In Digital Communications Associates, Inc. v. Softklone Distributing Corp., the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia rejected standardization as a reason to deny copyright protection to user interface design. The court also rejected the proposition, advanced six months earlier in Broderbund Software, Inc. v. Unison World, Inc., that copyright protection of the underlying computer program extends to the screen displays generated by that program. Once it found the screen displays to be separately copyrightable, the Softklone court evaluated each feature of the display individually, and extended copyright protection to some elements of the user interface. Although the court erroneously refused to protect the prog...
This article examines the issues surrounding software copyright protection and the problem of incons...
This Comment recommends how courts should apply the substantial similarity analysis to user interfac...
Since Congress\u27s express acknowledgment of copyright protection for computer programs in 1980, co...
In Digital Communications Associates, Inc. v. Softklone Distributing Corp., the United States Distri...
In Digital Communications Associates, Inc. v. Softklone Distributing Corp., the United States Distri...
Copyright protection for computer programs has traditionally centered on the computer program itself...
Although most court cases involving copyright protection of the user interface appear to have been d...
The Supreme Court\u27s landmark ruling Lotus Development Corp vs Paperback Software International ...
The Copyright Act protects computer programs, but the exact scope of protection has never been firml...
In Apple Computer Co. v. Franklin Computer, Inc., 714 F.2d 1240 (3d Cir. 1983), the United States Co...
Throughout the relatively short history of the computer industry, many disputes have arisen over una...
This Note presents the areas in which the copyrightability of a computer program has been questioned...
Courts focus on the Substantial Similarity test to determine copyright infringement. They also use t...
The non-literal elements of a computer program, such as its user interface, are crucial in determini...
The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has held that all computer programs are copyrightable regardless ...
This article examines the issues surrounding software copyright protection and the problem of incons...
This Comment recommends how courts should apply the substantial similarity analysis to user interfac...
Since Congress\u27s express acknowledgment of copyright protection for computer programs in 1980, co...
In Digital Communications Associates, Inc. v. Softklone Distributing Corp., the United States Distri...
In Digital Communications Associates, Inc. v. Softklone Distributing Corp., the United States Distri...
Copyright protection for computer programs has traditionally centered on the computer program itself...
Although most court cases involving copyright protection of the user interface appear to have been d...
The Supreme Court\u27s landmark ruling Lotus Development Corp vs Paperback Software International ...
The Copyright Act protects computer programs, but the exact scope of protection has never been firml...
In Apple Computer Co. v. Franklin Computer, Inc., 714 F.2d 1240 (3d Cir. 1983), the United States Co...
Throughout the relatively short history of the computer industry, many disputes have arisen over una...
This Note presents the areas in which the copyrightability of a computer program has been questioned...
Courts focus on the Substantial Similarity test to determine copyright infringement. They also use t...
The non-literal elements of a computer program, such as its user interface, are crucial in determini...
The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has held that all computer programs are copyrightable regardless ...
This article examines the issues surrounding software copyright protection and the problem of incons...
This Comment recommends how courts should apply the substantial similarity analysis to user interfac...
Since Congress\u27s express acknowledgment of copyright protection for computer programs in 1980, co...