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Articles 1 - 8 of 8
Full-Text Articles in Law
Imitation Is The Sincerest Form Of … Infringement?: Guitar Tabs, Fair Use, And The Internet, Jocelyn Kempema
Imitation Is The Sincerest Form Of … Infringement?: Guitar Tabs, Fair Use, And The Internet, Jocelyn Kempema
William & Mary Law Review
No abstract provided.
Does The Supreme Court Still Matter?, Timothy B. Dyk
Does The Supreme Court Still Matter?, Timothy B. Dyk
American University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Acquiring Innovation, Xuan-Thao Nguyen, Jeffrey A. Maine
Acquiring Innovation, Xuan-Thao Nguyen, Jeffrey A. Maine
American University Law Review
In recent years, the innovation market has witnessed a new business model involving companies that are mere patent holding shells and not operating entities. They have no customers or products to offer, but they do have an aggressive tactic of using patent portfolios to threaten other operating companies with potential infringement litigation. The strategy is executed with the end goal of extracting handsome settlements. Acquisitions of patents for offensive use have become a major concern to operating companies because such acquisitions pose the threats of patent injunction, interrupting the business and crippling further innovation. While many operating companies today know …
The Ec Council Regulation On Evidences And The “Description” Of Goods Infringing Ip Rights, Benedetta Carla Angela Ubertazzi
The Ec Council Regulation On Evidences And The “Description” Of Goods Infringing Ip Rights, Benedetta Carla Angela Ubertazzi
Benedetta Carla Angela Ubertazzi
No abstract provided.
Asking For Money Back - Chilling Commercialization Or Recouping Public Trust In The Context Of Stem Cell Research?, Matthew Herder
Asking For Money Back - Chilling Commercialization Or Recouping Public Trust In The Context Of Stem Cell Research?, Matthew Herder
Articles, Book Chapters, & Popular Press
As publicly funded institutions have increasingly embraced the goal of commercializing scientific research, concerns about private appropriation have become familiar refrain. One commonly suggested remedy is to create some kind of 'recoupment' provision whereby the State, on behalf of the public, receives a certain percentage of profits realized. The Bayh-Dole Act originally included a recoupment provision but it was deleted by a legislative committee. Countries around the globe attempting to emulate Bayh-Dole have, whether by design or default, reinforced the underlying logic against recoupment, which is essentially as follows: obligations to provide direct financial returns undermine the commercialization process and …
What If Seeds Were Not Patentable?, Elizabeth I. Winston
What If Seeds Were Not Patentable?, Elizabeth I. Winston
Scholarly Articles
In 2001, the United States Supreme Court held that seeds were patentable subject matter - a decision, I assert, of much discussion and little impact. Protection of agricultural intellectual property through private ordering, used both to expand the protection available through public ordering and to circumvent the restrictions public ordering places on owners of intellectual property, has provided the incentives necessary to promote investment and innovation in seeds. It has not been the patentability of seeds that has led to agricultural advances, but rather the profitability of licensing agricultural intellectual property. What if seeds were not patentable? So what if …
Innovation And The Domain Of Competition Policy, Herbert J. Hovenkamp
Innovation And The Domain Of Competition Policy, Herbert J. Hovenkamp
All Faculty Scholarship
Antitrust policy and the IP laws are both concerned with practices that restrain competition unnecessarily by reducing the size of the public domain beyond that which the Constitution contemplates, or as Congress intended for them to be expanded. In fact, antitrust has a dual role as promoter of competition in IP intensive markets. It regulates both restraints on competition and restraints on innovation. The first line protector of the competitive process in innovation is the IP statutes themselves. The Constitutional Mandate to Congress to create intellectual property regimes in order to promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts is …
Trademarking Nanotechnology: Nano-Lies & Federal Trademark Registration, Jason Du Mont
Trademarking Nanotechnology: Nano-Lies & Federal Trademark Registration, Jason Du Mont
Jason John Du Mont
No abstract provided.