Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Advertisement law (1)
- Advertising law (1)
- Appropriation of identity (1)
- Balancing publicity rights (1)
- Celebrity image (1)
-
- Celebrity law (1)
- Celebrity rights (1)
- Commercial exploitation (1)
- Commercial speech (1)
- Commercial use of identity (1)
- Commercial use of image (1)
- Commercial use of likeness (1)
- Commercial use of name (1)
- Commercial value of identity (1)
- Commercially exploiting name or likeness (1)
- Consumer confusion (1)
- Consumer protection (1)
- Creation of publicity rights (1)
- Disguised advertising (1)
- Distribution of likeness (1)
- Entertainment law (1)
- Evocation analysis (1)
- Evocation of identity (1)
- Exploitation of human identity (1)
- Expressive speech (1)
- Facial indicia (1)
- Federal right of publicity (1)
- First Amendment (1)
- First amendment (1)
- Free speech (1)
Articles 1 - 2 of 2
Full-Text Articles in Privacy Law
Harmonizing The Tension Between The First Amendment And Publicity Rights And Finding The Right Balance: Discerning How Much Freedom Is Warranted And What Needs Protection, William Buchsbaum
Harmonizing The Tension Between The First Amendment And Publicity Rights And Finding The Right Balance: Discerning How Much Freedom Is Warranted And What Needs Protection, William Buchsbaum
The University of Cincinnati Intellectual Property and Computer Law Journal
This paper examines the tension between the First Amendment and Publicity Rights considering why and how friction is emerging, the legal underpinnings and theories behind the development of publicity rights and how to reconcile this with values raised in support of the First Amendment. This collision course of rights occurs where property interests have vested in human identity itself which brings us face to face with the outer limits of free speech and expression under the First Amendment and evens tests the notion of how we define speech. The paper takes a dive into some of the currently arising issues …
National Security Or Consumer Privacy? A Question Even Siri Couldn’T Answer, Rebecca Knight
National Security Or Consumer Privacy? A Question Even Siri Couldn’T Answer, Rebecca Knight
The University of Cincinnati Intellectual Property and Computer Law Journal
No abstract provided.