In this Essay, I articulate a theory for why the outcome in the Ninth Circuit\u27s recent Garcia v. Google copyright decision is wrong. I apply the same theory to explain the problem with patent assertion entities, more colloquially known as patent trolls
Copyright policy is inextricably entangled with the work of academic researchers on Internet culture...
The 2015 Chapman Law Review Symposium will seek to advance the discussion of non-practicing entities...
On New Year’s Eve, the long-running copyright dispute between the Authors Guild and Google turned an...
Copyright protection is rooted in the Intellectual Property Clause of the United States Constitution...
This essay is adapted from a talk that I gave on October 2, 2015 at Columbia Law School’s annual Ker...
Google’s role as a copyright defendant has provided fodder for many an essay in this series, particu...
In the last decade copyright law has followed an almost linear path of increasing legal protections ...
No longer does it seem that a copyright infringer is anyone who violates any of the exclusive right...
The US Congress has enacted expansions of copyright which arguably impose high social costs and gene...
Last week, Google settled a controversial copyright case by agreeing to pay tens of millions in lice...
The subject of this conference is the “Rule of Law”, so I would like to address my opening comments ...
When government recognizes intellectual property (IP) rights, it is often viewed as sanctioning the ...
Over the last several years, copyrighted works have come to account for a healthy portion of our GNP...
This brief solicited response addresses Prof. Irina Manta\u27s article The High Cost of Low Sanctio...
This paper analyzes the historical differences between copyrights and patents. Copyright law allows ...
Copyright policy is inextricably entangled with the work of academic researchers on Internet culture...
The 2015 Chapman Law Review Symposium will seek to advance the discussion of non-practicing entities...
On New Year’s Eve, the long-running copyright dispute between the Authors Guild and Google turned an...
Copyright protection is rooted in the Intellectual Property Clause of the United States Constitution...
This essay is adapted from a talk that I gave on October 2, 2015 at Columbia Law School’s annual Ker...
Google’s role as a copyright defendant has provided fodder for many an essay in this series, particu...
In the last decade copyright law has followed an almost linear path of increasing legal protections ...
No longer does it seem that a copyright infringer is anyone who violates any of the exclusive right...
The US Congress has enacted expansions of copyright which arguably impose high social costs and gene...
Last week, Google settled a controversial copyright case by agreeing to pay tens of millions in lice...
The subject of this conference is the “Rule of Law”, so I would like to address my opening comments ...
When government recognizes intellectual property (IP) rights, it is often viewed as sanctioning the ...
Over the last several years, copyrighted works have come to account for a healthy portion of our GNP...
This brief solicited response addresses Prof. Irina Manta\u27s article The High Cost of Low Sanctio...
This paper analyzes the historical differences between copyrights and patents. Copyright law allows ...
Copyright policy is inextricably entangled with the work of academic researchers on Internet culture...
The 2015 Chapman Law Review Symposium will seek to advance the discussion of non-practicing entities...
On New Year’s Eve, the long-running copyright dispute between the Authors Guild and Google turned an...