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Full-Text Articles in Law
Size Matters (Or Should) In Copyright Law, Justin Hughes
Size Matters (Or Should) In Copyright Law, Justin Hughes
Faculty Articles
American copyright law has a widely recognized prohibition against the copyrighting of titles, short phrases, and single words. Despite this bar, effective advocacy has often pushed courts into recognizing independent copyright protection for smaller and smaller pieces of expression, particularly in recent cases involving valuation and taxonomy systems. Copyright case law is rife with dicta suggesting protection of short phrases and single words.
This instability in copyright law is rooted in the fiction that we deny copyright protection to short phrases and single words because they lack originality. In fact, there are many short phrases that cross copyright's low threshold …
Intellectualizing Property: The Tenuous Connections Between Land And Copyright, Stewart E. Sterk
Intellectualizing Property: The Tenuous Connections Between Land And Copyright, Stewart E. Sterk
Faculty Articles
Increased use of the intellectual property label to describe copyright and related areas of law has spawned analogies to the protections afforded real property. These analogies ignore significant differences between the foundations that undergird real and intellectual property rights. In particular, real property rights operate to avoid breaches of the peace and tragedies of the commons - problems that do not arise with intellectual works - while copyright and other intellectual property rights are designed to provide an incentive to create, an incentive irrelevant when land is at issue. These disparities in justification caution against routine importation of real property …