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Articles 1 - 2 of 2
Full-Text Articles in Law
Copyright Implications Attendant Upon The Use Of Home Videotape Recorders, Sandra Gross Schneider
Copyright Implications Attendant Upon The Use Of Home Videotape Recorders, Sandra Gross Schneider
University of Richmond Law Review
Copyright is the Cinderella of the law. Her rich older sisters, Franchises and Patents, long crowded her into the chimney-comer. Suddenly, the fairy godmother, Invention, endowed her with mechanical and electrical devices as magical as the pumpkin coach and the mice footmen. Now she whirls through the mad mazes of a glamorous ball.
The Patentability Of Microorganisms: Statutory Subject Matter And Other Living Things, Eric W. Guttag
The Patentability Of Microorganisms: Statutory Subject Matter And Other Living Things, Eric W. Guttag
University of Richmond Law Review
For the past 200 years, the federal patent laws have been used to encourage advances in scientific and technological areas. Pursuant to its constitutional authority "To Promote the Progress of Science and the Useful Arts," Congress has provided statutory protection for new and useful inventions. Consistent with constitutional and congressional mandates, patent rights have been granted for inventions which were diverse in both subject matter and complexity. For instance, the scope of patentable subject matter now extends to such highly sophisticated and revolutionary technologies as lasers, computers, and photocopiers.