Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Institution
- Keyword
-
- Arts and Entertainment (2)
- Consumer Protection Law (2)
- Intellectual Property Law (2)
- Law and Technology (2)
- Computer Law (1)
-
- Contracts (1)
- Empirical (1)
- Employment Practice (1)
- First Amendment (1)
- Gaming (1)
- Immoral (1)
- Intellectual property (1)
- Labor Law (1)
- Lanham act (1)
- Law and Society (1)
- Morality (1)
- Property-Personal and Real (1)
- Scandalous (1)
- Science and Technology (1)
- Sexuality and the Law (1)
- Sports (1)
- Trademarks (1)
- Workers' Compensation Law (1)
- Publication
- File Type
Articles 1 - 3 of 3
Full-Text Articles in Intellectual Property Law
Reviewing The (Shrinking) Principle Of Trademark Exhaustion In The European Union (Ten Years Later), Irene Calboli
Reviewing The (Shrinking) Principle Of Trademark Exhaustion In The European Union (Ten Years Later), Irene Calboli
Irene Calboli
No abstract provided.
Invisible Labor, Invisible Play: Online Gold Farming And The Boundary Between Jobs And Games, Julian Dibbell
Invisible Labor, Invisible Play: Online Gold Farming And The Boundary Between Jobs And Games, Julian Dibbell
Julian Dibbell
When does work become play, and play work? Courts have considered the question in a variety of economic contexts, from student athletes seeking recognition as employees to professional blackjack players seeking to be treated by casinos just like casual players. Here I apply the question to a relatively novel context: that of online gold farming, a gray-market industry in which wage-earning workers, largely based in China, are paid to play online fantasy games (MMOs) that reward them with virtual items their employers sell for profit to the same games’ casual players. Gold farming is clearly a job (and under the …
Nsfw: An Empirical Study Of Scandalous Trademarks, Megan M. Carpenter
Nsfw: An Empirical Study Of Scandalous Trademarks, Megan M. Carpenter
Megan M Carpenter
This project is an empirical analysis of trademarks that have received rejections based on the judgment that they are “scandalous." It is the first of its kind. The Lanham Act bars registration for trademarks that are “scandalous” and “immoral.” While much has been written on the morality provisions in the Lanham Act generally, this piece is the first scholarly project that engages an empirical analysis of 2(a) rejections based on scandalousness; it contains a look behind the scenes at how the morality provisions are applied throughout the trademark registration process. We study which marks are being rejected, what evidence is …