Buch, Englisch, 752 Seiten, Format (B × H): 173 mm x 231 mm, Gewicht: 1270 g
20 Years of the Ipkat
Buch, Englisch, 752 Seiten, Format (B × H): 173 mm x 231 mm, Gewicht: 1270 g
ISBN: 978-0-19-286447-5
Verlag: Oxford University Press
Developments and Directions in Intellectual Property Law celebrates the 20th anniversary of award-winning intellectual property (IP) blog, The IPKat, originally founded in 2003. Over the past two decades, The IPKat has covered and commented on several of the most topical developments in the IP field from substantive, practical, and policy standpoints. Today, The IPKat is considered the “Most Popular Intellectual Property Law Blawg” of all time (source: Justia) and its readers are academics, members of the judiciary, policy and law-makers, practitioners, and students from all over the world.
By bringing together several of the current and past contributors to The IPKat, this book reflects on the developments and directions that have emerged in the IP field over the past twenty years. Topics covered include changes within substantive IP rights, as well as IP law, policy, and practice broadly intended and from a global perspective.
From copyright to trade marks, patents to designs, image and publicity rights to geographical indications, and developments in IP practice and the court system to contract drafting, readers of this book will find expert insights into some of the most notable developments in IP since the inception of The IPKat blog.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
- Rechtswissenschaften Wirtschaftsrecht Gewerblicher Rechtsschutz Patentrecht, Gebrauchs- und Geschmacksmusterrecht, Designrecht
- Rechtswissenschaften Wirtschaftsrecht Gewerblicher Rechtsschutz Gewerblicher Rechtsschutz allg., Marken- und Kennzeichenrecht
- Rechtswissenschaften Wirtschaftsrecht Urheberrecht
Weitere Infos & Material
- Foreword: 20 years of the IPKat
- Editors' note
- Part 1 - Developments in IP law, policy, and practice: Katfriends' views
- 1: Robin Jacob: Twenty years of IPKat
- 2: Richard Arnold: IP in the English court system
- 3: Trevor Cook: The IP profession over the last twenty years
- 4: David Stone: 20 years of change in IP strategy and litigation
- 5: David Humphries: IP and evidence - A 20-year journey to the mainstream
- 6: Irene Calboli: Intellectual property teaching and research: How has the academy changed in the past two decades?
- 7: Jane C. Ginsburg: Twenty years of U.S. digital copyright: Adapting from analog
- 8: Maria Strong: A view from the U.S. Copyright Office: Serving the public, Congress, the courts, and more from 2001 to 2021
- 9: Maria Martin-Prat: 20 years after - The state of EU copyright law
- 10: Annette Kur: 20 years in design law - What has changed?
- 11: Frederick Mostert and Sheyna Cruz: How image rights have changed over the past 20 years
- 12: Daniel Gervais: Lessons from the TRIPS waiver debate
- Part 2 - Developments in copyright and image/publicity rights
- 13: Eleonora Rosati: Copyright at the CJEU: Back to the start (of copyright protection)
- 14: Riana Harvey: The copyright protection of makeup
- 15: Mathilde Pavis: Sixty years of international performers' rights: Time for a performers' copyright?
- 16: Chijioke I. Okorie: Fair use or fair dealing in Africa: The South African experience
- 17: Hayleigh Bosher: Music copyright infringement cases in the US and UK: Building a house upon the sand or the rock?
- 18: Giorgio Luceri: Automatic Content Recognition (ACR) technologies: A copyright management tool for content-sharing platforms
- 19: Peter Ling: One does not simply upload a meme - Internet memes and the parody exemption in Europe
- 20: Mirko Brüß: From CD-copying vending machines to cloud-based TV recorders - 20 years of private copying in Germany
- 21: Marie-Andrée Weiss: New York right of publicity protects starlets and now ghouls
- 22: Emma Perot: Post-mortem rights of publicity - A comparison of New York and California
- Part 3 - Developments in the law of trade marks and geographical indications
- 23: Darren Meale: Retromark: The last 20 years of trade marks
- 24: Ilanah Fhima: Psychology, prototypicality, and basic shapes: The 'shape resulting from the nature of the goods' exclusion under EU trade mark law
- 25: Valentina Torelli: 3D trade marks: Distinctiveness and scope of protection
- 26: Jan Jacobi: Context of use in colour marks
- 27: Lucas S. Michels: Revaluing periods of concurrent use in likelihood of confusion analyses
- 28: Anastasiia Kyrylenko: Sprechen Sie Cambozola? On the lessons from the early years of “evocation”
- 29: Léon Dijkman: Of treats and treaties: The forgotten chapter of European Geographical Indications law
- Part 4 - Developments in the law of patents and trade secrets
- 30: David Pearce: Patentability of software in Europe
- 31: Stefano Barazza: Standard essential patents and FRAND licensing: The evolution of the European approach
- 32: Bertrand Sautier: Trolls, sharks, and privateers: 20 years of patent assertion entities
- 33: Darren Smyth and Azadeh Vahdat: The doctrine of equivalents in the UK following Actavis v Lilly
- 34: Rose Hughes: Rewriting European patent law by the back-door: On patents, politics, and peppers
- 35: Frantzeska Papadopoulou: 20 years of SPC case law: A long way to go in the quest for clarity
- 36: Michael S. Mireles: Cybersecurity standards and trade secrecy in the United States
- Part 5 - Developments in IP policy, practice, and literature
- 37: Laetitia Lagarde: Intellectual property and sustainability
- 38: Verónica Rodríguez Arguijo: A new Industrial Property Law in Mexico
- 39: Tian Lu: Punitive damages for intellectual property rights infringement in China
- 40: Neil Wilkof: Jane Austen's Mansfield Park and the treatment of intellectual property
- 41: Ieva Giedrimaite: The open source licensing phenomenon: Pledge, transformation, and lessons learnt
- 42: Eleanor Wilson: Unjustified threats in the online space
- 43: Stephen Jones and Hayleigh Bosher: The changing impact of IP on individuals and small businesses and the importance of pro bono services




