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Articles 31 - 53 of 53

Full-Text Articles in Intellectual Property Law

The First Amendment Under Pressure, Daniel Schorr Jan 1996

The First Amendment Under Pressure, Daniel Schorr

UC Law SF Communications and Entertainment Journal

No abstract provided.


What Are The Limitations On Freedom Of The Press, Daniel Schorr Jan 1996

What Are The Limitations On Freedom Of The Press, Daniel Schorr

UC Law SF Communications and Entertainment Journal

No abstract provided.


The Communications Decency Act And The Indecent Indecency Spectacle, David Kushner Jan 1996

The Communications Decency Act And The Indecent Indecency Spectacle, David Kushner

UC Law SF Communications and Entertainment Journal

This essay situates the Communications Decency Act in contemporary jurisprudence and our postmodern culture. The author analyzes why both the proscription of indecency in cyberspace and the prescription of television ratings are unconstitutional. More importantly, the essay argues that cyberspace must be viewed as a post modern spectacle. The production forces of late capitalism have commodified sex and violence, making them the principal fruits of desire in cyberspace. These cultural urges, in conjunction with the convergence of telecommunications technologies, render the CDA and like forms of censorship fundamentally unenforceable. The essay concludes by suggesting the serious implications for First Amendment …


The Shirts Off Their Backs: Colleges Getting Away With Violating The Right Of Publicity, Vladimir P. Belo Jan 1996

The Shirts Off Their Backs: Colleges Getting Away With Violating The Right Of Publicity, Vladimir P. Belo

UC Law SF Communications and Entertainment Journal

The popularity of college athletics is at an all-time high in the United States. Colleges and universities have capitalized on the enthusiasm through marketing merchandise aimed at taking advantage of the growing popularity. Recently, colleges have begun using the popularity of individual student-athletes by marketing clothing featuring uniform numbers of high-profile players on their tiams. This Note examines this latest trend in college sports merchandising.

This Note suggests that the marketing of this type of merchandise may violate student-athletes' common law and statutory rights of publicity. This Note chronicles the development of right of publicity law, concluding that a college …


Seeing Beyond The Smoke And Mirrors: A Proposal For The Abandonment Of The Commercial Speech Doctrine And An Analysis Of Recent Tobacco Advertising Regulations, Scott Joachim Jan 1996

Seeing Beyond The Smoke And Mirrors: A Proposal For The Abandonment Of The Commercial Speech Doctrine And An Analysis Of Recent Tobacco Advertising Regulations, Scott Joachim

UC Law SF Communications and Entertainment Journal

This Note examines the Supreme Court's struggles both in defining commercial speech and identifying the parameters of the commercial speech doctrine. The author analyzes a series of Supreme Court cases and concludes that the doctrine rests on an ill-defined notion of commercial speech and on illusory assumptions regarding the distinctions between commercial speech and more highly protected discourse such as political speech. The author concludes that the Court should abandon the commercial speech doctrine and provide commercial speech the full protections enjoyed by political speech. The Note next outlines President Clinton's and the FDA's recent tobacco advertising regulations and analyzes …


Hilton Davis And Jury Trials,, William Alsup, Carolyn Wiggin Jan 1996

Hilton Davis And Jury Trials,, William Alsup, Carolyn Wiggin

UC Law SF Communications and Entertainment Journal

Congress' creation of the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in 1982 led to a boom in patent litigation that has continued into the 1990's. As this boom has continued, the role of juries in patent infringement cases has been criticized, with commentators suggesting jury bias in favor of patent holders. In particular, critics of patent infringement jury trials have argued that the doctrine of equivalents favors plaintiffs by allowing juries too much discretion in finding a patent infringement when there has been no literal infringement.

In 1995, the Federal Circuit's decision in Hilton Davis Chemical Co. v. Warner-Jenkinson …


The Copyright Term Extension Act: Is Life Plus Seventy Too Much, Jenny L. Dixon Jan 1996

The Copyright Term Extension Act: Is Life Plus Seventy Too Much, Jenny L. Dixon

UC Law SF Communications and Entertainment Journal

The Copyright Term Extension Act, if enacted, will increase the term of copyright protection to include the life of the author plus seventy years. Proponents of this legislation argue that such an increase is necessary for the United States to remain competitive in international intellectual property matters. This Note examines that proposition in light of the United States copyright tradition, the international copyright agreements currently in effect, and the negative impact the extension could have upon users of the public domain.


Caught In The Web: Entrapment In Cyberspace, Jennifer Gregg Jan 1996

Caught In The Web: Entrapment In Cyberspace, Jennifer Gregg

UC Law SF Communications and Entertainment Journal

Cyberspace presents a new forum for criminal activity, including the distribution of child pornography. Law enforcement has responded with creative undercover techniques to catch on-line pedophiles and other lawbreakers. But who is policing the police? This Note applies existing entrapment law to police deception in this novel setting, discusses the current state of the law, and demonstrates that the judicially created doctrine is inadequate to curb police abuses. It suggests that legislative action is needed to modify entrapment law to accommodate the special aspects of cyberspace, and identifies the threshold issues which such legislation must address.


Vara's First Five Years, Simon J. Frankel Jan 1996

Vara's First Five Years, Simon J. Frankel

UC Law SF Communications and Entertainment Journal

This article addresses the background, provisions, and brief history of the Visual Artists Rights Act of 1990 (VARA), a federal law protecting the "moral rights" of visual artists. These non-economic rights, which give artists some control over their creations even after the works are sold, have a long history in continental Europe, but are a recent import to the United States. After American courts declined to recognize such rights under common law earlier in this century, approximately a dozen states enacted laws protecting the rights of creators of "fine art." These statutes generally protect the artist's right of integrity-to protect …


Return To Hot Wheels: The Fcc, Program-Length Commercials, And The Children's Television Act Of 1990, Allen K. Rostron Jan 1996

Return To Hot Wheels: The Fcc, Program-Length Commercials, And The Children's Television Act Of 1990, Allen K. Rostron

UC Law SF Communications and Entertainment Journal

In the Children's Television Act of 1990, Congress directed the FCC to address the problem of "program-length commercials" aimed at children. Such programs, essentially thirty-minute ads for toys and other products, proliferated during the 1980s as the FCC deregulated children's television. In response to the Children's Television Act, the FCC adopted a policy that purported to address the problem, but actually avoided facing it. In its rule-making proceeding, the FCC disregarded Congress' concerns, misconstrued the issue presented, and mischaracterized the ineffective policy adopted as consistent with FCC rulings of the 1960s and 1970s. The need continues for a more effective …


Access To Premises And Easements: Can The Cable Operator Come In, Philip Kantor Jan 1996

Access To Premises And Easements: Can The Cable Operator Come In, Philip Kantor

UC Law SF Communications and Entertainment Journal

This article reviews the attempts by cable television operators to access easements in order to provide their service to television watchers. Cable operators first attempted to use state common law of apportionment in order to access utility easements. In order to argue that an easement could be apportioned, the operator needed to show that the easement was compatible for cable use and that use would not place an additional burden on the servient estate. Many courts have found that utility companies are authorized to share or apportion their easement rights with a third party, without obtaining the permission of, or …


Introduction Of Daniel Schorr, Betty Medsger Jan 1996

Introduction Of Daniel Schorr, Betty Medsger

UC Law SF Communications and Entertainment Journal

No abstract provided.


Contractual Rules And Terms And The Maintenance Of Bargains: The Case Of The Fledgling Writer, Blake D. Morant Jan 1996

Contractual Rules And Terms And The Maintenance Of Bargains: The Case Of The Fledgling Writer, Blake D. Morant

UC Law SF Communications and Entertainment Journal

A writer enters into an agreement with a publisher who is obligated to disseminate the writer's creative work. This contract often contains clauses such as indemnity provisions which seemingly protect the publisher from liability for marketing the work by shifting the risks of publication precipitously to the writer. Both parties accept this provision for disparate reasons: the writer, particularly a novice in this bargaining area, accedes to these risks either because of ignorance of the clause and its possible consequences, or a perceived lack of choice on her part; the publisher demands indemnification from the writer in the presumed belief …


Diversity And Minority Stereotyping In The Television Media: The Unsettled First Amendment Issue, Patricia M. Worthy Jan 1996

Diversity And Minority Stereotyping In The Television Media: The Unsettled First Amendment Issue, Patricia M. Worthy

UC Law SF Communications and Entertainment Journal

Racial dissention and divisiveness continue to be among the most destructive and debilitating aspects of our society. Social scientists have raised serious questions about the role that television has played both in increasing the level of violence and intensity of racial disharmony in America. Most findings reveal that ethnic minorities are still negatively stereotyped as "criminals," "dangerous characters," or "clowns." The research literature also suggests that media distortions negatively impact the self-esteem of African- American children and may preclude them from achieving self-actualization or impede their ability to realize their full potential. In response to these and other concerns, the …


The Right Of Publicity Versus Free Speech In Advertising: Some Counter-Points To Professor Mccarthy, Stephen R. Barnett Jan 1996

The Right Of Publicity Versus Free Speech In Advertising: Some Counter-Points To Professor Mccarthy, Stephen R. Barnett

UC Law SF Communications and Entertainment Journal

Professor J. Thomas McCarthy, in a recently published lecture, has defended recent expansions of the right of publicity and rejected the idea of a free-speech defense that would in some cases protect the unlicensed use of a celebrity's name, likeness, or "identity" in an advertisement. In this "counter-lecture" Professor Barnett focuses on what he sees as the growing conflict between the right of publicity, as embodied in Ninth Circuit decisions such as the Vanna White and Abdul-Jabbar cases and in the Restatement (Third) of Unfair Competition, and free speech in advertising, as protected by the Supreme Court's doctrine of "commercial …


Markman And Hilton Davis, The Federal Circuit Strikes And Awkward Balance: The Roles Of The Judge And Jury In Patent Infringement Suits, Jason Scully Jan 1996

Markman And Hilton Davis, The Federal Circuit Strikes And Awkward Balance: The Roles Of The Judge And Jury In Patent Infringement Suits, Jason Scully

UC Law SF Communications and Entertainment Journal

The Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit recently rendered two decisions which represent a compromise between increasing the power of the judge and maintaining a role for the jury. This Note. with reference to studies in juror comprehension and improved trial techniques, explores whether the court struck an appropriate balance.


The Case For Color-Blind Distress Sales, Michael E. Lewyn Jan 1996

The Case For Color-Blind Distress Sales, Michael E. Lewyn

UC Law SF Communications and Entertainment Journal

Under the Federal Communications Commission's "distress sale" policy, a broadcaster whose license has been designated for a revocation hearing, or whose renewal application has been designated for hearing, may assign the license to an FCC-approved minority enterprise at a discount price before the hearing. Under recent Supreme Court precedent restricting the use of race-conscious federal measures, the distress sale policy may soon be declared unconstitutional.

If the distress sale policy is declared unconstitutional, the FCC has two significant alternatives. First, the FCC may abolish the distress sale policy altogether. Second, the FCC may create a color-blind distress sale policy which …


Patent Law's Nonobviousness Requirement: The Effect Of Inconsistent Standards Regarding Commercial Success On The Individual Inventor, Reed W. L. Marcy Jan 1996

Patent Law's Nonobviousness Requirement: The Effect Of Inconsistent Standards Regarding Commercial Success On The Individual Inventor, Reed W. L. Marcy

UC Law SF Communications and Entertainment Journal

This Note examines the Federal Circuit's approach to determining nonobviousness, the most difficult of the statutory patent requirements to satisfy, and the effect that inconsistent nonobviousness standards have on the individual inventor.

Since 1982, the Federal Circuit has made the commercial success of an invention the most important factor in determining whether an invention was not obvious and thus patentable. For the most part, the Federal Circuit's approach has helped the individual inventor. However, numerous obstacles arise when too much emphasis is placed on the marketing of the invention rather than on the creative act of inventing. In addition, the …


Blood Money: When Media Expose Others To Risk Of Bodily Harm, Sandra Davidson Jan 1996

Blood Money: When Media Expose Others To Risk Of Bodily Harm, Sandra Davidson

UC Law SF Communications and Entertainment Journal

This Article explores application of negligence law to media that expose others to a foreseeable risk of bodily harm or death. Negligence suits are an increasing risk to the media. Several such cases are winding through the judicial system. Braun v. Soldier of Fortune and Hyde v. City of Columbia stand as precedents for media liability.

Besides surveying negligence cases brought against media, this Article explores the related areas of strict liability and incitement, which have not yet resulted in media liability. It also discusses the availability of bomb recipes on the Internet and asks whether increased dangers to physical …


Ball Four: The Irs Walks The Kansas City Royals, Myreon Sony Hodur Jan 1996

Ball Four: The Irs Walks The Kansas City Royals, Myreon Sony Hodur

UC Law SF Communications and Entertainment Journal

The IRS will grant deductions for money spent on charitable purposes. One such purpose is lessening the burdens of governments. In 1993 the IRS granted a deduction worth almost $100 million to the estate of Ewing M. Kauffman for his donation of the Kansas City Royals baseball team to a local community foundation under a "Succession Plan." That arrangement would give local buyers preference in bidding to purchase the team from the foundation. The IRS found that the Succession Plan lessened the burden of government insofar as it relieved Kansas City area governments of their burden in keeping the franchise …


Photographer's Rights: Case For Sufficient Originality Test In Copyright Law, 30 J. Marshall L. Rev. 149 (1996), Patricia L. Baade Jan 1996

Photographer's Rights: Case For Sufficient Originality Test In Copyright Law, 30 J. Marshall L. Rev. 149 (1996), Patricia L. Baade

UIC Law Review

No abstract provided.


Rating The Net, Jonathan Weinberg Jan 1996

Rating The Net, Jonathan Weinberg

UC Law SF Communications and Entertainment Journal

Rating systems provide an impressive solution to the problem of sexually explicit speech on the Internet. Members of the Internet community are rightly enthusiastic about the benefits filtering software promises. Those benefits, though, come at a cost. Sites may be stripped out of the filtered universe because of deliberate political choices on the part of ratings service administrators, and because of inaccuracies inherent in the ratings process. If a ratings service is to categorize a large number of sites, it cannot simultaneously achieve consistency and nuance; the techniques it must rely on to achieve consistency make it more difficult to …


Ambushing The Olympic Games, Robert N. Davis Jan 1996

Ambushing The Olympic Games, Robert N. Davis

Jeffrey S. Moorad Sports Law Journal

No abstract provided.