Matthew Rimmer, Research Symposium, QUT Faculty of Law via infojustice.org; Intellectual Property and Education in the Age of COVID-19
"Overview
This event will consider the relationship between intellectual
property and higher education in the age of the public health crisis
over the coronavirus COVID-19. It will bring together scholars, experts,
and practitioners in law, business, and education, and examine this
topic from a range of disciplinary perspectives.
Universities and educational institutions will play a key role in our
local, national, and global response to the public health crisis of the
coronavirus COVID-19. Professor John Shine — the President of the
Australian Academy of Science — has stressed: ‘As a repository of
knowledge, networks, infrastructure and smart, agile people, university
science has the capacity to address global challenges.’ Shine suggests:
‘People trained by university science and working within the research
sector are the people whose expertise will deliver on this global
challenge.’ He has concluded: ‘It’s the capacity to innovate in our
university science that will bring us through this crisis.’
This symposium will consider the role of universities and educational
institutions as creators, intermediaries, and users of copyright work.
It will also examine how universities rely upon trade mark law,
branding, marketing, and Internet Domain Names. This symposium will
explore the role of universities in respect of research, development and
deployment of patented inventions in key fields — including
agriculture, biotechnology, medicine, and clean technologies. This event
will also consider the tension between the open access culture of
universities, and the push towards the protection of trade secrets and
confidential information. It will look at recent concerns about the
cyber-hacking of universities, educational establishments, and research
institutions.
This symposium will also provide an Australian launch of Professor Jacob Rooksby’s Research Handbook on Intellectual Property and Technology Transfer (Edward
Elgar, 2020) — which includes a contribution from a QUT researcher on
intellectual property, 3D printing, and higher education."
Issues and developments related to IP, AI, and OM, examined in the IP and tech ethics graduate courses I teach at the University of Pittsburgh School of Computing and Information. My Bloomsbury book "Ethics, Information, and Technology", coming in Summer 2025, includes major chapters on IP, AI, OM, and other emerging technologies (IoT, drones, robots, autonomous vehicles, VR/AR). Kip Currier, PhD, JD
Sunday, August 9, 2020
Intellectual Property and Education in the Age of COVID-19; Research Symposium, QUT Faculty of Law via infojustice.org, July 29, 2020
Labels:
business,
Covid-19 pandemic,
education,
IP,
law,
Open,
technology transfer,
universities
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