Copyright law is based on a balance between the need to provide incentives and rewards to authors on the one hand, and the need to ensure new creators have adequate access to existing works on the other. Recent years have seen a trend in copyright law toward extending rights for rights holders at the expense of users and the public domain. This trend has continued despite extensive critique from commentators internationally. At a normative level, debate continues over how copyright provisions should be interpreted in order to preserve the copyright balance, and in order to facilitate access to copyright works, particularly access for new creators
In this submission, the author revisits and expands on various points highlighted during a roundtabl...
This research focuses on copyright law particularly its ability to provide for the competing needs o...
The Australian Law Reform Commission inquiry into Copyright and the Digital Economy has recommended ...
Originality is a foundational concept in copyright law: it defines the works to which copyright atta...
The underlying principle of copyright in New Zealand is that any person who creates an intellectual ...
Over the last decade, Supreme Court copyright jurisprudence has undergone dramatic changes, concurre...
Copyright law is one of our more explicit social institutions to regulate the flow of creative effor...
Canada\u27s Copyright Act has been said to create a balance -- but it is at least a 3-way balance, o...
Copyright exceptions limit the rights of copyright owners to control the reproduction, distribution,...
Connections 2005, Montreal, QC, May 14-15Information is increasingly seen as the commodity which dri...
Courts have struggled with articulating the standard for “originality” in copyright law. Some judge...
The paper offers a theoretical analysis of the tension between "sweat of the brow" and "creativity" ...
In this paper, the author explores the ambiguities and inconsistencies in the Supreme Court of Canad...
Few propositions are more frequently asserted in contemporary copyright discussion than the proposit...
article published in law journalIN THREE RECENT CASES, the Supreme Court of Canada provided several ...
In this submission, the author revisits and expands on various points highlighted during a roundtabl...
This research focuses on copyright law particularly its ability to provide for the competing needs o...
The Australian Law Reform Commission inquiry into Copyright and the Digital Economy has recommended ...
Originality is a foundational concept in copyright law: it defines the works to which copyright atta...
The underlying principle of copyright in New Zealand is that any person who creates an intellectual ...
Over the last decade, Supreme Court copyright jurisprudence has undergone dramatic changes, concurre...
Copyright law is one of our more explicit social institutions to regulate the flow of creative effor...
Canada\u27s Copyright Act has been said to create a balance -- but it is at least a 3-way balance, o...
Copyright exceptions limit the rights of copyright owners to control the reproduction, distribution,...
Connections 2005, Montreal, QC, May 14-15Information is increasingly seen as the commodity which dri...
Courts have struggled with articulating the standard for “originality” in copyright law. Some judge...
The paper offers a theoretical analysis of the tension between "sweat of the brow" and "creativity" ...
In this paper, the author explores the ambiguities and inconsistencies in the Supreme Court of Canad...
Few propositions are more frequently asserted in contemporary copyright discussion than the proposit...
article published in law journalIN THREE RECENT CASES, the Supreme Court of Canada provided several ...
In this submission, the author revisits and expands on various points highlighted during a roundtabl...
This research focuses on copyright law particularly its ability to provide for the competing needs o...
The Australian Law Reform Commission inquiry into Copyright and the Digital Economy has recommended ...