It is a safe assumption that every one of the twenty-eight EU Member States has some form of secondary liability principles within its general tort law. Traditionally, tort law principles require an element of deliberate contribution to, and therefore positive knowledge of, another person’s action. They are therefore of limited value for situations like Internet infringement, because the contributor is typically unaware of persons committing concrete acts of infringement. When the contributor merely provides the technical infrastructure that is used by an anonymous crowd for legitimate as well as illegitimate purposes, the “deliberate contribution” or “positive knowledge” element is difficult to prove. The general principles of tort law are...
The development and widespread use of new technologies further complicate the interpretation and app...
This chapter discusses intermediary liability and trade mark infringement from a civil law perspecti...
THE INTERNET AND THE PROTECTION OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY-THE SCOPE OF LIABILITY OF INDIVIDUAL PERSON...
Secondary liability remains perhaps the only meaningful remedy for rights owners when it comes to th...
In the wake of the millennium and the rise of the internet, legislative action was taken to shelter...
Online trademark infringement and counterfeiting is a growing problem for luxury brands. In recent y...
Given the global nature of the Interest, online trademark infringements alwaysinvolve multiple terri...
This chapter address the issue of secondary liability in trademark law, specifically the ongoing unc...
Many online entrepreneurs do not realize that they may be held legally liable for keywords they sele...
In U.S. law, the expression “secondary liability” is an umbrella term encompassing a number of diffe...
Although we live in a global, interconnected world, legal scholarship – even scholarship about the I...
Although trademark infringement is not a recent phenomenon, it was not until the inception and explo...
Over the past decade, courts have developed two distinct approaches in evaluating trademark claims a...
Article 97 of the European Union Trade Mark Regulation (EUTMR) sets a number of grounds to determine...
section 27(4) of the Trademark Act, as amended in 2005, provides enforcement against intermediaries ...
The development and widespread use of new technologies further complicate the interpretation and app...
This chapter discusses intermediary liability and trade mark infringement from a civil law perspecti...
THE INTERNET AND THE PROTECTION OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY-THE SCOPE OF LIABILITY OF INDIVIDUAL PERSON...
Secondary liability remains perhaps the only meaningful remedy for rights owners when it comes to th...
In the wake of the millennium and the rise of the internet, legislative action was taken to shelter...
Online trademark infringement and counterfeiting is a growing problem for luxury brands. In recent y...
Given the global nature of the Interest, online trademark infringements alwaysinvolve multiple terri...
This chapter address the issue of secondary liability in trademark law, specifically the ongoing unc...
Many online entrepreneurs do not realize that they may be held legally liable for keywords they sele...
In U.S. law, the expression “secondary liability” is an umbrella term encompassing a number of diffe...
Although we live in a global, interconnected world, legal scholarship – even scholarship about the I...
Although trademark infringement is not a recent phenomenon, it was not until the inception and explo...
Over the past decade, courts have developed two distinct approaches in evaluating trademark claims a...
Article 97 of the European Union Trade Mark Regulation (EUTMR) sets a number of grounds to determine...
section 27(4) of the Trademark Act, as amended in 2005, provides enforcement against intermediaries ...
The development and widespread use of new technologies further complicate the interpretation and app...
This chapter discusses intermediary liability and trade mark infringement from a civil law perspecti...
THE INTERNET AND THE PROTECTION OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY-THE SCOPE OF LIABILITY OF INDIVIDUAL PERSON...