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100 Years Of International Ip - Reflections On Past, Present And Future, Frederick M. Abbott Jan 2023

100 Years Of International Ip - Reflections On Past, Present And Future, Frederick M. Abbott

Scholarly Publications

We have been asked to reflect on the past 100 years of international intellectual property law and to try to project forward about what changes might be necessary or desirable in the future. Only a science fiction writer would purport to have some idea about what things might look like a hundred years in the future, including from the standpoint of international intellectual property, so my remarks on that will be somewhat more proximate to the present.


Child-Proofing Global Public Health In Anticipation Of Emergency, Frederick M. Abbott Jan 2021

Child-Proofing Global Public Health In Anticipation Of Emergency, Frederick M. Abbott

Scholarly Publications

No abstract provided.


Facilitating Access To Cross-Border Supplies Of Patented Pharmaceuticals: The Case Of The Covid-19 Pandemic, Frederick M. Abbott Sep 2020

Facilitating Access To Cross-Border Supplies Of Patented Pharmaceuticals: The Case Of The Covid-19 Pandemic, Frederick M. Abbott

Scholarly Publications

The COVID-19 pandemic has brought into stark relief the gaps in global preparedness to address widespread outbreaks of deadly viral infections. This article proposes legal mechanisms for addressing critical issues facing the international community in terms of providing equitable access to vaccines, treatments, diagnostics, and medical equipment. On the supply side, the authors propose the establishment of mandatory patent pools ('Licensing Facilities') on a global or regional, or even national basis, depending upon the degree of cooperation that maybe achieved. The authors also discuss the importance of creating shared production facilities. On the demand side, the authors propose the establishment …


Placebo Marks, Jake Linford Jan 2019

Placebo Marks, Jake Linford

Scholarly Publications

Scholars often complain that sellers use trademarks to manipulate consumer perception. This manipulation ostensibly harms consumers by limiting their ability to make informed choices. For example, holding other things constant, consumers spend more money on goods with a high-performance reputation. Critics characterize that result as wasteful, if not anticompetitive. But recent marketing research shows that trademarks with a high-performance reputation may sometimes influence perception to the benefit of the consumer.

A trademark with a high-performance reputation can deliver a performance-enhancing placebo effect. Research subjects perform better at physical and mental tasks when they prepare or play with a product bearing …


Let International Competition Negotiations Sleep A While Longer: Focus On Tools And Capacity, Frederick M. Abbott Jan 2018

Let International Competition Negotiations Sleep A While Longer: Focus On Tools And Capacity, Frederick M. Abbott

Scholarly Publications

No abstract provided.


Are Trademarks Ever Fanciful?, Jake Linford Mar 2017

Are Trademarks Ever Fanciful?, Jake Linford

Scholarly Publications

A fanciful trademark-a made-up word like Swiffer for mops or Xerox for photocopiers-is presumed to neither describe nor suggest any qualities of the product associated with the mark. This presumption is consistent with the theory of linguistic arbitrariness: there exists no connection between a given word (tree) and the thing signified by the word (a large woody plant). Because a fanciful mark is assumed to be an empty vessel, meaningless until used as a trademark, it qualifies for protection from first use and receives broader protection against infringement than other categories of trademarks.

Research into sound symbolism challenges the theory …


Datamining The Meaning(S) Of Progress, Jake Linford Jan 2017

Datamining The Meaning(S) Of Progress, Jake Linford

Scholarly Publications

No abstract provided.


Valuing Residual Goodwill After Tradmark Forfeiture, Jake Linford Jan 2017

Valuing Residual Goodwill After Tradmark Forfeiture, Jake Linford

Scholarly Publications

Trademarks contribute to an efficient market by helping consumers find products they like from sources they trust. This information-transmission function of trademarks can be upset if the law fails to reflect both how trademark owners communicate through marks and how consumers understand and use them. But many of trademark law’s forfeiture mechanisms (the ways a trademark can lose protection) ignore or discount consumer perception. This failure threatens not only to increase consumer search costs and consumer confusion, but also to distort markets.

For example, trademark protection may be forfeited when the mark owner interrupts or abandons use, even though consumers …


Improving Technology Neutrality Through Compulsory Licensing, Jake Linford Jan 2016

Improving Technology Neutrality Through Compulsory Licensing, Jake Linford

Scholarly Publications

No abstract provided.


A Linguistic Justification For Protecting "Generic" Trademarks, Jake Linford Jan 2015

A Linguistic Justification For Protecting "Generic" Trademarks, Jake Linford

Scholarly Publications

A trademark is created when a new meaning is added to an existing word or when a new word is invented in order to identify the source of a product. This Article contends that trademark law fails in critical ways to reflect our knowledge of how words gain or lose meaning over time and how new meanings become part of the public lexicon, a phenomenon commonly referred to as semantic shift. Although trademark law traditionally turns on protecting consumers from confusing ambiguity, some of its doctrines ignore consumer perception in whole or in part. In particular, the doctrine of trademark …


Private Ordering Under Threat Of Regulation, Jake Linford Jan 2015

Private Ordering Under Threat Of Regulation, Jake Linford

Scholarly Publications

No abstract provided.


The Institutional Progress Clause, Jake Linford Apr 2014

The Institutional Progress Clause, Jake Linford

Scholarly Publications

There is a curious anomaly at the intersection of copyright and free speech. In cases like Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, the United States Supreme Court has exhibited a profound distaste for tailoring free speech rights and restrictions based on the identity of the speaker. The Copyright Act, however, is full of such tailoring, extending special rights to some copyright owners and special defenses to some users. A Supreme Court serious about maintaining speaker neutrality would be appalled.

A set of compromises at the heart of the Copyright Act reflects interest-group lobbying rather than a careful consideration of …


Reverse Payments, Perverse Incentives, Murat C. Mungan Oct 2013

Reverse Payments, Perverse Incentives, Murat C. Mungan

Scholarly Publications

No abstract provided.


Trademark Owner As Adverse Possessor: Productive Use And Property Acquisition, Jake Linford Apr 2013

Trademark Owner As Adverse Possessor: Productive Use And Property Acquisition, Jake Linford

Scholarly Publications

There is an ongoing debate over whether or not a trademark is “property,” and what the appropriate boundaries of such a property right might be. Some scholars assert that rules and justifications developed to handle rights in real property are generally a poor fit for intellectual property regimes and for trademark protection in particular. Others respond that a unified theory of property should be able to account for both real and intellectual property. Neither approach fully recognizes that property regimes are multifaceted. A close look at the critical features of particular regimes can pay unexpected dividends.

This Article reveals how …


Economics Of The Independent Invention Defense Under Incomplete Information, Murat C. Mungan Jan 2012

Economics Of The Independent Invention Defense Under Incomplete Information, Murat C. Mungan

Scholarly Publications

Patents lead to ex post deadweight loss arising from a noncompetitive market structure for the invention. Many have argued that introducing independent invention as a defense (IID) to patent infringement can increase social welfare by decreasing such deadweight loss at the price of a modest decrease in the number of inventions. This paper considers the effects of IID in a setting where R&D firms have incomplete information about their rivals. Four main results follow under incomplete information: (i) fewer things are invented under an IID regime; (ii) IID’s effects on welfare are ambiguous; (iii) IID is more likely to increase …


Copyrights -- Since Fictional Characters Fall Within The Scope Of Congressional Power Over Copyrights, Federal Policy Prohibits States From Protecting Published Characters That The Copyright Act Has Left In The Public Domain, Donald J. Weidner Jan 1968

Copyrights -- Since Fictional Characters Fall Within The Scope Of Congressional Power Over Copyrights, Federal Policy Prohibits States From Protecting Published Characters That The Copyright Act Has Left In The Public Domain, Donald J. Weidner

Scholarly Publications

No abstract provided.