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Full-Text Articles in Law
Game On—Copyrighted Tattoos In Video Games As Fair Use, Emilie Smith
Game On—Copyrighted Tattoos In Video Games As Fair Use, Emilie Smith
Marquette Law Review
With its fact-intensive inquiries and limited bright-line rules, copyright law is known for its ambiguity, and courts often differ in their interpretations of various doctrines. The fair use doctrine is no different, and was in fact designed to grant courts discretion in making their determinations, all with the aim of maintaining the true purpose of the copyright law. Recent technologies and popularized forms of art only complicate things, adding rougher terrain to an already confusing landscape.
Joutsing At Windmills: Cervantes And The Quixotic Fight For Authorial Control, H. Parkman Biggs
Joutsing At Windmills: Cervantes And The Quixotic Fight For Authorial Control, H. Parkman Biggs
Marquette Intellectual Property Law Review
Achieving the appropriate balance between the right of first authors to control the later use of their work and freedom for follow-on authors to further develop from that text has long been challenging. Currently, under United States law in particular, fair use stands as a nebulous to buffer between the two creative camps, granting a significantly limited right to the second author to work from the first authors’ text. While that tension excites its own debate, a less considered aspect of this tension involves the degree to which the first author might be creatively and productively affected by the follow-on …