Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Aesthetic design feature (1)
- Commercial success effects (1)
- Competitive markets (1)
- Consumers (1)
- Copyright (1)
-
- Copyright infringement (1)
- Copyright law (1)
- Cost effects (1)
- Digital (1)
- Digital music (1)
- File (1)
- File sharing (1)
- Function design (1)
- Functional (1)
- Functionality doctrine (1)
- IP (1)
- Intellectual property (1)
- Internet (1)
- Inwood (1)
- Marketing Displays (1)
- Music (1)
- Music companies (1)
- Music industry (1)
- Napster (1)
- Patent law (1)
- Producers (1)
- Quality effects (1)
- Sharing (1)
- Songs (1)
- Source-identifying trade symbols (1)
Articles 1 - 2 of 2
Full-Text Articles in Law
Trademark Law, Functional Design Features, And The Trouble With Traffix, Harold R. Weinberg
Trademark Law, Functional Design Features, And The Trouble With Traffix, Harold R. Weinberg
Law Faculty Scholarly Articles
This article concerns trademark law's functionality doctrine and the Supreme Court's troublesome opinion concerning it in TrafFix Devices, Inc. v. Marketing Displays, Inc. The doctrine provides that if a producer's useful or aesthetic design feature is "functional," then competitors can lawfully copy it even if the feature otherwise would be protected against copying by trademark principles. In order to introduce the functionality doctrine and the trouble with TrafFix, it is helpful to describe the nature of design features, the simultaneous roles they may play as source-identifying trade symbols and as useful or aesthetic product elements, and trademark law's place …
Introduction: From Sheet Music To Mp3 Files—A Brief Perspective On Napster, Harold R. Weinberg
Introduction: From Sheet Music To Mp3 Files—A Brief Perspective On Napster, Harold R. Weinberg
Law Faculty Scholarly Articles
The Napster case is the current cause celebre of the digital age. The story has color. It involves music-sharing technology invented by an eighteen-year-old college dropout whose high school classmates nicknamed him "The Napster" on account of his perpetually kinky hair. The story has drama. Depending on your perspective, it pits rapacious big music companies against poor and hardworking students who just want to enjoy some tunes; or it pits creative and industrious music companies seeking a fair return on their invested effort, time, and money against greedy and irreverent music thieves. And the case has importance. Music maybe intellectual …