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Intellectual Property Law

Chicago-Kent College of Law

Series

Intellectual Property Law

Publication Year

Articles 1 - 4 of 4

Full-Text Articles in Law

New Business Models For Music, Henry H. Perritt Jr. Jan 2011

New Business Models For Music, Henry H. Perritt Jr.

All Faculty Scholarship

The popular music industry is in the middle of a technology-driven revolution. It is clear that the old order has been swept away, but it is not yet clear what form the “new order” will take. The major labels are on life support and will not survive in anything like their previous form. Compact Discs are dead as a distribution medium. Copyright is unenforceable and hence essentially irrelevant except at the margins of the “new order.” Barriers to entry have been reduced dramatically as the costs of producing top-quality recordings have declined by a couple of orders of magnitude. Portable …


Turned On Its Head?: Norms, Freedom, And Acceptable Terms In Internet Contracting, Richard Warner Jan 2008

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

All Faculty Scholarship

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 …


Patents: The Need For Bioethics Scrutiny And Legal Change (With J. Paradise), Lori B. Andrews Feb 2005

Patents: The Need For Bioethics Scrutiny And Legal Change (With J. Paradise), Lori B. Andrews

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A patent holder can choose to license a patented invention to others, can choose to use the patented invention exclusively itself, or can choose to prevent any use of the patented invention by itself or by others. In the gene patent area, the exclusive rights of the patent holder can raise the costs of genetic services, diminish the quality of genetic tests and treatments, and interfere with access to health care.


Unbundling Value In Electronic Information Products: Intellectual Property Protection For Machine Readable Interfaces, Henry H. Perritt Jr. Mar 1994

Unbundling Value In Electronic Information Products: Intellectual Property Protection For Machine Readable Interfaces, Henry H. Perritt Jr.

All Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.