This Comment will analyze Section 102 of the Copyright Act,the right of publicity in common law and as codified in state statutes,and Section 43(a) of the Lanham Act, and the analyses and applicationof these laws by different circuits. Further, this Comment willsuggest alternative tests, modeled upon trademark law, that courtsmay use in the future in similar situations to reach more equitable determinations
A person\u27s right to publicity may often contradict with another person\u27s rights under the Firs...
The Ninth Circuit’s decision in In re NCAA Student-Athlete Name & Licensing Litigation highlights th...
This Article examines the application of section 43(a) of the Lanham Act to claims of reverse passin...
This Comment will analyze Section 102 of the Copyright Act,the right of publicity in common law and ...
The only consistency in right of publicity jurisprudence has been inconsistency. The right can be de...
The right of publicity finds itself increasingly threatened by the First Amendment. Recent decisions...
The right of publicity — the most recently developed type of intellectual property — allows a person...
The right of publicity is an established legal doctrine that grants individuals the exclusive right ...
Over the past fifty years, a new intellectual property right called the right of publicity has evolv...
The Right of Publicity has its root in privacy law. Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis, in an 1890 art...
Until recently, the question of whether §43 of the Lanham Act prevented the unaccredited copying of ...
This Article explores the nature and developing boundaries of the state law doctrine of the right of...
This Article identifies a striking asymmetry in the law’s disparate treatment of publicity-rights ho...
Over the past six decades, the right of publicity has been developed almost as quickly as the world ...
Book Chapter Mark McKenna, Trademark Law\u27s Faux Federalism, in Intellectual Property and the Comm...
A person\u27s right to publicity may often contradict with another person\u27s rights under the Firs...
The Ninth Circuit’s decision in In re NCAA Student-Athlete Name & Licensing Litigation highlights th...
This Article examines the application of section 43(a) of the Lanham Act to claims of reverse passin...
This Comment will analyze Section 102 of the Copyright Act,the right of publicity in common law and ...
The only consistency in right of publicity jurisprudence has been inconsistency. The right can be de...
The right of publicity finds itself increasingly threatened by the First Amendment. Recent decisions...
The right of publicity — the most recently developed type of intellectual property — allows a person...
The right of publicity is an established legal doctrine that grants individuals the exclusive right ...
Over the past fifty years, a new intellectual property right called the right of publicity has evolv...
The Right of Publicity has its root in privacy law. Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis, in an 1890 art...
Until recently, the question of whether §43 of the Lanham Act prevented the unaccredited copying of ...
This Article explores the nature and developing boundaries of the state law doctrine of the right of...
This Article identifies a striking asymmetry in the law’s disparate treatment of publicity-rights ho...
Over the past six decades, the right of publicity has been developed almost as quickly as the world ...
Book Chapter Mark McKenna, Trademark Law\u27s Faux Federalism, in Intellectual Property and the Comm...
A person\u27s right to publicity may often contradict with another person\u27s rights under the Firs...
The Ninth Circuit’s decision in In re NCAA Student-Athlete Name & Licensing Litigation highlights th...
This Article examines the application of section 43(a) of the Lanham Act to claims of reverse passin...