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Full-Text Articles in Law
The Territorial Discrepancy Between Intellectual Property Rights Infringement Claims And Remedies, Marketa Trimble
The Territorial Discrepancy Between Intellectual Property Rights Infringement Claims And Remedies, Marketa Trimble
Media & Informal Publications
Professor Trimble delivered a presentation for the International Dimension of Intellectual Property Disputes conference.
The topic relates to Professor Trimble's article The Territorial Discrepancy Between Intellectual Property Rights Infringement Claims and Remedies.
Patents, Validity Challenges, And Private Ordering: A New Dispensation For The Easy-Challenge Era, Rob Merges
Patents, Validity Challenges, And Private Ordering: A New Dispensation For The Easy-Challenge Era, Rob Merges
Nevada Law Journal
No abstract provided.
The Case For A Cda Section 230 Notice-And-Takedown Duty, Michael L. Rustad, Thomas H. Koenig
The Case For A Cda Section 230 Notice-And-Takedown Duty, Michael L. Rustad, Thomas H. Koenig
Nevada Law Journal
No abstract provided.
What Is The Territorial Scope Of The Lanham Act?, Marketa Trimble
What Is The Territorial Scope Of The Lanham Act?, Marketa Trimble
Scholarly Works
Since Steele v. Bulova Watch Co., 344 U.S. 280 (1952), the Supreme Court has not addressed the territorial scope of the Lanham Act. Abitron Austria GmbH v. Hetronic International, Inc. is an opportunity for the Court to clarify how its RJR Nabisco extraterritoriality framework applies to the Lanham Act, whether and how current circuit court tests fit into the framework, and whether any of the tests should apply in the second step of the framework.
Of Marks And Markets: An Empirical Study Of Trademark Litigation, Jessica M. Kiser, Sean P. Wright, Benjamin P. Edwards
Of Marks And Markets: An Empirical Study Of Trademark Litigation, Jessica M. Kiser, Sean P. Wright, Benjamin P. Edwards
Scholarly Works
Trademarks are increasingly valuable assets, and some companies aggressively enforce and protect these assets. Such aggressive tactics can harm small businesses and chill creativity and speech, but trademark owners are routinely told that the law requires them to stop all similar third-party trademark usage or risk abandonment of their rights. While prior scholarship has discussed how the risk of trademark abandonment is quite low, incentives built into trademark law still push companies to court. This Article presents the results of an event study utilizing an established database of trademark infringement cases to provide insight to decisionmakers on whether the stock …