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Full-Text Articles in Law
Whose Progress?, Laura A. Heymann
Whose Progress?, Laura A. Heymann
Faculty Publications
Article I, Section 8, Clause 8 of the U.S. Constitution provides that Congress shall have power “to promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries.” These words have been the subject of countless books and scholarly articles. Professor Silbey’s engaging contribution [in Against Progress: Intellectual Property Law and Fundamental Values in the Internet Age] to the conversation focuses on one word—progress—and what it should mean as we think about intellectual property law’s motivations and justifications in the twenty-first century.
But even …
The Harmonization Myth In International Intellectual Property Law, Sarah R. Wasserman Rajec
The Harmonization Myth In International Intellectual Property Law, Sarah R. Wasserman Rajec
Faculty Publications
There is a dominant narrative in international intellectual property ("IP") law of ever-increasing harmonization. This narrative has been deployed in ways descriptive, prescriptive, and instrumental: approximating the historical trend, providing justification, and establishing the path forward. Appeals to harmonization are attractive. They evoke a worldwide partnership and shared sacrifice to meet the goals of innovation and access to technology through certainty, efficiency, and increased competition through lowered trade barriers. Countries with strong IP protections consistently and successfully tout the importance of certainty and lower trade barriers when seeking new and stronger protections from countries with lower levels of protection. Yet …
Who Owns (What We Characterize As) The News?, Laura A. Heymann
Who Owns (What We Characterize As) The News?, Laura A. Heymann
Faculty Publications
Will Slauter’s Who Owns the News? (2019) is subtitled A History of Copyright, but it could just as easily have been subtitled A History of Journalism. Slauter’s thoughtful and detailed story of the battle among newspaper publishers to secure legal and other protection for their work product is inseparable from questions about what it means for something to be “news” in the first place—and, indeed, whether “journalism” is something different from “news.” Developments subsequent to Slauter’s history—the emergence of the journalist as a literary figure, the heightened need to see news publishing as an economic (and profitable) enterprise, and the …
Overlapping Intellectual Property Doctrines: Election Of Rights Versus Selection Of Remedies, Laura A. Heymann
Overlapping Intellectual Property Doctrines: Election Of Rights Versus Selection Of Remedies, Laura A. Heymann
Faculty Publications
Overlaps exist across various doctrines in federal intellectual property law. Software can be protected under both copyright law and patent law; logos can be protected under both copyright law and trademark law. Design patents provide a particular opportunity to consider the issue of overlap, as an industrial design that qualifies for design patent protection might also, in particular circumstances, qualify for copyright protection as well as function as protectable trade dress.
When an overlap issue arises—that is, when an intellectual property rights holder asserts rights under more than one doctrine—the question then becomes how courts should respond. One response, of …
A Tale Of (At Least) Two Authors: Focusing Copyright Law On Process Over Product, Laura A. Heymann
A Tale Of (At Least) Two Authors: Focusing Copyright Law On Process Over Product, Laura A. Heymann
Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
The Trademark/Copyright Divide, Laura A. Heymann
The Trademark/Copyright Divide, Laura A. Heymann
Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Copyrighting Facts, Michael S. Green
Not So Different: Tangible, Intangible, Digital, And Analog Works And Their Comparison For Copyright Purposes, I. Trotter Hardy
Not So Different: Tangible, Intangible, Digital, And Analog Works And Their Comparison For Copyright Purposes, I. Trotter Hardy
Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
The Impact Of Recent Litigation On Interlibrary Loan And Document Delivery, James S. Heller
The Impact Of Recent Litigation On Interlibrary Loan And Document Delivery, James S. Heller
Faculty Publications
Professor Heller discusses how two recent federal copyright law decisions, Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music in the United States Supreme Court and American Geophysical Union v. Texaco in the Second Circuit, may affect the interlibrary loan and document delivery services provided by libraries.
Property (And Copyright) In Cyberspace, I. Trotter Hardy
Property (And Copyright) In Cyberspace, I. Trotter Hardy
Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
The Policy, Law, And Facts Of Computer Screen Displays: An Essay, I. Trotter Hardy
The Policy, Law, And Facts Of Computer Screen Displays: An Essay, I. Trotter Hardy
Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
The Copyright Doctrine Of 'Works Made For Hire', I. Trotter Hardy
The Copyright Doctrine Of 'Works Made For Hire', I. Trotter Hardy
Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Copyright Law's Concept Of Employment -- What Congress Really Intended, I. Trotter Hardy
Copyright Law's Concept Of Employment -- What Congress Really Intended, I. Trotter Hardy
Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Report To The Copyright Office By The American Association Of Law Libraries, James S. Heller
Report To The Copyright Office By The American Association Of Law Libraries, James S. Heller
Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.