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A Submission To The New Zealand Government On The Plain Packaging Of Tobacco Products, Matthew Rimmer Oct 2012

A Submission To The New Zealand Government On The Plain Packaging Of Tobacco Products, Matthew Rimmer

Matthew Rimmer

EXECUTIVE SUMMARYThis submission draws upon a number of pieces of research and policy papers on the plain packaging of tobacco products including:1. Becky Freeman, Simon Chapman, and Matthew Rimmer, 'The Case for the Plain Packaging of Tobacco Products' (2008) 103 (4) Addiction 580-590.2. Matthew Rimmer, 'A Submission to the Senate Legal and Constitutional Committee on the Trade Marks Amendment (Tobacco Plain Packaging) Bill (Cth)', September 2011, https://senate.aph.gov.au/submissions/comittees/viewdocument.aspx?id=dabfcd75-9807-493f-bc99-4a7506bf493b3A. Matthew Rimmer, 'Tobacco's Mad Men Threaten Public Health', The Conversation, 23 September 2011, http://theconversation.edu.au/tobaccos-mad-men-threaten-public-health-34503B. Matthew Rimmer, 'Big Tobacco's Box Fetish: Plain Packaging at the High Court', The Conversation, 20 April 2012, https://theconversation.edu.au/big-tobaccos-box-fetish-plain-packaging-at-the-high-court-65183C. Matthew …


Property Rights Legislation In Agricultural Biotechnology: United States And Argentina, Andres A. Gallo, Jay P. Kesan May 2012

Property Rights Legislation In Agricultural Biotechnology: United States And Argentina, Andres A. Gallo, Jay P. Kesan

Andres A. Gallo

The market for biotechnology products has expanded rapidly in the 1990s and is expected to give impulse to radical changes in agriculture around the world. Investment in research and development (R&D) of new seed varieties has become a key factor for agriculture development. In the last decades, the investment in R&D has switched from state sponsored research to private funding. At the same time, the market has moved towards a strong concentration in a few multinational firms, which now control most of the agricultural biotechnology R&D around the world. One of the most important issues regarding ag-biotechnology is the legal …


Patent Reform And Best Mode: A Signal To The Patent Office Or A Step Toward Elimination?, Ryan G. Vacca Feb 2012

Patent Reform And Best Mode: A Signal To The Patent Office Or A Step Toward Elimination?, Ryan G. Vacca

Ryan G. Vacca

On September 16, 2011, President Obama signed the America Invents Act (AIA), the first major overhaul of the patent system in nearly sixty years. This article analyzes the recent change to patent law's best mode requirement under the AIA. Before the AIA, patent applicants were required, at the time of submitting their application, to disclose the best mode of carrying out the invention as contemplated by the inventor. A failure to disclose the best mode was a basis for a finding of invalidity of the relevant claims or could render the entire patent unenforceable under the doctrine of inequitable conduct. …


Patent Reversion: An Employee-Inventor's Second Bite At The Apple, Richard Kamprath Jan 2012

Patent Reversion: An Employee-Inventor's Second Bite At The Apple, Richard Kamprath

Richard Kamprath

In an attempt to more fully compensate employee-inventors without harming the return on investment of employers, a patent reversion is proposed in which the rights to the patent revert to joint ownership between the original inventor and the current owner. In Section I, the background of the relationship between employer and employee-inventor will be discussed in terms of patent rights. This section will outline the problems inherent in the pre-assignment status quo of these rights from employees to employers. Section II will begin with Part A, which is a review of previously proposed solutions to the under-compensation of employee-inventors. The …


Threats Escalate: Corporate Information Technology Governance Under Fire, Lawrence J. Trautman Jan 2012

Threats Escalate: Corporate Information Technology Governance Under Fire, Lawrence J. Trautman

Lawrence J. Trautman Sr.

In a previous publication The Board’s Responsibility for Information Technology Governance, (with Kara Altenbaumer-Price) we examined: The IT Governance Institute’s Executive Summary and Framework for Control Objectives for Information and Related Technology 4.1 (COBIT®); reviewed the Weill and Ross Corporate and Key Asset Governance Framework; and observed “that in a survey of audit executives and board members, 58 percent believed that their corporate employees had little to no understanding of how to assess risk.” We further described the new SEC rules on risk management; Congressional action on cyber security; legal basis for director’s duties and responsibilities relative to IT governance; …


Toward A Limited Right Of Publicity: An Argument For The Convergence Of The Right Of Publicity, Unfair Competition & Trademark Law, Andrew Beckerman Rodau Jan 2012

Toward A Limited Right Of Publicity: An Argument For The Convergence Of The Right Of Publicity, Unfair Competition & Trademark Law, Andrew Beckerman Rodau

Andrew Beckerman Rodau

The right of publicity, the newest type of intellectual property, allows a person to control commercial use of his or her identity. The scope of the right has expanded significantly because many courts and commentators have misinterpreted it by viewing it as a pure property right justified by a labor or unjust enrichment theory. It should be evaluated in light of the utilitarian justification for intellectual property law. Rewarding people by allowing them to monetize their public persona is not the goal. The goal is to incentivize individuals to engage in creative endeavors for the benefit of the public. An …


"Resq"Ing Patent Infringement Damages After Resqnet: The Dangers Of Litigation Licenses As Evidence Of A Reasonable Royalty, Layne S. Keele Jan 2012

"Resq"Ing Patent Infringement Damages After Resqnet: The Dangers Of Litigation Licenses As Evidence Of A Reasonable Royalty, Layne S. Keele

Layne S. Keele

Almost everyone agrees that, when a patent owner seeks a reasonable royalty as patent infringement damages, prior patent licenses are useful in determining the reasonable royalty. But the use of licenses arising out of the settlement of litigation— “litigation licenses”—has met with mixed acceptance, with some courts admitting litigation licenses into evidence and other courts excluding the licenses under Rules 402, 403, or 408. Recently, some district courts have concluded that the Federal Circuit’s 2010 decision, ResQNet.com, Inc. v. Lansa, Inc. resolves this question in favor of the use of these litigation licenses. This article shows, first, that this conclusion …


Minecraft As Web 2.0: Amateur Creativity In Digital Games, Greg Lastowka Jan 2012

Minecraft As Web 2.0: Amateur Creativity In Digital Games, Greg Lastowka

Greg Lastowka

This book chapter considers how the digital game Minecraft has both enabled and benefited from various Web 2.0 practices. I begin with an explanation of the concept of Web 2.0 and then consider how that concept applies to the space of digital games.


Walled Gardens & The Stationers’ Company 2.0, Greg Lastowka Jan 2012

Walled Gardens & The Stationers’ Company 2.0, Greg Lastowka

Greg Lastowka

Copyright law originated as a law designed to regulate the commerce of printing, not as a law designed to protect the interests of authors. The Statute of Anne changed this by vesting copyright with the author and thereby creating the possibility of pre-publication negotiations. Today that bargain is being broken. In our era of cloud-computing and Web 2.0, non-author intermediaries provide platforms that constitute the tools of authorship, the tools of publicity, and the tools of commercial distribution. Within this new ecosystem, we are seeing a return to the model of the Stationers’ Company, where legal power over authorial production …


A Rollicking Band Of Pirates: Licensing The Exclusive Right Of Public Performance In The Theatre Industry, Shane D. Valenzi Jan 2012

A Rollicking Band Of Pirates: Licensing The Exclusive Right Of Public Performance In The Theatre Industry, Shane D. Valenzi

Shane D Valenzi

With ticket prices on Broadway at an all-time high, amateur and regional theatres are the only venues for theatrical productions to which most Americans are exposed. Licensing these performance rights—known as “stock and amateur rights”—is the primary source of income for many playwrights, even for those whose plays flopped at the highest level. However, the licensing houses responsible for facilitating these transactions frequently retain and exercise the ability to issue exclusive performance licenses to certain large regional theatres. This practice limits public access to particular works and restricts playwrights’ potential earnings in those works. Though this behavior does not amount …


Patents, Trademarks And Copyrights In Uruguay, Juan Lapenne Jan 2012

Patents, Trademarks And Copyrights In Uruguay, Juan Lapenne

Juan Lapenne

No abstract provided.


Patentes De Reválida En El Uruguay, Juan Lapenne Jan 2012

Patentes De Reválida En El Uruguay, Juan Lapenne

Juan Lapenne

No abstract provided.


Protección Jurídica Del Software, Juan Lapenne Jan 2012

Protección Jurídica Del Software, Juan Lapenne

Juan Lapenne

No abstract provided.


Valuing Publication And Attribution In Intellectual Property, Christopher Sprigman, Christopher Buccafusco, Zachary Burns Jan 2012

Valuing Publication And Attribution In Intellectual Property, Christopher Sprigman, Christopher Buccafusco, Zachary Burns

Christopher Sprigman

This is the third in a series of articles focusing on the experimental economics of intellectual property. In earlier work, we have experimentally studied the ways in which creators assign monetary value to the things that they create. That research has suggested that creators are subject to a systematic bias that leads them to overvalue their work. This bias, which we have called the 'creativity effect,' potentially results in inefficient markets in IP, because creators may be unwilling to license their works for rational amounts. Our prior research, however, like American IP law itself, focused exclusively on the monetary value …


Intellectual Property And Private International Law – Swedish Perspectives, Ulf Maunsbach Dec 2011

Intellectual Property And Private International Law – Swedish Perspectives, Ulf Maunsbach

Ulf Maunsbach

No abstract provided.


Interests In The Balance: Fda Regulations Under The Biologics Price Competition And Innovation Act, Parker Tresemer Dec 2011

Interests In The Balance: Fda Regulations Under The Biologics Price Competition And Innovation Act, Parker Tresemer

Parker Tresemer

Recent biotechnology advances are yielding potentially life-saving therapies, but without FDA regulations designed to minimize product costs, patients will continue to be unable to afford these expensive biologic products. Many believe that these prohibitive costs stem from weak competition from generic biologic products, also known as follow-on biologics. To correct this deficiency, and to address the often conflicting regulatory and policy concerns associated with biologic products, Congress enacted the Biologics Price Competition and Innovation Act. The Act created an abbreviated approval pathway for biologic products and, if effective, could increase competition while driving down product costs. But legislation alone is …


Betty Boop Almost Lost Her “Bling-Bling”: Fleischer Studios V. A.V.E.L.A. I And The Re-Emergence Of Aesthetic Functionality In Trademark Merchandising Cases, Tracy Reilly Dec 2011

Betty Boop Almost Lost Her “Bling-Bling”: Fleischer Studios V. A.V.E.L.A. I And The Re-Emergence Of Aesthetic Functionality In Trademark Merchandising Cases, Tracy Reilly

Tracy Reilly

This article analyzes the original Ninth Circuit opinion in Fleisher Studios, Inc. v. A.V.E.L.A., Inc. in which the court provided a sua sponte discussion of the dispraised doctrine of aesthetic functionality in the context of the contemporary merchandising practices of trademark owners, which analysis was subsequently withdrawn in its entirety by the court six months later when it substituted its former opinion with a new holding on grounds other than aesthetic functionality. The article will begin with an explanation and history of the Lanham Trademark Act, focusing on its twin goals of protection against consumer confusion over the source of …


Asian Approaches To International Law: Focusing On Plant Protection Issues, Pawarit Lertdhamtewe Dec 2011

Asian Approaches To International Law: Focusing On Plant Protection Issues, Pawarit Lertdhamtewe

Pawarit Lertdhamtewe

Plant variety protection has long been a sensitive issue and plant varieties have historically been excluded from being protected in many jurisdictions in Asia. While some countries in the region introduced some kinds of plant protection laws during the twentieth century, many generally felt that it was not appropriate to grant IP protection in this field. Plant variety protection gained importance through membership to the WTO, which was something the International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of plants had been unable to achieve. For this reason, more and more countries in Asia, being developing countries, have implemented some …


Copyright In A Borderless Online Environment – Comments From A Swedish Horizon, Ulf Maunsbach Dec 2011

Copyright In A Borderless Online Environment – Comments From A Swedish Horizon, Ulf Maunsbach

Ulf Maunsbach

No abstract provided.