Patents are intended as a means of promoting innovation through private pecuniary incentives. But the patent system has for some time been on a collision course with guarantees of expressive freedom. Surprisingly, no one has ever subjected patent doctrine to a close First Amendment analysis. In this paper I show, first, that patents clearly affect expressive freedom; second, that patents are subject to legal scrutiny for their effect on expressive rights; and third, that patents are not excused from scrutiny by virtue of constituting property rights or by virtue of private discretion. After examining the patent system in terms of familiar First Amendment metrics such as strict scrutiny, narrow tailoring, governmental interest, and least res...
Possibly in response to criticisms that the U.S. patent system affords too much legal protection to ...
Copyright law exists to encourage the creation of works of authorship by granting exclusive rights. ...
The definition of statutory subject matter lies at the heart of the patent system. It is the reflect...
Recent American patent scholarship has begun to explore the intersection of the patent system and gu...
Design patents have been part of American law since 1842. In that time, only just over 600,000 desig...
In the past three years, the Supreme Court has twice ruled that Congress’s moral bars to trademark p...
Innovation occurs within a complex web of law. Of the myriad legal doctrines that affect innovation,...
After a century of disregard, the question of whether patents are entitled to protection under the F...
Intellectual property regimes operate in the shadow of the First Amendment. By deeming a particular ...
Patent law today is a complex institution in most developed economies and the appropriate structure ...
The Constitution confers upon Congress the power to promote the ... useful Arts, by securing for li...
Several recent commentators have criticized trends in the patent system by suggesting that the goals...
Congress\u27 constitutional power to establish a patent system is not unrestrained. Rather, it is de...
Patents have seldom troubled civil libertarians. A specialized form of property, patents seemed pert...
This paper analyzes the historical differences between copyrights and patents. Copyright law allows ...
Possibly in response to criticisms that the U.S. patent system affords too much legal protection to ...
Copyright law exists to encourage the creation of works of authorship by granting exclusive rights. ...
The definition of statutory subject matter lies at the heart of the patent system. It is the reflect...
Recent American patent scholarship has begun to explore the intersection of the patent system and gu...
Design patents have been part of American law since 1842. In that time, only just over 600,000 desig...
In the past three years, the Supreme Court has twice ruled that Congress’s moral bars to trademark p...
Innovation occurs within a complex web of law. Of the myriad legal doctrines that affect innovation,...
After a century of disregard, the question of whether patents are entitled to protection under the F...
Intellectual property regimes operate in the shadow of the First Amendment. By deeming a particular ...
Patent law today is a complex institution in most developed economies and the appropriate structure ...
The Constitution confers upon Congress the power to promote the ... useful Arts, by securing for li...
Several recent commentators have criticized trends in the patent system by suggesting that the goals...
Congress\u27 constitutional power to establish a patent system is not unrestrained. Rather, it is de...
Patents have seldom troubled civil libertarians. A specialized form of property, patents seemed pert...
This paper analyzes the historical differences between copyrights and patents. Copyright law allows ...
Possibly in response to criticisms that the U.S. patent system affords too much legal protection to ...
Copyright law exists to encourage the creation of works of authorship by granting exclusive rights. ...
The definition of statutory subject matter lies at the heart of the patent system. It is the reflect...