In the wake of Feist, copyright practitioners are scrambling to determine what it all means, and how best to protect their client\u27s intellectual property rights and interests. While different views are presented, an expression of dismay is common. This note will address the question: are the copyright practitioners justified in their concern? Part I will outline the Constitutional underpinnings of copyright protection. More specifically, this Part will discuss the two theories underlying the case law in the circuit courts of appeal, including a discussion of their legal philosophies. Part II will examine the Court\u27s decision in Feist. Part III will analyze and critique the Court\u27s decision, discuss practical implications, and prese...
The article discusses various aspects of copyright law, including public domain, incentives, and rig...
© 2000 Jennifer Anne OwenThe thesis submits that copyright law is not the right regime to protect al...
In Salinger v. Random House, Inc., the Second Circuit Court of Appeals implicitly broadened the scop...
In the wake of Feist, copyright practitioners are scrambling to determine what it all means, and how...
Questions about the copyrightability of compilations and other low authorship fact works, and about ...
Feist Publications, Inc. v. Rural Telephone Service Co., 111 S. Ct. 1282 (interim ed. 1991)
The Supreme Court\u27s unanimous decision last Term in Feist Publications, Inc. v. Rural Telephone S...
The basic principle that copyright protects neither ideas nor information has eroded recently. Recen...
Following the Supreme Court\u27s 1991 Feist decision, intellectual property and Constitutional law s...
What protection remains for compilations of information, particularly digital databases, since the U...
The debate over databases protection has failed to identify and discuss some of its most basic and p...
Copyright law is today perceived as principally statutory in origin. The Copyright Act of 1976 is th...
Courts have struggled with articulating the standard for “originality” in copyright law. Some judge...
Copyright law can be broadly viewed as a system that seeks an appropriate balance between the rights...
This article is about the importance of the copyright law jurisprudence from the U.S. Court of Appea...
The article discusses various aspects of copyright law, including public domain, incentives, and rig...
© 2000 Jennifer Anne OwenThe thesis submits that copyright law is not the right regime to protect al...
In Salinger v. Random House, Inc., the Second Circuit Court of Appeals implicitly broadened the scop...
In the wake of Feist, copyright practitioners are scrambling to determine what it all means, and how...
Questions about the copyrightability of compilations and other low authorship fact works, and about ...
Feist Publications, Inc. v. Rural Telephone Service Co., 111 S. Ct. 1282 (interim ed. 1991)
The Supreme Court\u27s unanimous decision last Term in Feist Publications, Inc. v. Rural Telephone S...
The basic principle that copyright protects neither ideas nor information has eroded recently. Recen...
Following the Supreme Court\u27s 1991 Feist decision, intellectual property and Constitutional law s...
What protection remains for compilations of information, particularly digital databases, since the U...
The debate over databases protection has failed to identify and discuss some of its most basic and p...
Copyright law is today perceived as principally statutory in origin. The Copyright Act of 1976 is th...
Courts have struggled with articulating the standard for “originality” in copyright law. Some judge...
Copyright law can be broadly viewed as a system that seeks an appropriate balance between the rights...
This article is about the importance of the copyright law jurisprudence from the U.S. Court of Appea...
The article discusses various aspects of copyright law, including public domain, incentives, and rig...
© 2000 Jennifer Anne OwenThe thesis submits that copyright law is not the right regime to protect al...
In Salinger v. Random House, Inc., the Second Circuit Court of Appeals implicitly broadened the scop...