توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Intellectual Property Excesses: Exploring the Boundaries of IP Protection
نام کتاب : Intellectual Property Excesses: Exploring the Boundaries of IP Protection
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : افراط در مالکیت فکری: کشف مرزهای حفاظت از IP
سری :
نویسندگان : Enrico Bonadio, Aislinn O’Connell (editors)
ناشر : Hart Publishing
سال نشر : 2022
تعداد صفحات : 371
ISBN (شابک) : 9781509944880 , 9781509944903
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 5 مگابایت
بعد از تکمیل فرایند پرداخت لینک دانلود کتاب ارائه خواهد شد. درصورت ثبت نام و ورود به حساب کاربری خود قادر خواهید بود لیست کتاب های خریداری شده را مشاهده فرمایید.
فهرست مطالب :
Foreword\nContents\nList of Contributors\nIntroduction\n I. Structure of the Book\nPART I: CULTURE\n 1. Copyright Term Extension: Good Morning to You Productions v Warner/Chappell Music\n I. Introduction\n II. Happy Birthday to You in Court\n III. Copyright Term Extension and Expansion\n IV. The Economics of Term Extension\n V. Term Extension and Market Failures\n VI. Conclusions\n 2. Copyright Liability and Music ‘Piracy’:\rCapitol Records v Thomas-Rasset\n I. Introduction\n II. The Procedural Steps of Capitol Records v Thomas-Rasset\n III. Analysis\n IV. Conclusion\n 3. ASCAP v The Girl Scouts of America: The IP Excesses of Collective Management Organisations\n I. Introduction\n II. The ASCAP Demand Letters and Apparent Reversal\n III. The Role of CMOs\n IV. CMO Harm to Users\n V. CMO Harm to Rightsholders\n VI. Government Regulation of CMOs\n VII. Conclusion\n 4. Copyright and Public Domain Works: Highsmith v Getty\n I. Introduction\n II. Theoretical Perspectives: The Gift, the Commons and the Rationales for Copyright\n III. The Way Forward: Three Recommendations\n 5. Copyright and Related Rights in Intimate Images: Chrissy Chambers and Other Victim-Survivors\n I. Introduction\n II. Image-Based Sexual Abuse - A Spectrum of Abusive Behaviours\n III. The Criminal Offence of Non-Consensual Distribution of Private Sexual Images\n IV. The YouTube Star and the Vengeful Ex\n V. Copyright in Intimate Images\n VI. The Author and the Mystery Troll\n VII. The Multi-Step Problem\n VIII. Removing or Reducing Copyright in \'Obscene\' Images\n IX. Private Regulatory Initiatives for Non-Consensual Image Sharing\n X. Suggested Solutions and Conclusion\nPART II: TECHNOLOGY AND SCIENCE\n 6. Biopiracy as an Abuse of the Patent System\n I. Introduction\n II. The Duty of Disclosure\n III. Disclosure Problems in Current Law\n IV. Problems in the Context of Traditional Knowledge\n V. Addressing Disclosure in the TK Context\n VI. Conclusion\n 7. Allergan’s Restasis and the St. Regis Mohawk Tribe: Chronicles of a Desperate Move, an Announced Defeat and a Collective Sigh of Relief\n I. Introduction\n II. A Successful Drug in Peril: Restasis’ Annus Horribilis (2017)\n III. The St. Regis Mohawk Tribe Agreement as a Desperate Move\n IV. Commercial Activities and Tribal Sovereign Immunity: Friends or Foes?\n V. An Announced Defeat, or Three: PTAB, the Federal Circuit and the Supreme Court\n VI. Conclusion: A Collective Sigh of Relief?\n 8. Limiting Access to Life-Saving Medications: Three South African Case Studies\n I. Introduction\n II. Interest Representation in Patent Policymaking and Legislative Processes\n III. Case 1: Litigation Around Amendments to the Medicines and Related Substances Control Act 1965\n IV. Case 2: National IP Policy\n V. Case 3 – TRIPS Waiver Proposal\n VI. Conclusion\n 9. Patent Trolls and their Excesses: Blackbird Tech v Cloudflare\n I. Introduction\n II. Blackbird v Cloudflare\n III. NPEs and Patent Trolls\n IV. Trolls and Ex Ante Failures of the Patent System\n V. Trolls and Ex Post Failures of the Patent System\n VI. Trolls and Impact on Innovation\n VII. Conclusion\n 10. From Asset to Liability: Five Scenarios of Excessive Protection of Trade Secrets\n I. Trade Secrets as an Asset\n II. Manifestation of Excess in Trade Secrecy\n III. Recalibrating Trade Secret Protection\n IV. Concluding Remarks\nPART III: SIGNS, IMAGES AND MARKETING RIGHTS\n 11. The Not-So-Friendly Neighbourhood Super-Hero®\n I. Take a Hero and Make Them Super: Where Did the Term \'Superhero\' Come From?\n II. Superhero®: Origins\n III. Web of Intrigue: Is SUPERHERO Distinctive?\n IV. Astonishing Tales: The True Effect of the®\n V. Conclusion\n 12. Protection of Colour Per Se: Or, #FreeThePink and the Battle Over \'Magenta\'\n I. Introduction\n II. Roadmap: Colour Marks and \'Excess\'\n III. Status Quo: Current Doctrine of Colour-Mark Protection\n IV. Analysis, Critique, and Reconceptualisation\n V. Summary\n 13. International Investment Agreements and Intellectual Property: Philip Morris v Uruguay\n I. Introduction\n II. A Gruelling Duel – Philip Morris v Uruguay\n III. The Broader Implications\n IV. Conclusion\n 14. Reverse Domain Name Hijacking: Camilla Australia v Domain Admin, Mrs Jello\n I. Introduction\n II. Camilla Australia v Domain Admin, Mrs Jello\n III. Domain Name Registered Earlier than Trademarks\n IV. Bad Faith Registration and Use\n V. Lack of Penalties for Reverse Domain Name Hijacking\n VI. Conclusion\n 15. Ambush Marketing and IP Expansion: FIFA, Bavaria and the 2010 World Cup South Africa\n I. Introduction\n II. What is Ambush Marketing?\n III. Traditional Causes of Action\n IV. Olympic Law and Major Event Legislation\n V. The 2010 World Cup\n VI. Lacking Legitimacy?\n VII. Conclusion\n 16. ROBOTS (and Elvis Imitators) AGAIN: Estate of Presley v Russen and Right of Publicity Over-Reaches in US Law\n I. Introduction\n II. Origin of the Right of Publicity in US Law\n III. Expanding the Doctrine\n IV. The Intersection of ROP and Copyright Law\n V. ROP in California and New York\n VI. The Intersection of Copyright and Right of Publicity Law\n VII. Zealous Protection or Over-Reaching? – The Estate of Presley Cases\n VIII. Concluding Remarks\nIndex