In their eagerness to reward celebrities for the power of their “images,” and to prevent other people from exploiting those images, courts have allowed the right of publicity to distort the First Amendment. The power of the visual image has allowed courts to create an inconsistent, overly expansive regime that would be easily understood as constitutionally unacceptable were the same rules applied to written words as to drawings and video games. The intersection of a conceptually unbounded right with a category of objects that courts do not handle well has created deep inconsistencies and biases in the treatment of visual and audiovisual media, particularly comics and video games. These problems show up both in First Amendment defenses and i...
Although the right of publicity has been recognized as a distinct common-law doctrine since 1953, on...
The Right of Publicity: Privacy Reimagined for a Public World provides the first serious scholarly a...
A person\u27s right to publicity may often contradict with another person\u27s rights under the Firs...
In their eagerness to reward celebrities for the power of their “images,” and to prevent other peopl...
In their eagerness to reward celebrities for the power of their “images,” and to prevent other peopl...
This Article identifies a striking asymmetry in the law’s disparate treatment of publicity-rights ho...
The only consistency in right of publicity jurisprudence has been inconsistency. The right can be de...
Despite the increasing importance attached to the right of publicity, its doctrinal scope has yet to...
Two circuits in one summer found in favor of college athletes in right-of-publicity suits filed agai...
The first Part of this Article charts a brief course through the history of the right of publicity a...
For over a century, the right of publicity (ROP) has protected individuals from unwanted commercial ...
The right of publicity is an established legal doctrine that grants individuals the exclusive right ...
Over the past six decades, the right of publicity has been developed almost as quickly as the world ...
The right of publicity is a legal theory that enables individuals to protect themselves from unautho...
As the law is currently structured, there is no clear protection for a celebrity who is personally o...
Although the right of publicity has been recognized as a distinct common-law doctrine since 1953, on...
The Right of Publicity: Privacy Reimagined for a Public World provides the first serious scholarly a...
A person\u27s right to publicity may often contradict with another person\u27s rights under the Firs...
In their eagerness to reward celebrities for the power of their “images,” and to prevent other peopl...
In their eagerness to reward celebrities for the power of their “images,” and to prevent other peopl...
This Article identifies a striking asymmetry in the law’s disparate treatment of publicity-rights ho...
The only consistency in right of publicity jurisprudence has been inconsistency. The right can be de...
Despite the increasing importance attached to the right of publicity, its doctrinal scope has yet to...
Two circuits in one summer found in favor of college athletes in right-of-publicity suits filed agai...
The first Part of this Article charts a brief course through the history of the right of publicity a...
For over a century, the right of publicity (ROP) has protected individuals from unwanted commercial ...
The right of publicity is an established legal doctrine that grants individuals the exclusive right ...
Over the past six decades, the right of publicity has been developed almost as quickly as the world ...
The right of publicity is a legal theory that enables individuals to protect themselves from unautho...
As the law is currently structured, there is no clear protection for a celebrity who is personally o...
Although the right of publicity has been recognized as a distinct common-law doctrine since 1953, on...
The Right of Publicity: Privacy Reimagined for a Public World provides the first serious scholarly a...
A person\u27s right to publicity may often contradict with another person\u27s rights under the Firs...