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Articles 1 - 30 of 42
Full-Text Articles in Intellectual Property Law
Stifling Dissent Or Enforcing Rules? The State Of Speech Rights In Online Forums, Noah Olson
Stifling Dissent Or Enforcing Rules? The State Of Speech Rights In Online Forums, Noah Olson
The University of Cincinnati Intellectual Property and Computer Law Journal
No abstract provided.
“Storytime: We’Re Being Sued” – Copyright Infringement And Fair Use In The Digital Era, Mikayla Spencer
“Storytime: We’Re Being Sued” – Copyright Infringement And Fair Use In The Digital Era, Mikayla Spencer
The University of Cincinnati Intellectual Property and Computer Law Journal
No abstract provided.
The Importance Of Being Earnestly Innovative: The Increasing Role Of Intellectual Property Law In The Global Economy, Inma Sumaita
The Importance Of Being Earnestly Innovative: The Increasing Role Of Intellectual Property Law In The Global Economy, Inma Sumaita
The University of Cincinnati Intellectual Property and Computer Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Intellectual Property & National Security, James Morrison
Intellectual Property & National Security, James Morrison
The University of Cincinnati Intellectual Property and Computer Law Journal
No abstract provided.
The Patentability Of Antibodies For Use In Medications After Amgen V. Sanofi, Kaitlyn Taylor
The Patentability Of Antibodies For Use In Medications After Amgen V. Sanofi, Kaitlyn Taylor
The University of Cincinnati Intellectual Property and Computer Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Copyright Claims And Constitutional Games: The Constitutionality Of The Copyright Claims Board Following The Supreme Court Ruling In Arthrex, Laura Callihan
Copyright Claims And Constitutional Games: The Constitutionality Of The Copyright Claims Board Following The Supreme Court Ruling In Arthrex, Laura Callihan
The University of Cincinnati Intellectual Property and Computer Law Journal
No abstract provided.
From The Golden Gate To London: Bridging The Gap Between Data Privacy And The Right Of Publicity, Kristin Kuraishi
From The Golden Gate To London: Bridging The Gap Between Data Privacy And The Right Of Publicity, Kristin Kuraishi
Brooklyn Journal of International Law
Currently, there is no global standard or recognition for the right of publicity. Even within the United States, the recognition, scope, and protections vary by state. As the world becomes increasingly reliant on social media for news, information, communication, and recommendations, micro-influencers and non-celebrities require a way to control their developed and curated name, image, and likeness from unauthorized commercial uses by others. Advertising is occurring more frequently online, and brands recognize the power that micro-influencers have on commerce. Some countries, like the United Kingdom, do not recognize the right of publicity, potentially leaving many individuals without recourse for the …
Cracking The Code: How To Prevent Copyright Termination From Upending The Proprietary And Open Source Software Markets, Grant Emrich
Cracking The Code: How To Prevent Copyright Termination From Upending The Proprietary And Open Source Software Markets, Grant Emrich
Fordham Law Review
Computer software is protected by copyright law through its underlying code, which courts have interpreted as constituting a “literary work” pursuant to the Copyright Act. Prior to including software as copyrightable subject matter, Congress established a termination right which grants original authors the ability to reclaim their copyright thirty-five years after they have transferred it. Termination was intended to benefit up-and-coming authors who faced an inherent disadvantage in the market when selling the rights to their works. In the near future, many software works will reach the thirty-five-year threshold, thus presenting courts with a novel application of termination to computer …
Copyrighting Tiktok Dances: Choreography In The Internet Age, Ali Johnson
Copyrighting Tiktok Dances: Choreography In The Internet Age, Ali Johnson
Washington Law Review
TikTok is a video-sharing social media application that launched in 2018 and has grown wildly since its inception. Many users are drawn to the platform by “dance challenges”—short dance routines of varying complexity set to popular songs that are recreated by other users, eventually going “viral” (i.e., recreated on a massive scale by other users) on the app. Going viral can provide young dancers and choreographers an opportunity to break into the highly competitive entertainment industry. However, there is a problem: due to TikTok’s interface and community practices, the original creators of a dance (who, significantly, are often young women …
Barnet As Tr. Of 2012 Saretta Barnet Revocable Tr. V. Ministry Of Culture & Sports Of The Hellenic Republic, 961 F.3d 193 (2d Cir. 2020), Meghan Jackson
Barnet As Tr. Of 2012 Saretta Barnet Revocable Tr. V. Ministry Of Culture & Sports Of The Hellenic Republic, 961 F.3d 193 (2d Cir. 2020), Meghan Jackson
DePaul Journal of Art, Technology & Intellectual Property Law
No abstract provided.
Fighting To Protect Individual Privacy In A Rapidly Advancing Technological World, Farzana Ahmed
Fighting To Protect Individual Privacy In A Rapidly Advancing Technological World, Farzana Ahmed
DePaul Journal of Art, Technology & Intellectual Property Law
No abstract provided.
The Nflpo: The Nfl's Private Patent Office, Paul Fina
The Nflpo: The Nfl's Private Patent Office, Paul Fina
DePaul Journal of Art, Technology & Intellectual Property Law
No abstract provided.
Ex Ante Intellectual Property Considerations For Small Businesses, Jason A. Sanders
Ex Ante Intellectual Property Considerations For Small Businesses, Jason A. Sanders
DePaul Journal of Art, Technology & Intellectual Property Law
No abstract provided.
Revitalizing Language Through Education: Ireland's Use Of International Law To Drive Linguistic Preservation, Emma A. O'Connell
Revitalizing Language Through Education: Ireland's Use Of International Law To Drive Linguistic Preservation, Emma A. O'Connell
DePaul Journal of Art, Technology & Intellectual Property Law
No abstract provided.
The Data Privacy Landscape During Covid-19: An Exploration Of Some Of The Major Data Privacy Regulations And Trends, Gitanjali Deb
The Data Privacy Landscape During Covid-19: An Exploration Of Some Of The Major Data Privacy Regulations And Trends, Gitanjali Deb
DePaul Journal of Art, Technology & Intellectual Property Law
No abstract provided.
Open World Regulation: The Urgent Need For Federal Legislation On Video Game Loot Boxes, Alex Reyes
Open World Regulation: The Urgent Need For Federal Legislation On Video Game Loot Boxes, Alex Reyes
Washington Journal of Law, Technology & Arts
Loot boxes are items in video games that contain randomized prizes that players can purchase with real-world money. In recent years, loot boxes have come under scrutiny because the relationship between behavior and the underlying mechanics of loot boxes are similar to that of addictive behaviors associated with real-world gambling. Many papers suggest solutions focused on industry changes without direct regulation. However, these papers neglect the enormous profit incentive to maintain a business practice which can have detrimental behavioral effects on children. The United States federal government must take example from a growing number of European countries and ban the …
Digital Contract Tracing In The Workplace, Alexandra Kiosse
Digital Contract Tracing In The Workplace, Alexandra Kiosse
Washington Journal of Law, Technology & Arts
The COVID-19 pandemic has affected the way businesses run and operate in the United States. With the dire need to keep employees safe, digital contact tracing has become the most efficient mechanism for controlling the spread of the virus within places of employment. However, information privacy laws come into tension with the use of employee health data by employers and third parties. This Article proposes a careful balance between contact tracing and maintaining employees’ privacy as they share health and proximity data with digital contact tracing applications in the workplace.
Table Of Contents, Ashley Stoll
Table Of Contents, Ashley Stoll
Washington Journal of Law, Technology & Arts
No abstract provided.
The Use Of Technical Experts In Software Copyright Cases: Rectifying The Ninth Circuit’S “Nutty” Rule, Shyamkrishna Balganesh, Peter S. Menell
The Use Of Technical Experts In Software Copyright Cases: Rectifying The Ninth Circuit’S “Nutty” Rule, Shyamkrishna Balganesh, Peter S. Menell
Faculty Scholarship
Courts have long been skeptical about the use of expert witnesses in copyright cases. More than four decades ago, and before Congress extended copyright law to protect computer software, the Ninth Circuit in Krofft Television Productions, Inc. v. McDonald’s Corp. ruled that expert testimony was inadmissible to determine whether Mayor McCheese and the merry band of McDonald’s characters infringed copyright protection for Wilhelmina W. Witchiepoo and the other imaginative H.R. Pufnstuf costumed characters. Since the emergence of software copyright infringement cases in the 1980s, substantially all software copyright cases have permitted expert witnesses to aid juries in understanding software code. …
Bertillonage In An Age Of Surveillance: Fourth Amendment Regulation Of Facial Recognition Technologies, David C. Gray
Bertillonage In An Age Of Surveillance: Fourth Amendment Regulation Of Facial Recognition Technologies, David C. Gray
SMU Science and Technology Law Review
The Fourth Amendment is a closed hydraulic system. As a general rule, if government conduct is deemed a “search” under the Fourth Amendment, then agents must secure a warrant from a detached and neutral magistrate before engaging in that conduct. There are exceptions, of course, but they just shift the pressure into another valve. Officers who conduct searches based on their own initiative must show not only probable cause, but also good reasons why, in their circumstances, they were not required to get a warrant.
One consequence of these Fourth Amendment hydraulics is a reluctance on the part of the …
Q: Can Booking.Com Be Trademarked? A: Booking.Yeah, Samantha Favela
Q: Can Booking.Com Be Trademarked? A: Booking.Yeah, Samantha Favela
SMU Science and Technology Law Review
By choosing a generic Internet domain as a brand name, that brand can hit the Internet jackpot. But the popularity and use of a generic domain name creates tension with trademark law. While companies want to be easily found on the Internet, they also want to protect themselves from competitors. This Case Note argues that the Supreme Court’s ruling in United States Patent & Trademark Office v. Booking.com B.V. is the best possible outcome in protecting brand’s rights and balancing trademark law principles. Through the analysis of past cases, the Supreme Court decision in Booking.com itself, and trademark law principles, …
The Fifth Circuit, Fourth Amendment, And The Third-Party Doctrine: Two Takeaways From The Court’S First Ruling On Bitcoin Privacy, Daniel Penn
SMU Science and Technology Law Review
No abstract provided.
Signed, Sealed, Patented?: A Look At The United States Postal Service’S Patent Application For Implementing Blockchain Technology In Mobile Voting Systems, Ethan Todd
SMU Science and Technology Law Review
No abstract provided.
Access Denied? Unauthorized Access After Hiq Labs V. Linkedin, Dalton Sjong
Access Denied? Unauthorized Access After Hiq Labs V. Linkedin, Dalton Sjong
Marquette Intellectual Property & Innovation Law Review
None
Uncovering The “Realness” Of Cgi Influencers, Samantha Favela
Uncovering The “Realness” Of Cgi Influencers, Samantha Favela
SMU Science and Technology Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Communitarian Deficit In The Usa: Three Telling Cases, Amitai Etzioni
The Communitarian Deficit In The Usa: Three Telling Cases, Amitai Etzioni
SMU Science and Technology Law Review
Liberal communitarianism suggests that the balance between individual rights and the common good must be adjusted as historical conditions change. Much attention has been paid to violations of rights, e.g., by the police, for good reasons. This Article examines three new technologies that undermine public safety, a key common good, and asks whether they should be banned. The 2020 pandemic revealed that scores of millions of Americans objected, not merely to government mandates to take measures that are likely to spare fellow Americans a severe disease or death, but even to respond to moral calls, especially wearing a mask. This …
Covid-19: Legal Framework For Vaccine Distributions And Mandates, Dana B. Taschner, Ashley Atwood
Covid-19: Legal Framework For Vaccine Distributions And Mandates, Dana B. Taschner, Ashley Atwood
SMU Science and Technology Law Review
The COVID-19 pandemic has created heightened turmoil for at-risk populations, solidified laws allowing the use of mask mandates, raised legal issues surrounding vaccine mandates, and presented the new issue of a vaccine passport. As a nation, we have failed to implement vaccination schemes that properly protect vulnerable populations. Specifically, the homeless population has been overlooked, creating an additional layer of hardship, and contributing to greater community spread. This article contemplates the various methods by which an equitable vaccination scheme could have been achieved and the division of powers that created complications.
Additionally, the legality of vaccine mandates is discussed, and …
The Art Of Dodging Bullets: How Covid-19 Drug Manufacturers And Providers Plan To Escape Tort Liability, Ruan Meintjes
The Art Of Dodging Bullets: How Covid-19 Drug Manufacturers And Providers Plan To Escape Tort Liability, Ruan Meintjes
SMU Science and Technology Law Review
No abstract provided.