For many decades, the preferred route to protection against imitators of original designs has been a variation of the protection of the law of copyright. Many participants and observers, both interested and disinterested, believe that design is under-protected. Congress, however, has yet to be persuaded that additional protection is needed. This Article reviews the quest for copyright-like protection of designs. This quest falls into two uneven time spans. One stretches from before the 1930s—more intensely from 1957—through 1983. Every Congress, since the 85th in 1957, has witnessed the introduction of a bill to protect the ornamental designs of useful articles. These bills have passed the Senate five times but have never received favorabl...
Many firms invest heavily in the way their products look, and they rely on a handful of intellectual...
Despite the robust nature of the fashion industry, which has been largely unprotected by copyright, ...
The fashion industry does not need special, protective legislation. Laws are already in place that c...
This is the first of two articles that study the complex interactions of the differeent branches of ...
As discussed in the previous installment of this five-part series, A Strange Centennial, lawyers and...
In an era of increased harmonization of intellectual property laws worldwide, the United States’ tre...
Between 1914 and 1916, the United States Congress saw the first serious round of lobbying by advocat...
The dominant concern of the law protecting designs of useful articles has been to keep design and ut...
Design patents have been part of American law since 1842. In that time, only just over 600,000 desig...
For as long as copyright protection has existed in the United States, protection has never expressly...
The Innovative Design Protection & Piracy Prevention Act of 2011 (“IDPPPA”) crafts a sui generis for...
The standard for copyright protection is notoriously low the work must be independently created by t...
In copyright law, the marriage of beauty and utility often proves fraught. Domestic and internationa...
Throughout America history, our legal system has tended to overlook the fashion industry. While trad...
Copyright protection in the fashion industry is currently the focus of intense debate in the United ...
Many firms invest heavily in the way their products look, and they rely on a handful of intellectual...
Despite the robust nature of the fashion industry, which has been largely unprotected by copyright, ...
The fashion industry does not need special, protective legislation. Laws are already in place that c...
This is the first of two articles that study the complex interactions of the differeent branches of ...
As discussed in the previous installment of this five-part series, A Strange Centennial, lawyers and...
In an era of increased harmonization of intellectual property laws worldwide, the United States’ tre...
Between 1914 and 1916, the United States Congress saw the first serious round of lobbying by advocat...
The dominant concern of the law protecting designs of useful articles has been to keep design and ut...
Design patents have been part of American law since 1842. In that time, only just over 600,000 desig...
For as long as copyright protection has existed in the United States, protection has never expressly...
The Innovative Design Protection & Piracy Prevention Act of 2011 (“IDPPPA”) crafts a sui generis for...
The standard for copyright protection is notoriously low the work must be independently created by t...
In copyright law, the marriage of beauty and utility often proves fraught. Domestic and internationa...
Throughout America history, our legal system has tended to overlook the fashion industry. While trad...
Copyright protection in the fashion industry is currently the focus of intense debate in the United ...
Many firms invest heavily in the way their products look, and they rely on a handful of intellectual...
Despite the robust nature of the fashion industry, which has been largely unprotected by copyright, ...
The fashion industry does not need special, protective legislation. Laws are already in place that c...