David Branigan, Intellectual Property Watch; New Research Study Describes DNDi As A “Commons” For Public Health
"Since 2003, Drugs for Neglected Diseases Initiative (DNDi) has worked to
meet the public health needs of neglected populations by filling gaps
in drug development left by the for-profit pharmaceutical industry. A
new research study by the French Development Agency analysed DNDi’s
unique product development partnership (PDP) model, and found that it
“illustrate[s] what can be presented as a ‘commons’ within the area of
public health."
The research study, “DNDi, a Distinctive Illustration of Commons in the Area of Public Health,”
was published earlier this month by the Agence Française de
Développement (AFD), the French public development bank that “works in
many sectors — energy, healthcare, biodiversity, water, digital
technology, professional training, among others — to assist with
transitions towards a safer, more equitable, and more sustainable world:
a world in common,” according to its website."
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
Tuesday, February 26, 2019
Startup Law A to Z: Intellectual Property; TechCrunch, February 25, 2019
Daniel McKenzie, TechCrunch; Startup Law A to Z: Intellectual Property
"Whether protected through copyright, trade secret, trademark, or patents, software technology companies depend on IP more so than perhaps any other business type in history.
It is surprising, then, just how little founders think about protecting their own IP. Sure, “product-market fit” is an all-engrossing search for truth that tolerates no distraction, but that is at best an explanation, not an excuse.
The real pros will find product-market fit while documenting and protecting IP along the way — it’s the only way to ensure you own your work, after all.
This article provides an overview to help you think about where your IP sits, how to protect it, and how to avoid certain pitfalls that plague far too many startups."
"Whether protected through copyright, trade secret, trademark, or patents, software technology companies depend on IP more so than perhaps any other business type in history.
It is surprising, then, just how little founders think about protecting their own IP. Sure, “product-market fit” is an all-engrossing search for truth that tolerates no distraction, but that is at best an explanation, not an excuse.
The real pros will find product-market fit while documenting and protecting IP along the way — it’s the only way to ensure you own your work, after all.
This article provides an overview to help you think about where your IP sits, how to protect it, and how to avoid certain pitfalls that plague far too many startups."
A Century-Old Debate Over Science Patents Is Repeating Itself Today; Slate, February 25, 2019
Charles Duan, Slate; A Century-Old Debate Over Science Patents Is Repeating Itself Today
"What caused the demise of Ruffini’s idea? It turned out to be devils in the details: Deep thinkers on the subject, even those in favor of scientific property in principle, couldn’t figure out the implementation. Rogers, for example, wondered how scientific property would deal with multiple contributors to one discovery. Who, for example, “discovered” electricity—Benjamin Franklin? André-Marie Ampère? George Simon Ohm? The “chap that made the Leyden jar”? Industries worried about unexpected liability and demanded creation of a scientific property insurance scheme. The American Association for the Advancement of Science report found concerns that the expansive scope of some scientific discoveries could lead to unbounded, tortuous litigation. A U.S. Patent Office official wondered how scientific property patents could be written without being too vague and speculative."
"What caused the demise of Ruffini’s idea? It turned out to be devils in the details: Deep thinkers on the subject, even those in favor of scientific property in principle, couldn’t figure out the implementation. Rogers, for example, wondered how scientific property would deal with multiple contributors to one discovery. Who, for example, “discovered” electricity—Benjamin Franklin? André-Marie Ampère? George Simon Ohm? The “chap that made the Leyden jar”? Industries worried about unexpected liability and demanded creation of a scientific property insurance scheme. The American Association for the Advancement of Science report found concerns that the expansive scope of some scientific discoveries could lead to unbounded, tortuous litigation. A U.S. Patent Office official wondered how scientific property patents could be written without being too vague and speculative."
Wednesday, February 20, 2019
Dentist’s failed suit demonstrates a copyright’s bite needs more than teeth; Lexology, February 18, 2019
Thompson Coburn LLP -
Mark Sableman, Lexology; Dentist’s failed suit demonstrates a copyright’s bite needs more than teeth
"The court agreed in Pohl v. MH SUB I, LLC,
finding that Dr. Pohl’s two “direct shots” of his patient’s teeth were
purely utilitarian, like pictures of food plates on a Chinese
restaurant’s menu. They lacked the minimal required “creative spark.”...
For more information, there’s a chapter
in the Copyright Office Compendium on this subject. Or you can just
remember: “No way” for teeth or triangles; a thin “OK” for tetrahedrons."
Tuesday, February 19, 2019
The worst possible version of the EU Copyright Directive has sparked a German uprising; BoingBoing, February 18, 2019
Cory Doctorow, BoingBoing; The worst possible version of the EU Copyright Directive has sparked a German uprising
"In the meantime, the petition to save Europe from the Directive—already the largest in EU history—keeps racking up more signatures, and is on track to be the largest petition in the history of the world."
"In the meantime, the petition to save Europe from the Directive—already the largest in EU history—keeps racking up more signatures, and is on track to be the largest petition in the history of the world."
Saturday, February 16, 2019
Entrepreneurs Tell USPTO Director Iancu: Patent Trolls Aren’t Just “Monster Stories”; Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), February 14, 2019
Joe Mullin, Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF); Entrepreneurs Tell USPTO Director Iancu: Patent Trolls Aren’t Just “Monster Stories”
"Unfortunately, the new director of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) is in a serious state of denial about patent trolls and the hurt they cause to technologists everywhere. Today a number of small business owners and start-up founders have submitted a letter [PDF] to USPTO Director Andre Iancu telling him that patent trolls remain a real threat to U.S. businesses. Signatories range from mid-sized companies like Foursquare and Life360 to one-person software enterprises like Ken Cooper's. The letter explains the harm, cost, and stress that patent trolls cause businesses."
"Unfortunately, the new director of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) is in a serious state of denial about patent trolls and the hurt they cause to technologists everywhere. Today a number of small business owners and start-up founders have submitted a letter [PDF] to USPTO Director Andre Iancu telling him that patent trolls remain a real threat to U.S. businesses. Signatories range from mid-sized companies like Foursquare and Life360 to one-person software enterprises like Ken Cooper's. The letter explains the harm, cost, and stress that patent trolls cause businesses."
Wednesday, February 13, 2019
The Scouts Teach Us All a Lesson About Trademark Law; Forbes, February 12, 2019
Tony Marks, Forbes; The Scouts Teach Us All a Lesson About Trademark Law
"David Harford, an attorney with Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner, contributed to this post."...
"Ultimately, the Girl Scout’s suit against the Boy Scouts demonstrates the caution that should be exercised regarding the use of intellectual property in connection with the alteration and expansion of services. This is a message that all franchisors should take to heart as they rebrand or brand products and services. The Boy Scouts likely devoted a lot of resources to determine how they should let everyone know that they were offering new services. Instead of just reaping the benefits of that work, they are now fighting a lawsuit that may result in their inability to take advantage of their new marketing strategy."
"David Harford, an attorney with Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner, contributed to this post."...
"Ultimately, the Girl Scout’s suit against the Boy Scouts demonstrates the caution that should be exercised regarding the use of intellectual property in connection with the alteration and expansion of services. This is a message that all franchisors should take to heart as they rebrand or brand products and services. The Boy Scouts likely devoted a lot of resources to determine how they should let everyone know that they were offering new services. Instead of just reaping the benefits of that work, they are now fighting a lawsuit that may result in their inability to take advantage of their new marketing strategy."
Lack of women inventors could hurt innovation, US patent office says; CNet, February 12, 2019
Erin Carson, CNet; Lack of women inventors could hurt innovation, US patent office says
The report, titled Progress and Potential: A profile of women inventors on US patents,
found that while the share of patents that include at least one woman
listed as an inventor rose from 7 percent in the 1980s to 21 percent in
2016, women accounted for only 12 percent of inventors in 2016.
"Harnessing underexploited talent in these groups would be valuable to spurring innovation and driving growth," reads the report, whose release coincided with the International Day of Women and Girls in Science. It refers to the idea of "lost Einsteins," or people who could have made valuable contributions had they been exposed to "innovation and inventor role models.""
"More women are filing patents, but they still
have a long way to go in terms of representation among inventors,
according to a report out Monday from the US Patent and Trademark
Office.
"Harnessing underexploited talent in these groups would be valuable to spurring innovation and driving growth," reads the report, whose release coincided with the International Day of Women and Girls in Science. It refers to the idea of "lost Einsteins," or people who could have made valuable contributions had they been exposed to "innovation and inventor role models.""
Colorado Open Scholars Summit to examine ‘Open Access in Tenure and Promotion’ March 1; Colorado State University, February 9, 2019
CSU External Relations Staff, Colorado State University; Colorado Open Scholars Summit to examine ‘Open Access in Tenure and Promotion’ March 1
"The second biennial Colorado Open Scholars Summit, a statewide event co-sponsored by nine Colorado universities, will be held on March 1 in the Morgan Library Event Hall at CSU.
The focus of this year’s event, being held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., is “Open Access in Tenure and Promotion.” The summit will consist of two virtual panels featuring renowned scholars from the U.S. and Canada, followed by local discussions at the nine participating Colorado institutions, including CSU.
The first panel features CSU’s own Patrick Burns, dean of libraries and vice president of information technology, and will be a general discussion of challenges within the tenure and promotion process. This panel will focus on evaluation of scholarly and creative output, with particular attention paid to disincentives built into the T&P process and challenges in evaluating multidisciplinary and non-traditional scholarship.
The second panel will explore the topics of equity, prestige and quality of scholarship, with particular focus on the effect of open access on these areas of T&P evaluation."
"The second biennial Colorado Open Scholars Summit, a statewide event co-sponsored by nine Colorado universities, will be held on March 1 in the Morgan Library Event Hall at CSU.
The focus of this year’s event, being held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., is “Open Access in Tenure and Promotion.” The summit will consist of two virtual panels featuring renowned scholars from the U.S. and Canada, followed by local discussions at the nine participating Colorado institutions, including CSU.
The first panel features CSU’s own Patrick Burns, dean of libraries and vice president of information technology, and will be a general discussion of challenges within the tenure and promotion process. This panel will focus on evaluation of scholarly and creative output, with particular attention paid to disincentives built into the T&P process and challenges in evaluating multidisciplinary and non-traditional scholarship.
The second panel will explore the topics of equity, prestige and quality of scholarship, with particular focus on the effect of open access on these areas of T&P evaluation."
Disney lobbies Congress to change copyright laws; The Highlander, University of California Riverside, February 12, 2019
Robert Gold, University of California Riverside; Disney lobbies Congress to change copyright laws
"Copyright law is a tedious topic but it affects people in their daily lives."
"Copyright law is a tedious topic but it affects people in their daily lives."
Thursday, January 31, 2019
USPTO Releases 2018 Performance and Accountability Report; Guest Blog by Chief Financial Officer Tony Scardino, January 31, 2019
Director's Forum: A Blog from USPTO's Leadership
Blog homepage
| A tribute to veteran... »
Thursday Jan 31, 2019
USPTO Releases 2018 Performance and Accountability Report
"I’m pleased to announce that the USPTO has published its Performance and Accountability Report (PAR) for fiscal year (FY) 2018. The PAR serves as the USPTO’s annual report, similar to what private sector companies prepare for their shareholders. Each year the USPTO publishes this report to update the public on our performance and financial health.
Our FY 2018 PAR charts the agency’s progress toward meeting goals outlined in our 2014-2018 Strategic Plan: optimizing patent quality and timeliness; optimizing trademark quality and timeliness; and providing domestic and global leadership to improve intellectual property policy, protection, and enforcement worldwide. In addition, the PAR provides information on the USPTO’s progress towards a broader management goal: achieving organizational excellence. These goals drive the quality and quantity of our service to intellectual property stakeholders over the last five years.
Quote by President Abraham Lincoln on the patent
system, as displayed on the Herbert C. Hoover federal building in
Washington D.C., headquarters of the U.S. Department of Commerce
Here at the USPTO, we take pride in producing a PAR that meets the highest standards of transparency, quality, and accountability. The PAR contains a wealth of data and historical information of interest to our stakeholders, including data on patent and trademark examining activities, application filings, and agency staffing levels. This information is conveniently presented in the workload tables section at the end of the PAR.
On the issue of financial performance, FY 2018 marks the 26th consecutive year that the USPTO’s financial statements have received an unmodified audit opinion. Our clean audit opinion gives the public independent assurance that the information presented in the agency’s financial statements is fairly presented and follows generally accepted accounting principles. The auditors did note a deficiency in our internal controls related to managing and configuring IT system access. We have already begun developing plans to address the auditor’s concerns. Despite this deficiency, the auditor found no material weaknesses in the USPTO’s internal controls, and no instances of non-compliance with laws and regulations affecting the financial statements.
The PAR is a faithful snapshot of the USPTO’s FY 2018 performance. I hope you find value in this document, and that it allows you to glean greater insights into the agency’s activities and achievements."
The Role Of The Centre For Data Ethics And Innovation - What It Means For The UK; Mondaq, January 22, 2019
Jocelyn S. Paulley and David Brennan, Gowling WLG, Mondaq; The Role Of The Centre For Data Ethics And Innovation - What It Means For The UK
"What is the CDEI's role?
The CDEI will operate as an independent advisor to the government and will be led by an independent board of expert members with three core functions3:
"What is the CDEI's role?
The CDEI will operate as an independent advisor to the government and will be led by an independent board of expert members with three core functions3:
- analysing and anticipating risks and opportunities such as gaps in governance and regulation that could impede the ethical and innovative deployment of data and AI;
- agreeing and articulating best practice such as codes of conduct and standards that can guide ethical and innovative uses of AI; and
- advising government on the need for action including specific policy or regulatory actions required to address or prevent barriers to innovative and ethical uses of data.
- appropriately balance objectives for ethical and innovative uses of data and AI to ensure they deliver the greatest benefit for society and the economy;
- take into account the economic implications of its advice, including the UK's attractiveness as a place to invest in the development of data-driven technologies;
- provide advice that is independent, impartial, proportionate and evidence-based; and
- work closely with existing regulators and other institutions to ensure clarity and consistency of guidance
Labels:
AI,
Centre For Data Ethics And Innovation (CDEI),
data,
ethics,
innovation,
UK
So Much TV, Too Little IP Yields Writers Rich Rewards; Variety, January 31, 2019
Elaine Low, Variety; So Much TV, Too Little IP Yields Writers Rich Rewards
"The sheer volume of television out there is changing how precious intellectual property is foraged, acquired and ultimately used."
"The sheer volume of television out there is changing how precious intellectual property is foraged, acquired and ultimately used."
Labels:
books,
IP,
optioning books,
TV,
writers
UN agency finds US, Asian companies seek most AI patents; Associated Press, January 31, 2019
Associated Press; UN agency finds US, Asian companies seek most AI patents
"The U.N.’s intellectual property organization says companies in Japan, South Korea and the U.S. are the top filers of patent applications involving artificial intelligence.
The World Intellectual Property Organization has issued a first report aiming to show trends in AI, seen as a growth area in coming years, although still a tiny fraction of all patent applications each year.
WIPO said Thursday that machine learning is the dominant AI technique disclosed in patents."
"The U.N.’s intellectual property organization says companies in Japan, South Korea and the U.S. are the top filers of patent applications involving artificial intelligence.
The World Intellectual Property Organization has issued a first report aiming to show trends in AI, seen as a growth area in coming years, although still a tiny fraction of all patent applications each year.
WIPO said Thursday that machine learning is the dominant AI technique disclosed in patents."
Labels:
AI patent applications,
IBM,
IP,
Japan,
machine learning,
Microsoft,
NEC,
Samsung,
South Korea,
Toshiba,
trends in AI,
US,
WIPO
US Trademark Office Approves Application To Register The Shape Of A Burger; Mondaq, January 31, 2019
Donna A. Tobin, Mondaq; US Trademark Office Approves Application To Register The Shape Of A Burger
"The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office ("USPTO") recently approved registration of the irregular shape of a hamburger patty as a trademark, meaning that the owner of the mark, Bubba Foods LLC (Bubba's) had made a sufficient showing to the USPTO that the below shape of its burger was not functional and that the shape itself serves to identify Bubba Burgers as the source of burgers so shaped.
Such marks, known as "product configuration marks" are less common than more typical trademarks, such as names, slogans or logos. However, while the process is not an easy one, such non- traditional trademarks, which can also protect aspects of a product such as smells, sounds and the appearance of a retail establishment, can confer powerful rights on an owner."
"The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office ("USPTO") recently approved registration of the irregular shape of a hamburger patty as a trademark, meaning that the owner of the mark, Bubba Foods LLC (Bubba's) had made a sufficient showing to the USPTO that the below shape of its burger was not functional and that the shape itself serves to identify Bubba Burgers as the source of burgers so shaped.
Such marks, known as "product configuration marks" are less common than more typical trademarks, such as names, slogans or logos. However, while the process is not an easy one, such non- traditional trademarks, which can also protect aspects of a product such as smells, sounds and the appearance of a retail establishment, can confer powerful rights on an owner."
Game of Life Copyright Dispute Meets 'Day of Reckoning'; Law.com, January 30, 2019
Scott Graham, Law.com; Game of Life Copyright Dispute Meets 'Day of Reckoning'
"Markham died in 1993. His heirs sued in 2015, invoking a provision of the Copyright Act of 1976 that allows authors to terminate licenses after 56 years in certain circumstances.
But that provision excludes works for hire, and Smith concluded that the Game of Life is a work for hire that was commissioned by Klamer and produced by Markham’s company. “The weight of the evidence in this case is that the success that met the Game of Life was, in fact, nothing if not the result of collective effort,” Smith concluded. “And although the credit, in the colloquial sense, can be split pro rata, the law dictates that the copyrights cannot be.”"
"Markham died in 1993. His heirs sued in 2015, invoking a provision of the Copyright Act of 1976 that allows authors to terminate licenses after 56 years in certain circumstances.
But that provision excludes works for hire, and Smith concluded that the Game of Life is a work for hire that was commissioned by Klamer and produced by Markham’s company. “The weight of the evidence in this case is that the success that met the Game of Life was, in fact, nothing if not the result of collective effort,” Smith concluded. “And although the credit, in the colloquial sense, can be split pro rata, the law dictates that the copyrights cannot be.”"
Second China-Bound Apple Car Worker Charged With Data Theft; Bloomberg, January 30, 2019
Bloomberg; Second China-Bound Apple Car Worker Charged With Data Theft
"An Apple Inc. hardware engineer was charged by the U.S. with stealing the iPhone maker’s driverless car secrets for a China-based company, the second such case since July amid an unprecedented crackdown by the Trump administration on Chinese corporate espionage...
As President Donald Trump ratcheted up his trade war with China, the Justice Department in November announced a “China Initiative” aimed at prioritizing trade-theft cases and litigating them as quickly as possible.
San Francisco prosecutors have brought trade-secret theft cases against Chinese nationals who worked for companies as diverse as Micron Technology Inc., a memory chipmaker, and drug maker Genentech Inc. This week, the U.S. charged Huawei Technologies Co., China’s largest telecommunications company, with stealing secrets from its American partner, T-Mobile US Inc."
"An Apple Inc. hardware engineer was charged by the U.S. with stealing the iPhone maker’s driverless car secrets for a China-based company, the second such case since July amid an unprecedented crackdown by the Trump administration on Chinese corporate espionage...
As President Donald Trump ratcheted up his trade war with China, the Justice Department in November announced a “China Initiative” aimed at prioritizing trade-theft cases and litigating them as quickly as possible.
San Francisco prosecutors have brought trade-secret theft cases against Chinese nationals who worked for companies as diverse as Micron Technology Inc., a memory chipmaker, and drug maker Genentech Inc. This week, the U.S. charged Huawei Technologies Co., China’s largest telecommunications company, with stealing secrets from its American partner, T-Mobile US Inc."
Wednesday, January 30, 2019
US hammers Huawei with 23 indictments for alleged trade secret theft, fraud; CNet, January 29, 2019
Abrar Al-Heeti, CNet; US hammers Huawei with 23 indictments for alleged trade secret theft, fraud
A 10-count indictment alleges that China's Huawei stole trade secrets from US carrier T-Mobile
beginning in 2012. Huawei also allegedly offered bonuses to employees
who stole confidential information from companies. In addition, a
13-count indictment charged four defendants, including Huawei and Chief
Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou, with financial fraud. The indicted defendants also include affiliates Huawei USA and Skycom.
"The charges unsealed today clearly allege that Huawei intentionally conspired to steal the intellectual property of an American company in an attempt to undermine the free and fair global marketplace," said FBI Director Christopher Wray in a statement. "To the detriment of American ingenuity, Huawei continually disregarded the laws of the United States in the hopes of gaining an unfair economic advantage.""
"The US Department of Justice on Monday charged Huawei with theft of trade secrets, wire fraud and obstruction of justice.
"The charges unsealed today clearly allege that Huawei intentionally conspired to steal the intellectual property of an American company in an attempt to undermine the free and fair global marketplace," said FBI Director Christopher Wray in a statement. "To the detriment of American ingenuity, Huawei continually disregarded the laws of the United States in the hopes of gaining an unfair economic advantage.""
Tuesday, January 29, 2019
Video and audio from my closing keynote at Friday's Grand Re-Opening of the Public Domain; BoingBoing, January 27, 2019
Cory Doctorow, BoingBoing; Video and audio from my closing keynote at Friday's Grand Re-Opening of the Public Domain
"On Friday, hundreds of us gathered at the Internet Archive, at the invitation of Creative Commons, to celebrate the Grand Re-Opening of the Public Domain, just weeks after the first works entered the American public domain in twenty years.
I had the honor of delivering the closing keynote, after a roster of astounding speakers. It was a big challenge and I was pretty nervous, but on reviewing the saved livestream, I'm pretty proud of how it turned out.
Proud enough that I've ripped the audio and posted it to my podcast feed; the video for the keynote is on the Archive and mirrored to Youtube.
The whole event's livestream is also online, and boy do I recommend it."
"On Friday, hundreds of us gathered at the Internet Archive, at the invitation of Creative Commons, to celebrate the Grand Re-Opening of the Public Domain, just weeks after the first works entered the American public domain in twenty years.
I had the honor of delivering the closing keynote, after a roster of astounding speakers. It was a big challenge and I was pretty nervous, but on reviewing the saved livestream, I'm pretty proud of how it turned out.
Proud enough that I've ripped the audio and posted it to my podcast feed; the video for the keynote is on the Archive and mirrored to Youtube.
The whole event's livestream is also online, and boy do I recommend it."
Monday, January 28, 2019
Copyright Office identifies visual arts copyright problems, solutions; Lexology, January 24, 2019
Thompson Coburn LLP -
Mark Sableman, Lexology; Copyright Office identifies visual arts copyright problems, solutions
"Our forms are antiquated and difficult to use. Our definition of
“publication” is important but hard to understand and apply. Our process
for enforcing rights is tedious, costly, and time consuming.
Those are key takeaways from a report by the Copyright Office
to Congress about visual works copyrights. And that’s not all of the
bad news. In addition to deficiencies in its own processes, the
Copyright Office reported the hardly surprising conclusion that people
on the Internet often misuse copyrighted works and mislead users about
copyright...
The report, titled “Copyright and Visual Works: The Legal Landscape of
Opportunities and Challenges,” concerns a recent “holistic analysis of
the copyright landscape in which visual artists must work.” Based on
comments from industry and the public, the Copyright Office identified
three major challenges for visual artist copyrights: the registration
process, licensing, and enforcement."
Sunday, January 27, 2019
Shazam! Vs. Captain Marvel: The Bizarre Battle Over a Name; Comic Book Resources, January 27, 2019
Brian Cronin, Comic Book Resources; Shazam! Vs. Captain Marvel: The Bizarre Battle Over a Name
"Eventually, most fans will only known [sic] the hero formerly known as Captain Marvel as Shazam. It's a bit of a shame, but that's how the intellectual property rights fell."
"Eventually, most fans will only known [sic] the hero formerly known as Captain Marvel as Shazam. It's a bit of a shame, but that's how the intellectual property rights fell."
Thursday, January 24, 2019
How the public domain offers new life to these poetry classics; PBS NewsHour, January 21, 2019
PBS NewsHour; How the public domain offers new life to these poetry classics
"Literary works in the public domain have inspired countless homages, spinoffs and reimaginings. Broadway hit musical “Wicked” was based on Frank L. Baum’s “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz,” which entered the public domain in 1956. New York Times bestseller “Pride and Prejudice and Zombies” mixed 2009’s undead craze with Jane Austen’s 18th-century romantic comedy. Tony-award winner Lin Manuel Miranda used several public domain works in “Hamilton,” avoiding copyright infringement for his contemporary take on one of the Founding Fathers.
For more on the various ways the public domain serves today’s poets, writers and other literary fans, the PBS NewsHour interviewed Adam Green, editor-in-chief of The Public Domain Review, Robert Casper, head of the Library of Congress’ Poetry and Literature Center, and Karyn A. Temple, director of the library’s U.S. Copyright Office.
These conversations have been combined and edited for length. A list of works entering the public domain in 2019 is available here."
"Literary works in the public domain have inspired countless homages, spinoffs and reimaginings. Broadway hit musical “Wicked” was based on Frank L. Baum’s “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz,” which entered the public domain in 1956. New York Times bestseller “Pride and Prejudice and Zombies” mixed 2009’s undead craze with Jane Austen’s 18th-century romantic comedy. Tony-award winner Lin Manuel Miranda used several public domain works in “Hamilton,” avoiding copyright infringement for his contemporary take on one of the Founding Fathers.
For more on the various ways the public domain serves today’s poets, writers and other literary fans, the PBS NewsHour interviewed Adam Green, editor-in-chief of The Public Domain Review, Robert Casper, head of the Library of Congress’ Poetry and Literature Center, and Karyn A. Temple, director of the library’s U.S. Copyright Office.
These conversations have been combined and edited for length. A list of works entering the public domain in 2019 is available here."
Tuesday, January 22, 2019
Viral Is Still Copyrighted, Even to Learn Where Trump Is; Lexology, January 18, 2019
Finnegan, Henderson, Farabow, Garrett & Dunner LLP -
Joseph Myles and Margaret A. Esquenet, Lexology; Viral Is Still Copyrighted, Even to Learn Where Trump Is
"While attending his friend’s wedding at the Trump National Golf Club in New Jersey in June 2017, Jonathan Otto took a photograph of a certain wedding crasher: the president himself...
The case continues towards trial, but with a number of the most important issues now decided in Otto’s favor."
Monday, January 21, 2019
Trademark Fight Over Vulgar Term’s ‘Phonetic Twin’ Heads to Supreme Court; The New York Times, January 21, 2019
Adam Liptak, The New York Times; Trademark Fight Over Vulgar Term’s ‘Phonetic Twin’ Heads to Supreme Court
"The Supreme Court apparently thinks the question is more complicated, as it agreed this month to hear the government’s appeal.
If nothing else, the court can use Mr. Brunetti’s case to sort out just
what it meant to say in the 2017 decision, which ruled for an
Asian-American dance-rock band called the Slants. (The decision also
effectively allowed the Washington Redskins football team to register
its trademarks.)
The justices were
unanimous in ruling that the prohibition on disparaging trademarks
violated the First Amendment. But they managed to split 4 to 4 in most
of their reasoning, making it hard to analyze how the decision applies
in the context of the ban on scandalous terms."
Monday, January 14, 2019
Autocomplete suggestions: Did you mean 'copyright infringement'?; Lexology, January 10, 2019
MinterEllison -
Nadia Braad and Ruby Ramachandran, Lexology; Autocomplete suggestions: Did you mean 'copyright infringement'?
"We won't be likely to see a Court consider this particular topic until the value of the copyright is sufficient for a copyright owner to challenge a search engine over the autocomplete suggestions. In the fast paced world of technology, this may not be far away."
Saturday, January 12, 2019
Trump’s bizarre statement on China dishonors us all; The Washington Post, January 11, 2019
Dana Milbank, The Washington Post; Trump’s bizarre statement on China dishonors us all
"Asked an unrelated question on the White House South
Lawn on Thursday, Trump volunteered a comparison between Speaker Nancy
Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.)
— and the leaders of the People’s Republic of China.
“I find China, frankly, in many ways, to be far more honorable
than Cryin’ Chuck and Nancy. I really do,” he said. “I think that China
is actually much easier to deal with than the opposition party.”
China, honorable?
China, which is holding a million members of religious minorities in concentration camps for “reeducation” by force?
China, which, according to Trump’s own FBI director, is, by far, the leading perpetrator of technology theft and espionage against the United States and is “using illegal methods” to “replace the U.S. as the world’s leading superpower”?
China, whose state-sponsored hackers were indicted just three weeks ago and accused of a 12-year campaign of cyberattacks on this and other countries?
China, whose ruling Communist Party has caused the extermination of tens of millions
of people since the end of World War II, through government-induced
famine, the ideological purges of the Cultural Revolution, and in mowing
down reformers in Tiananmen Square?
Trump has a strange sense of honor. In April, he bestowed the same adjective on
the world’s most oppressive leader, North Korea’s nuclear-armed
dictator: “Kim Jong Un, he really has been very open and I think very
honorable from everything we’re seeing.”
Now,
the president is declaring that China’s dictatorship, by far the
world’s biggest international criminal and abuser of human rights and
operator of its most extensive police state, is more honorable than his
political opponents in the United States.
In
Trump’s view, your opponents are your enemies — and your actual enemies
are your friends. How can you negotiate with a man who thinks like this?"
Labels:
China,
cyberhacking,
Donald Trump,
ethics,
forced detentions,
honor,
honorable,
human rights,
IP theft,
leadership,
negotiations
A Grand Re-Opening of the Public Domain by Internet Archive and Creative Commons: January 25, 2019
"Description
Please join us on Friday, January 25, 2019 for a grand day celebrating the public domain!
Co-hosted by the Internet Archive and Creative Commons, this celebration will feature a keynote addresses by Lawrence Lessig and Cory Doctorow, lightning talks, demos, multimedia displays and more to mark the “re-opening” of the public domain in the United States. The event will take place at the Internet Archive in San Francisco.
Schedule of Events:
10am: Doors & Registration10-11:45: Interactive public domain demos and project stations with organizations including Creative Commons, Internet Archive, Wikipedia, Authors Alliance, Electronic Frontier Foundation, California Digital Library, Center for the Study of the Public Domain, LightHouse for the Blind and Visually Impaired, the Cleveland Art Museum, and many more!
11:45-1pm: Lunch on your own in the Richmond District
1pm-6pm: Program of keynote speakers, lightning talks and panels highlighting the value and importance of the public domain
6pm-7:30pm: Reception
Speakers/Panelists Include:
Lawrence Lessig - Harvard Law ProfessorCory Doctorow - Author & Co-editor, Boing-Boing
Pam Samuelson - Berkeley Law Professor
Paul Soulellis - Artist & Rhode Island School of Design Professor
Jamie Boyle - Duke Law Professor & Founder, Center for the Study of the Public Domain
Brewster Kahle - Founder & Digital Librarian, Internet Archive
Corynne McSherry - Legal Director, Electronic Frontier Foundation
Ryan Merkley - CEO, Creative Commons
Jennifer Urban - Berkeley Law Professor
Joseph C. Gratz - Partner, Durie Tangri
Jane Park - Director of Product and Research, Creative Commons
Cheyenne Hohman - Director, Free Music Archive
Ben Vershbow - Director, Community Programs, Wikimedia
Jennifer Jenkins - Director, Center for the Study of the Public Domain
Rick Prelinger - Founder, Prelinger Archives
Amy Mason - LightHouse for the Blind and Visually Impaired
Paul Keller - Communia Association
Michael Wolfe - Duke Lecturing Fellow, Center for the Study of the Public Domain
Daniel Schacht - Co-chair of the Intellectual Property Practice Group, Donahue Fitzgerald LLP"
Monday, January 7, 2019
Will the world embrace Plan S, the radical proposal to mandate open access to science papers?; Science, January 3, 2019
Tania Rabesandratana, Science; Will the world embrace Plan S, the radical proposal to mandate open access to science papers?
""In the OA movement, it seems to a lot of people that you have to choose a road: green or gold or diamond," says Colleen Campbell, director of the OA2020 initiative at the Max Planck Digital Library in Munich, Germany, referring to various styles of OA. "Publishers are sitting back laughing at us while we argue about different shades" instead of focusing on a shared goal of complete, immediate OA. Because of its bold, stringent requirements, she and others think Plan S can galvanize advocates to align their efforts to shake up the publishing system...
"The combined weight of Europe and China is probably enough to move the system," says astrophysicist Luke Drury, of the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies and the lead author of a cautiously supportive response to Plan S by All European Academies, a federation of European academies of sciences and humanities.
If Plan S does succeed in bringing about a fairer publishing system, he says, a transition to worldwide OA is sure to follow. "Somebody has to take the lead, and I'm pleased that it looks like it's coming from Europe.""
""In the OA movement, it seems to a lot of people that you have to choose a road: green or gold or diamond," says Colleen Campbell, director of the OA2020 initiative at the Max Planck Digital Library in Munich, Germany, referring to various styles of OA. "Publishers are sitting back laughing at us while we argue about different shades" instead of focusing on a shared goal of complete, immediate OA. Because of its bold, stringent requirements, she and others think Plan S can galvanize advocates to align their efforts to shake up the publishing system...
"The combined weight of Europe and China is probably enough to move the system," says astrophysicist Luke Drury, of the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies and the lead author of a cautiously supportive response to Plan S by All European Academies, a federation of European academies of sciences and humanities.
If Plan S does succeed in bringing about a fairer publishing system, he says, a transition to worldwide OA is sure to follow. "Somebody has to take the lead, and I'm pleased that it looks like it's coming from Europe.""
January 1, 2019 is (finally) Public Domain Day: Works from 1923 are open to all!; Center for the Study of the Public Domain, January 2019
Center for the Study of the Public Domain;
"For the first time in over 20 years, on January 1, 2019, published works will enter the US public domain.1 Works from 1923 will be free for all to use and build upon, without permission or fee. They include dramatic films such as The Ten Commandments,
and comedies featuring Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, and Harold
Lloyd. There are literary works by Robert Frost, Aldous Huxley, and
Edith Wharton, the “Charleston” song, and more. And remember, this has
not happened for over 20 years. Why? Works from 1923 were set to go into
the public domain in 1999, after a 75-year copyright term. But in 1998
Congress hit a two-decade pause button and extended their copyright term
for 20 years, giving works published between 1923 and 1977 an expanded
term of 95 years.2
But now the drought is over. How will people celebrate this trove of cultural material? Google Books will offer the full text of books from that year, instead of showing only snippet views or authorized previews. The Internet Archive will add books, movies, music, and more to its online library.
HathiTrust has made over 50,000 titles from 1923 available in its digital library. Community theaters are planning screenings of the films. Students will be free to adapt and publicly perform the music. Because these works are in the public domain, anyone can make them available, where you can rediscover and enjoy them. (Empirical studies have shown that public domain books are less expensive, available in more editions and formats, and more likely to be in print—see here, here, and here.) In addition, the expiration of copyright means that you’re free to use these materials, for education, for research, or for creative endeavors—whether it’s translating the books, making your own versions of the films, or building new music based on old classics.
Here are some of the works that will be entering the public domain in 2019. A fuller (but still partial) listing of over a thousand works that we have researched can be found here. (You can click on some of the titles below to get the newly public domain works.)"
But now the drought is over. How will people celebrate this trove of cultural material? Google Books will offer the full text of books from that year, instead of showing only snippet views or authorized previews. The Internet Archive will add books, movies, music, and more to its online library.
HathiTrust has made over 50,000 titles from 1923 available in its digital library. Community theaters are planning screenings of the films. Students will be free to adapt and publicly perform the music. Because these works are in the public domain, anyone can make them available, where you can rediscover and enjoy them. (Empirical studies have shown that public domain books are less expensive, available in more editions and formats, and more likely to be in print—see here, here, and here.) In addition, the expiration of copyright means that you’re free to use these materials, for education, for research, or for creative endeavors—whether it’s translating the books, making your own versions of the films, or building new music based on old classics.
Here are some of the works that will be entering the public domain in 2019. A fuller (but still partial) listing of over a thousand works that we have researched can be found here. (You can click on some of the titles below to get the newly public domain works.)"
Sunday, January 6, 2019
Supreme Court to decide if trademark protection can be denied to ‘scandalous’ brands; The Washington Post, January 4, 2019
Robert Barnes, The Washington Post; Supreme Court to decide if trademark protection can be denied to ‘scandalous’ brands
"The Supreme Court agreed Friday to review a new
front in the battle over free speech and will decide whether trademark
protection can be refused to brands the federal government finds vulgar
or lewd.
The case involves a decision of the
U.S. Patent and Trademark Office to deny trademark registration to a
clothing line called FUCT.
The U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Federal Circuit struck down the century-old ban on
protecting “scandalous” and “immoral” trademarks as a First Amendment
violation, and the Department of Justice wants the Supreme Court to
reverse the decision...
Freed From Copyright, These Classic Works Are Yours To Adapt; NPR, January 5, 2019
Milton Guevara, NPR; Freed From Copyright, These Classic Works Are Yours To Adapt
""Copyright has been overextended so many times, largely at the behest of major copyright holders," says author Naomi Novik. "Even though what that actually does is inhibit people from creating new works and sharing these older works." Novik is a founding member of the Organization for Transformative Works, a nonprofit that focuses on preserving fan fiction and art — that is, work created by fans, based on characters and worlds from their favorite written works, film, and TV, which can occasionally come into conflict with copyright law.
"For a character to live, that character has to belong to the audience," says Novik. "Works of art are meant to nourish our collective understanding; they're meant to nourish our conversation."
Duke Law's entire list of works that entered the public domain this year can be found here."
""Copyright has been overextended so many times, largely at the behest of major copyright holders," says author Naomi Novik. "Even though what that actually does is inhibit people from creating new works and sharing these older works." Novik is a founding member of the Organization for Transformative Works, a nonprofit that focuses on preserving fan fiction and art — that is, work created by fans, based on characters and worlds from their favorite written works, film, and TV, which can occasionally come into conflict with copyright law.
"For a character to live, that character has to belong to the audience," says Novik. "Works of art are meant to nourish our collective understanding; they're meant to nourish our conversation."
Duke Law's entire list of works that entered the public domain this year can be found here."
Friday, January 4, 2019
'The drought is over': mass US copyright expiry brings flood of works into public domain; The Guardian, January 2, 2019
Alison Flood, The Guardian;
"“The drought is over,” proclaims Duke Law School’s Center for the Public Domain,
highlighting some of the works which are now available royalty-free, by
authors from Edgar Rice Burroughs to Kahlil Gibran, PG Wodehouse to DH
Lawrence, Edith Wharton to EE Cummings. It’s not only books: copyright
in the US is also expiring on a host of films, paintings and music.
“The
public domain has been frozen in time for 20 years, and we’re reaching
the 20-year thaw,” the center’s director Jennifer Jenkins told the Smithsonian.
The magazine predicted that the release’s impact on culture and
creativity could be huge, because “we have never seen such a mass entry
into the public domain in the digital age”. Brewster Kahle, founder of
the Internet Archive, told the Smithsonian: “We have shortchanged a
generation. The 20th century is largely missing from the internet.”"
Thursday, January 3, 2019
We Are! ... Happy Valley? Penn State applies for trademark on moniker; The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, January 2, 2019
Bill Schackner, The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette; We Are! ... Happy Valley? Penn State applies for trademark on moniker
"Josh Gerben, a trademark attorney in Washington, D.C., tweeted about the Penn State application Dec. 28, calling it a “trademark ‘land grab.’”
He said Happy Valley should remain in the public domain, since the university did not create the expression and the words are used broadly in Pennsylvania and elsewhere. He said others should be able to profit from it.
“It’s a generally accepted term for a geographic area in which the university happens to reside,” he said. “It seems out of place for the university to come in and say they should be the exclusive provider of Happy Valley clothing throughout the country. That’s exactly what they are asking to do.”"
"Josh Gerben, a trademark attorney in Washington, D.C., tweeted about the Penn State application Dec. 28, calling it a “trademark ‘land grab.’”
He said Happy Valley should remain in the public domain, since the university did not create the expression and the words are used broadly in Pennsylvania and elsewhere. He said others should be able to profit from it.
“It’s a generally accepted term for a geographic area in which the university happens to reside,” he said. “It seems out of place for the university to come in and say they should be the exclusive provider of Happy Valley clothing throughout the country. That’s exactly what they are asking to do.”"
Tuesday, January 1, 2019
Mickey Mouse and Batman will soon be public domain—here’s what that means; Ars Technica, January 1, 2019
Timothy B. Lee, Ars Technica; Mickey Mouse and Batman will soon be public domain—here’s what that means
"Until recently, I assumed that the same interest groups would try to extend copyright terms again in 2018. But the political climate for copyright legislation has changed radically over the last 20 years.
A year ago, Ars Technica broke the news that three of the nation's most powerful rights holder groups in the country, the Motion Picture Association of America, the Recording Industry Association of America, and the Authors Guild, were not even going to try to pass legislation extending copyrights.
"It's not something we are pursuing," an RIAA spokesman told me.
The reason was simple, Grimmelmann argues: they knew they weren't going to win."
"Until recently, I assumed that the same interest groups would try to extend copyright terms again in 2018. But the political climate for copyright legislation has changed radically over the last 20 years.
A year ago, Ars Technica broke the news that three of the nation's most powerful rights holder groups in the country, the Motion Picture Association of America, the Recording Industry Association of America, and the Authors Guild, were not even going to try to pass legislation extending copyrights.
"It's not something we are pursuing," an RIAA spokesman told me.
The reason was simple, Grimmelmann argues: they knew they weren't going to win."
Saturday, December 29, 2018
Why Mickey Mouse’s 1998 copyright extension probably won’t happen again; Ars Technica, January 8, 2018
Timothy B. Lee, Ars Technica; Why Mickey Mouse’s 1998 copyright extension probably won’t happen again
"Most of the public considered copyright to be a boring subject with little relevance to their daily lives, so there was little grassroots interest in the issue. Karjala hoped that professional associations of librarians and historians—which had traditionally been important advocates for the public interest on copyright issues—would help stop the bill. But the legislation had so much momentum that these groups decided to settle for minor changes to the legislation. So the bill wound up passing without a significant fight.
The rise of the Internet has totally changed the political landscape on copyright issues. The Electronic Frontier Foundation is much larger than it was in 1998. Other groups, including Public Knowledge, didn't even exist 20 years ago. Internet companies—especially Google—have become powerful opponents of expanding copyright protections."
"Most of the public considered copyright to be a boring subject with little relevance to their daily lives, so there was little grassroots interest in the issue. Karjala hoped that professional associations of librarians and historians—which had traditionally been important advocates for the public interest on copyright issues—would help stop the bill. But the legislation had so much momentum that these groups decided to settle for minor changes to the legislation. So the bill wound up passing without a significant fight.
The rise of the Internet has totally changed the political landscape on copyright issues. The Electronic Frontier Foundation is much larger than it was in 1998. Other groups, including Public Knowledge, didn't even exist 20 years ago. Internet companies—especially Google—have become powerful opponents of expanding copyright protections."
New Life for Old Classics, as Their Copyrights Run Out; The New York Times, December 29, 2018
Alexandra Alter, The New York Times; New Life for Old Classics, as Their Copyrights Run Out
"This
coming year marks the first time in two decades that a large body of
copyrighted works will lose their protected status — a shift that will
have profound consequences for publishers and literary estates, which
stand to lose both money and creative control.
But it will also be a boon for readers, who will have more editions to choose from, and for writers and other artists who can create new works based on classic stories without getting hit with an intellectual property lawsuit...
But it will also be a boon for readers, who will have more editions to choose from, and for writers and other artists who can create new works based on classic stories without getting hit with an intellectual property lawsuit...
Labels:
authors,
copyrighted works,
public domain,
publishers,
readers,
US copyright law,
writers
China's Supreme Court to take on intellectual property cases; Reuters, December 29, 2018
Reuters; China's Supreme Court to take on intellectual property cases
"Intellectual property rights cases can from next month be taken to China’s Supreme Court, the government said on Saturday, as the country seeks to strengthen protections in the face of complaints from the United States about the issue."
"Intellectual property rights cases can from next month be taken to China’s Supreme Court, the government said on Saturday, as the country seeks to strengthen protections in the face of complaints from the United States about the issue."
Labels:
China,
China's Supreme Court,
IP rights cases,
US
Thursday, December 27, 2018
Athletes Don’t Own Their Tattoos. That’s a Problem for Video Game Developers.; The New York Times, December 27, 2018
Jason M. Bailey, The New York Times; Athletes Don’t Own Their Tattoos. That’s a Problem for Video Game Developers.
"Take-Two has argued in court papers that
Solid Oak’s tattoos are seen rarely, fleetingly and hazily in the NBA
2K games, but the judge rejected a motion for dismissal in March.
A verdict for either side would set an important precedent on how the owner of a tattoo copyright can enforce it, said Yolanda M. King, an associate law professor at Northern Illinois University who has extensively studied the issue."
Saturday, December 22, 2018
Disney trademarked ‘Hakuna Matata.’ A new petition demands the company drop it.; The Washington Post, December 19, 2018
Sonia Rao , The Washington Post; Disney trademarked ‘Hakuna Matata.’ A new petition demands the company drop it.
"The company has received similar criticism before."
"The company has received similar criticism before."
Hakuna Matata™? Can Disney Actually Trademark That?; The New York Times, December 20, 2018
Kimiko de Freytas-Tamura, The New York Times; Hakuna Matata™? Can Disney Actually Trademark That?
"Trademark experts said the talk of
colonialism and robbery was overwrought, and that the trademarking of
phrases, particularly those from other languages, is commonplace.
“People talk about appropriation,” said Phillip Johnson,
a professor of commercial law at Cardiff Law School in Wales and a
specialist on intellectual property law, “but a trademark is all about
appropriation of language within a narrow commercial sphere, outside
that space people are free to use the language as they wish.”
“What’s
difficult about this case is whether it was a sensible commercial
decision for the Disney brand, rather than whether, legally, the mark
should or should not be registered,” he added. “The question is, does
their brand benefit from having trademark or does it get damaged from
bad publicity from having that trademark?”"
Video, Andy Sheehan, CBS KDKA; Ohio Clothing Company Seeks To Trademark ‘Yinzer’ For T-Shirts, CBS KDKA, December 21, 2018
Video, Andy Sheehan, CBS KDKA; Ohio Clothing Company Seeks To Trademark ‘Yinzer’ For T-Shirts
"KDKA’s Andy Sheehan: “Are you a yinzer?”
"KDKA’s Andy Sheehan: “Are you a yinzer?”
Grbach: “Yeah, I think so, yeah. I think deep down I am, absolutely.”
Sheehan: “You don’t use the word yinz.”
Grbach: “I tell my kids not to, but sometimes it slips out.”
Friday, December 21, 2018
For the First Time in More Than 20 Years, Copyrighted Works Will Enter the Public Domain; Smithsonian Magazine, January 2019
Glenn Fleishman, Smithsonian Magazine;
"At midnight on New Year’s Eve, all works first published in the United
States in 1923 will enter the public domain. It has been 21 years since
the last mass expiration of copyright in the U.S."
Labels:
copyrighted works,
public domain,
US copyright law
Thursday, December 20, 2018
The Second Circuit Shuts Down Resale of Digital Music Files in Capitol Records, LLC v. ReDigi, Inc., Lexology, December 18, 2018
Weil Gotshal & Manges LLP -
Samuel J. Zeitlin and Bruce Rich, Lexology; The Second Circuit Shuts Down Resale of Digital Music Files in Capitol Records, LLC v. ReDigi, Inc.
"If you purchase a copy of music in physical form--like a CD or vinyl
record-- you own your copy even though you do not own the underlying
songs. Although the law reserves to the copyright owner the right to
make more copies, she cannot stop you from selling your copy or giving
it away. This rule is called the right of first sale, and it enables all
secondhand sales of copyrighted material, from the smallest used
bookstore to eBay and Amazon Marketplace. The right of first sale began
as judge-made law in the early 20th century, and today is part of the
copyright statute at 17 U.S.C. 109(a). In technical terms, Section
109(a) creates an exception for the owners of legal copies to the
copyright owner's exclusive right to distribute her work, although not
to her exclusive right to reproduce her work.
But what happens if you purchase a digital music file? Digital
copying unravels the balance between the rights of copyright owners and
customers set by the first sale doctrine. Section 109(a) only allows the
owner of a copy to distribute it, not to make more copies. In a digital
environment, however, distributing a file is done by making a copy of
that file in a new location. When the distinction between copying and
distributing collapses, is it still possible to exercise the right of
first sale?
The Second Circuit has just confronted this issue in its December 12,
2018 ruling on the legality of ReDigi, an online marketplace designed
to let people resell digital music files purchased from iTunes. In a
unanimous decision in Capitol Records, LLC v. ReDigi, Inc. penned by the
Second Circuit's preeminent copyright expert, Judge Pierre Leval, the
court upheld the conclusion of the district court that ReDigi's business
model violated the law."
Tuesday, December 18, 2018
Did a Typo Accidentally Make Rudolph's TV Special Public Domain?; Comic Book Resources, December 15, 2018
Brian Cronin, Comic Book Resources; Did a Typo Accidentally Make Rudolph's TV Special Public Domain?
"Not so fast.
You see, the main character in the film, Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, WAS under copyright (in one of the sweetest stories of corporate generosity ever, Montgomery Ward gave the copyright to the character to the employee who created Rudolph as part of a store Christmas giveaway). Rudolph is also currently protected by federal trademark, meaning that you couldn't name any project "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer" without permission from the Rudolph trademark owners (I think there's a company specifically set up just to handle this Rudolph-related intellectual property stuff). Similarly, all of the songs in the film were independently copyrighted, so you couldn't use any of them."
"Not so fast.
You see, the main character in the film, Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, WAS under copyright (in one of the sweetest stories of corporate generosity ever, Montgomery Ward gave the copyright to the character to the employee who created Rudolph as part of a store Christmas giveaway). Rudolph is also currently protected by federal trademark, meaning that you couldn't name any project "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer" without permission from the Rudolph trademark owners (I think there's a company specifically set up just to handle this Rudolph-related intellectual property stuff). Similarly, all of the songs in the film were independently copyrighted, so you couldn't use any of them."
Monday, December 17, 2018
Gift Guide For The Intellectual Property Geek; Above The Law, December 13, 2018
Krista L. Cox, Above The Law; Gift Guide For The Intellectual Property Geek
"Still looking for a holiday gift for the IP geek who loves all things copyright, patent, and trademark?Try one of these gift ideas below, some of which were the subject of litigation (including in other countries)."
"Still looking for a holiday gift for the IP geek who loves all things copyright, patent, and trademark?Try one of these gift ideas below, some of which were the subject of litigation (including in other countries)."
Labels:
copyright,
holiday gifts,
IP geeks,
patents,
trade secrets,
trademarks
It’s not a trade war with China. It’s a tech war.; The Washington Post, December 14, 2018
Michael Morell and David Kris, The Washington Post; It’s not a trade war with China. It’s a tech war.
"Michael Morell, a Post contributing columnist, is a former deputy director and twice acting director of the Central Intelligence Agency. David Kris is a former assistant attorney general for national security and co-founder of Culper Partners consulting firm.
The United States is in an escalating technological cold war with China. It’s not centered on tariffs and trade, which President Trump often cites; instead, it involves both China’s use of technology to steal information and the theft of technology itself."
"Michael Morell, a Post contributing columnist, is a former deputy director and twice acting director of the Central Intelligence Agency. David Kris is a former assistant attorney general for national security and co-founder of Culper Partners consulting firm.
The United States is in an escalating technological cold war with China. It’s not centered on tariffs and trade, which President Trump often cites; instead, it involves both China’s use of technology to steal information and the theft of technology itself."
Wednesday, December 12, 2018
Indigenous Knowledge Misappropriation: The Case Of The Zia Sun Symbol Explained At WIPO; Intellectual Property Watch, December 11, 2018
Catherine Saez, Intellectual Property Watch; Indigenous Knowledge Misappropriation: The Case Of The Zia Sun Symbol Explained At WIPO
"The three panellists mentioned the importance of the United Nations Declarations on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples [pdf], and in particular Article 31, which asserts the right of indigenous peoples to maintain, control, protect and develop their cultural heritage, TK and TCEs, and the right to maintain, control, protect and develop their intellectual property over their cultural heritage, TK, and TCEs.
Commenting on the Zia case, June Lorenzo, a lawyer advocating in tribal and domestic courts and legislative and international human rights bodies, said in the late 1890s, Zia was at a very vulnerable point, as many other tribes were. A number of archaeologists came and took “what they could because they thought we were going to disappear as a civilisation,” she said, noting that the stolen pot was repatriated in 2000 or 2002.
In 1925, when the Zia symbol was adopted by the state of New Mexico, the Zia were not even considered as citizens of the United States, she said, and could not vote. “So the idea that they should have objected to this [ the use of the symbol] in 1925 … is just absurd.”"
"The three panellists mentioned the importance of the United Nations Declarations on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples [pdf], and in particular Article 31, which asserts the right of indigenous peoples to maintain, control, protect and develop their cultural heritage, TK and TCEs, and the right to maintain, control, protect and develop their intellectual property over their cultural heritage, TK, and TCEs.
Commenting on the Zia case, June Lorenzo, a lawyer advocating in tribal and domestic courts and legislative and international human rights bodies, said in the late 1890s, Zia was at a very vulnerable point, as many other tribes were. A number of archaeologists came and took “what they could because they thought we were going to disappear as a civilisation,” she said, noting that the stolen pot was repatriated in 2000 or 2002.
In 1925, when the Zia symbol was adopted by the state of New Mexico, the Zia were not even considered as citizens of the United States, she said, and could not vote. “So the idea that they should have objected to this [ the use of the symbol] in 1925 … is just absurd.”"
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