the treatment of HIV and AIDS is spawning a juridical, advocacy and enforcement revolution. The intersection of AIDS and human rights was once characterized almost exclusively by anti-discrimination and destigmatization efforts. Today, human rights advocates are demanding life-saving treatment and convincing courts and legislatures to make states pay for it. Using a comparative Constitutional law methodology that places domestic courts at the center of the struggle for HIV treatment, this article shows how the provision of AIDS medications is reframing the right to health and the implementation of socio-economic rights. First, it locates an emerging right …


Rethinking "Reasonable Efforts" To Protect Trade Secrets In A Digital World, Elizabeth Rowe Sep 2008

Rethinking "Reasonable Efforts" To Protect Trade Secrets In A Digital World, Elizabeth Rowe

Elizabeth A Rowe

The very technological tools in use today that increase the efficiency with which companies do business create challenges for trade secret protection. They make trade secrets easier to store, easier to access, easier to disseminate, and more portable, thus increasing the risks that trade secrets will be destroyed. While secrecy is the sine qua non of trade secret protection, it can be difficult to accomplish. There is a tension between the need to keep information secret and modern technological methods that allow the information to be easily accessed, reproduced, and disseminated. In trade secret misappropriation cases, courts evaluate the sufficiency …


On Breaking Patents: Separating Strands Of Fact From Fiction Under Trips, Cynthia M. Ho Sep 2008

On Breaking Patents: Separating Strands Of Fact From Fiction Under Trips, Cynthia M. Ho

Cynthia M Ho

This article provides the first comprehensive analysis of when compulsory licensing of patents is permissible as a matter of international law under the Agreement of Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property (TRIPS). Thailand’s recent compulsory licenses of patents on a variety of medications provide a convenient vehicle to analyze the limits of compulsory licensing under TRIPS. Thailand’s actions are unique; most countries hesitate to issue compulsory licenses in the wake of legal uncertainties regarding TRIPS requirements as well as political pressure. This article capitalizes on the many issues involved in Thailand’s licenses to provide an authoritative interpretation of the scope of …


Plain Language Patents, Robin C. Feldman Aug 2008

Plain Language Patents, Robin C. Feldman

Robin C Feldman

Law is a process of Bounded Adaptation. The law that exists at any given moment is constantly driven to adapt to changing circumstances within the framework of what has gone before. The boundaries of that framework are policed by the necessity of articulating an interpretation in a way that gains general acceptance. It is the need to effectively articulate a common logic that mitigates the distortion of personal perspective.

This process of Bounded Adaptation cannot proceed effectively without an adequately structured dialogue that will promote the flow of information and analysis. Nowhere is this dialogue more challenging than at the …


Contracting To Preserve Open Science: The Privatization Of Public Policy In Patent Law, Peter Lee Aug 2008

Contracting To Preserve Open Science: The Privatization Of Public Policy In Patent Law, Peter Lee

Peter Lee

Patents on biomedical research tools—technological inputs to experimentation—may inhibit scientific inquiry and the development of life-enhancing therapies. Various “public law” approaches to address this challenge, such as a common law experimental use exception to patent infringement, have achieved limited success. In the wake of these shortcomings, this Article argues that institutions are utilizing a new model of private ordering to resolve research holdup. Increasingly, federal and state agencies, universities, non-profits, and disease advocacy groups are conditioning the provision of vital research support on requirements that recipients of this support make resulting patented inventions widely available for noncommercial research purposes. In …


Guns And Speech Technologies: How The Right To Bear Arms Affects Copyright Regulations Of Speech Technologies, Edward Lee Aug 2008

Guns And Speech Technologies: How The Right To Bear Arms Affects Copyright Regulations Of Speech Technologies, Edward Lee

Edward Lee

This Essay examines the possible effect the Supreme Court’s landmark Second Amendment ruling in District of Columbia v. Heller will have on future cases brought under the Free Press Clause. Based on the text and history of the Constitution, the connection between the two Clauses is undeniable, as the Heller Court itself repeatedly suggested. Only two provisions in the entire Constitution protect individual rights to a technology: the Second Amendment’s right to bear “arms” and the Free Press Clause’s right to the freedom of the “press,” meaning the printing press. Both rights were viewed, moreover, as preexisting, natural rights to …


Copyright Infringement In The Internet Age - Primetime For Harmonized Conflict-Of-Laws Rules?, Anita B. Frohlich Aug 2008

Copyright Infringement In The Internet Age - Primetime For Harmonized Conflict-Of-Laws Rules?, Anita B. Frohlich

Anita B Frohlich

The traditionally national nature of law endangers its very raison d’être in today’s interconnected and borderless world. Conflict-of-laws methodology may prove to represent an adequate means to maintain relevance of national legal tradition in presence of the increasingly international nature of legal disputes. Here, I propose that only a harmonized conflict-of-laws framework can achieve this goal. Specifically, I focus on international copyright law since (1) the current national jurisprudence in this field is unsatisfactory and disparate, (2) international intellectual property law has so far mostly failed to cross-fertilize with the field of conflict of laws, and (3) there have been …


Copyright And Fair Use In The New Digital Age, Jonathan R. Medina Jul 2008

Copyright And Fair Use In The New Digital Age, Jonathan R. Medina

Jonathan R Medina

This paper concerns aspects of intellectual property law in the new digital age and how Fair Use should be modified to include some user-generated content. However, users should be cautious of copyright concerns of creators and respect those rights, using their works in context.


The New Federal Trademark Dilution Act Is A Constitutional Restriction On Free Speech, Don E. Reeve Jun 2008

The New Federal Trademark Dilution Act Is A Constitutional Restriction On Free Speech, Don E. Reeve

Don E Reeve Jr.

The Note discusses the constitutionality of the Federal Trademark Dilution Act of 2006 (FTDRA) in light of First Amendment concerns by discussing and analyzing 1) the history and evolution of trademark dilution protection while attempting to clarify the confusion over the definition of dilution, 2) the perceived conflict between trademark dilution protection and the First Amendment noting the foundational arguments supporting the criticism of the FTDRA, and 3) the specific criticisms of the FTDRA. The Note then proceeds to apply the legal principals governing First Amendment protection to the current federal statute and argues that the FTDRA does not threaten …


The Formal Structure Of Patent Law And The Limits Of Enablement, Jeffrey A. Lefstin Apr 2008

The Formal Structure Of Patent Law And The Limits Of Enablement, Jeffrey A. Lefstin

Jeffrey A Lefstin

Modern American patent law is characterized by two grand themes, both of which were first sounded in the formative years of patent law but have assumed center stage today. The first has been the condensation of the invention and the inventor’s legal rights around the claim, a highly formal and abstract collection of properties defining the boundaries of the patent’s reach. The second has been the drive to reduce patent law to a small set of formal principles, from which the essential doctrines of patent law may be logically derived. This Article argues that those two themes are fundamentally incompatible, …


Sharing Potential And The Potential For Sharing: Open Source Licensing As A Legal And Economic Modality For The Dissemination Of Renewable Energy Technology Apr 2008

Sharing Potential And The Potential For Sharing: Open Source Licensing As A Legal And Economic Modality For The Dissemination Of Renewable Energy Technology

Jason Wiener

No abstract provided.


Leave Those Orcs Alone: Property Rights In Virtual Worlds, Kevin Deenihan Mar 2008

Leave Those Orcs Alone: Property Rights In Virtual Worlds, Kevin Deenihan

Kevin E Deenihan

Conversion of property is a familiar piece of law. What about conversion of virtual property? In 2006, a man filed suit claiming theft of virtual real estate he maintained in a Virtual World. The Judge may well have wondered: is this property law? Intellectual property? Torts? Contract? When should the law even apply to Virtual Worlds at all? New societies populated by millions of people have sprung up in the online context. Their inhabitants buy goods, trade with each other, and form complex self-regulating organizations and economic systems. All are activities governed in the real world by centuries of legal …


The Pope's Copyright? Aligning Incentives With Reality By Using Creative Motivation To Shape Copyright Protection, Lydia P. Loren Mar 2008

The Pope's Copyright? Aligning Incentives With Reality By Using Creative Motivation To Shape Copyright Protection, Lydia P. Loren

Lydia P Loren

In the United States utilitarian theory posits that granting an exclusive right in creative expression will provide a necessary incentive to invest in the creation and distribution of expressive works. It is feared that without this incentive there would be insufficient motivation for creation. Indeed, it appears that the U.S. adheres completely to the notion that “no man but a blockhead ever wrote, except for money.” Yet the creation of many works, such as email and papel decrees, ordinarily are not motivated by monetary incentives. Nevertheless, current copyright protection fails to account for the creator’s motivation in determining the level …


Valuable Asset Or Vibrant Force? Intellectual Property And Conceptions Of Culture, Olufunmilayo B. Arewa Feb 2008

Valuable Asset Or Vibrant Force? Intellectual Property And Conceptions Of Culture, Olufunmilayo B. Arewa

Olufunmilayo B. Arewa

Discussions of intellectual property as property often implicitly rely upon conceptions of value that give primacy to economic and business value while dismissing or even ignoring questions of cultural value. Questions of cultural value are, however, fundamental to discussions of intellectual property today. Discussions of intellectual property often emphasize treating cultural material as valuable assets and highlight the role of intellectual property in protecting such assets. Valuable asset models of culture accentuate the business and economic utility of intellectual property assets. Valuable asset approaches, however, typically reflect an incomplete understanding of the roles of culture and the intersection of culture …


Law's Misguided Love Affair With Science, Robin Feldman Feb 2008

Law's Misguided Love Affair With Science, Robin Feldman

Robin C Feldman

The allure of science has always captivated members of the legal profession. Its siren’s song has followed us throughout much of American legal history. We look to science to rescue us from the experience of uncertainty and the discomfort of difficult legal decisions, and we are constantly disappointed.

The notion of what constitutes science and what it would take to make law more scientific varies across time. What does not vary is our constant return to the well. We are constantly seduced into believing that some new science will provide answers to law’s dilemmas, and we are constantly disappointed.

This …


Complying With The National Institutes Of Health Public Access Policy: Copyright Considerations And Options, Michael W. Carroll Jan 2008

Complying With The National Institutes Of Health Public Access Policy: Copyright Considerations And Options, Michael W. Carroll

Michael W. Carroll

This White Paper is written primarily for policymaking staff in universities and other institutional recipients of NIH support responsible for ensuring compliance with the Public Access Policy. The January 11, 2008, Public Access Policy imposes two new compliance mandates. First, the grantee must ensure proper manuscript submission. The version of the article to be submitted is the final version over which the author has control, which must include all revisions made after peer review. The statutory command directs that the manuscript be submitted to PMC “upon acceptance for publication.” That is, the author’s final manuscript should be submitted to PMC …


An Enhanced Standard For Redefining Obviousness: Why Ksr Does Not Work And A Proposed Solution To A Subjectivity Problem, Aaron Davis Jan 2008

An Enhanced Standard For Redefining Obviousness: Why Ksr Does Not Work And A Proposed Solution To A Subjectivity Problem, Aaron Davis

Aaron P. Davis

This paper will evaluate the background and evolution of the obviousness requirement of patentability established by 35 U.S.C. § 103, including an in-depth analysis of the landmark decision in KSR v. Teleflex and its subsequent confirmation in Leapfrog v. Fisher-Price. Next, the study will explain why the Supreme Court decision in KSR is ineffective and propose a solution to the KSR problem using a hybrid test, to be explained further, which generally combines the elements of the Graham test with the standard TSM approach adopted by the Federal Circuit post-Graham, and institutes a grace period by which an inventor will …


Authors And Readers: Conceptualizing Authorship In Copyright Law, Alina Ng Dec 2007

Authors And Readers: Conceptualizing Authorship In Copyright Law, Alina Ng

Alina Ng

Copyright law recognizes authors as the first owners of copyright. However, there is paucity in literature in copyright analysis of the author and the rights which should be granted by virtue of the very act of creativity in the production of literary and artistic works. This indicates insufficient attention paid to a concept that is so central to a law that primarily aims to encourage authorship for society’s benefit. The idea of the author and authorship as a creative process is central to copyright analysis. Deeper analysis of the author and creative authorship will provide insights into how the law …


Debunking The Top Three Myths Of Digital Sampling: An Endorsement Of The Bridgeport Music Court's Attempt To Afford "Sound" Copyright Protection To Sound Recordings, Tracy Reilly Dec 2007

Debunking The Top Three Myths Of Digital Sampling: An Endorsement Of The Bridgeport Music Court's Attempt To Afford "Sound" Copyright Protection To Sound Recordings, Tracy Reilly

Tracy Reilly

In sharp contrast with the majority of legal scholarship on the subject matter, this article asserts that, since the emergence of digital sampling technology in the 1970’s, courts and legal scholars alike have failed to fully appreciate the true nature and consequences of allowing legally unchecked digital sampling—that is, until the Sixth Circuit decision in Bridgeport Music, Inc. v. Dimension Films, holding that defendants’ unlicensed sampling of three notes of a copyrighted sound recording constituted a per se infringement. This decision marked the first time a court hearing a sampling case truly discerned the subtle but existent differences between sampling …


Outgrowing Copyright: The Effect Of Market Size On Copyright Policy, Tom W. Bell Dec 2007

Outgrowing Copyright: The Effect Of Market Size On Copyright Policy, Tom W. Bell

Tom W. Bell

Does copyright protection offer the best means of stimulating the production of expressive works? Perhaps, at the moment, it does. If so, however, copyright protection will probably become inefficiently over-protective as the market for expressive works grows. With such growth, copyright holders will find it increasingly remunerative to focus on customers willing to pay a premium for particular expressive works. In a larger, more finely segmented market, copyright holders will find that their statutory rights generate larger monopoly rents. Yet copyright holders will suffer no corresponding increase in production or distribution costs; thanks to technological advances, we can expect those …


Trademark Dilution Bibliography, Don E. Reeve Dec 2007

Trademark Dilution Bibliography, Don E. Reeve

Don E Reeve Jr.

A listing of legal and non-legal articles which discuss trademark dilution.


Turned On Its Head?: Norms, Freedom, And Acceptable Terms In Internet Contracting, Richard Warner Dec 2007

Turned On Its Head?: Norms, Freedom, And Acceptable Terms In Internet Contracting, Richard Warner

Richard Warner

Is the Internet turning contract law on its head? Many commentators contend it is. Precisely this issue arises in current controversies over end user license agreements (EULAs) and Terms of Use agreements (TOUs, the agreements governing our use of web sites). Commentators complain that, in both cases, the formation process unduly restricts buyers’ freedom; and, that sellers and web site owners exploit the process to impose terms that deprive consumers of important intellectual property and privacy rights. The courts ignore the criticisms and routinely enforce EULAs and TOUs. There is truth on both sides of this court/commentator divide. EULAs and …


Intellectual Property And Human Rights: Learning To Live Together, Daniel J. Gervais Dec 2007

Intellectual Property And Human Rights: Learning To Live Together, Daniel J. Gervais

Daniel J Gervais

Intellectual property and human rights must learn to live together. Traditionally, there have been two dominant views of this “cohabitation,” namely a conflict view, which emphasizes the negative impacts of intellectual property on rights such as freedom of expression or the right to health and security, and a compatibility model, which emphasizes that both sets of rights strive towards the same fundamental equilibrium. This Chapter takes the dualist view that both are right, though there is, and should be, much more truth to the second approach in the coming years.


Revitalizing Essential Facilities, Spencer Weber Waller, Brett Frischmann Dec 2007

Revitalizing Essential Facilities, Spencer Weber Waller, Brett Frischmann

Spencer Weber Waller

Revitalizing Essential Facilities

Spencer Weber Waller

Brett Frischmann

Our article examines an age old debate about the nature and limits of property rights and the current manifestation of this debate in antitrust law. Many areas of law struggle to balance private property rightsCmost importantly, the right of exclusionCwith the public=s right of access to essential resources. What is the best way to manage resources that provide both public and private benefits? For years, academics and law makers have debated this question with respect to transportation systems, communication networks, scientific research, and a variety of other "infrastructural" resources. Many press for …