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Now showing items 1-10 of 14
The 1909 Copyright Act in International Context
(Santa Clara Computer & High Technology Law Journal, 2010)
The passage of the 1909 U.S. Copyright Act was embedded in a significant period of evolution for international copyright law. Just a year before, the Berne Convention had been revised for the second time. This Berlin (1908) ...
Reinventing Lisbon: The Case for a Protocol to the Lisbon Agreement (Geographical Indications)
(Chicago Journal of International Law, 2010)
The Doha Development Agenda (Doha Round) of multilateral trade negotiations at the World Trade Organization (WTO) may fail unless a solution to the establishment of a multilateral register for geographical indications on ...
The Google Book Settlement and the TRIPS Agreement
(Stanford Technology Law Review, 2011)
The proposed amended settlement in the Google Book case has been the focus of numerous comments and critiques. This "perspective" reviews the compatibility of the proposed settlement with the TRIPS Agreement and relevant ...
The Derivative Right, or Why Copyright Law Protects Foxes Better than Hedgehogs
(Vanderbilt Journal of Entertainment and Technology Law, 2013)
The derivative right is at the very core of copyright theory. What can and cannot be reused to create a new work impacts freedom of expression but also impacts the value of the markets for works and their various “derivatives.” ...
Plain Packaging and the TRIPS Agreement: A response to Professors Davison, Mitchell and Voon
(Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law, 2013)
The issue of plain packaging is at the very core of the intersection between trade law, intellectual property and public health. Unlike the issue of export of generic pharmaceuticals, which was addressed in the World Trade ...
Golan v. Holder: A Look at the Constraints Imposed by the Berne Convention
(Vanderbilt Law Review, 2011)
One of the central issues in the Golan v. Holder litigation is the extent to which the United States had flexibility to tailor the protection of existing works that had fallen in the public domain when it joined the Berne ...
Authors, Online
(Columbia Journal of Law & the Arts, 2015)
The fate of professional creators is a major cultural issue. While specific
copyright rules are obviously contingent and should be adapted to the new realities
of online distribution and easy reuse, professional authorship ...
Investor-State Dispute Settlement
(U.C. Irvine Law Review, 2018)
The triangular interface between trade, intellectual property (IP) and human rights has yet to be fully formed, both doctrinally and normatively. Adding investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) to the mix increases the ...
The Regulation of Inchoate Technologies
(Houston Law Review, 2010)
In this Essay, I explain why and how certain technologies I refer to as "inchoate" defeat regulatory interventions. I examine the "law" of unintended consequences and the role of regulatory ideologies. I suggest that ...
The Landscape of Collective Management Schemes
(Columbia Journal of Law & the Arts, 2011)
I see a bright future for collective management as a model. Each country and each CMO will be different and United States CMOs will likely have fewer collectivized elements than their foreign counterparts. But beyond those ...