This Article identifies a striking asymmetry in the law’s disparate treatment of publicity-rights holders and copyright holders. State-law publicity rights generally protect individuals from unauthorized use of their name and likeness by others. Publicity-claim liability, however, is limited by the First Amendment’s protection for expressive speech embodying a “transformative use” of the publicity-rights holder’s identity. This Article examines for the first time a further limitation imposed by copyright law: when a publicity-rights holder’s identity is transformatively depicted in a copyrighted work without consent, the author’s copyright can produce the peculiar result of enjoining the publicity-rights holder from using or engaging in...
This Comment will analyze Section 102 of the Copyright Act,the right of publicity in common law and ...
This Article challenges the standard account of the creation of the right of publicity. In legal lit...
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 Right of Publicity has its root in privacy law. Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis, in an 1890 art...
The Right of Publicity: Privacy Reimagined for a Public World provides the first serious scholarly a...
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...
The so-called right of publicity gives individuals a legally protected interest against commercially...
The appropriation of an individual\u27s name or likeness without that individual\u27s consent subjec...
This Article examines the overlaps between the right of publicity and rights granted by trademark la...
The Article is adapted from a keynote lecture about my book, THE RIGHT OF PUBLICITY: PRIVACY REIMAGI...
The right of publicity — the most recently developed type of intellectual property — allows a person...
No country in the world is so driven by personality as is the United States. Since 1953, when the ri...
A person\u27s right to publicity may often contradict with another person\u27s rights under the Firs...
This Comment will analyze Section 102 of the Copyright Act,the right of publicity in common law and ...
This Article challenges the standard account of the creation of the right of publicity. In legal lit...
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 Right of Publicity has its root in privacy law. Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis, in an 1890 art...
The Right of Publicity: Privacy Reimagined for a Public World provides the first serious scholarly a...
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...
The so-called right of publicity gives individuals a legally protected interest against commercially...
The appropriation of an individual\u27s name or likeness without that individual\u27s consent subjec...
This Article examines the overlaps between the right of publicity and rights granted by trademark la...
The Article is adapted from a keynote lecture about my book, THE RIGHT OF PUBLICITY: PRIVACY REIMAGI...
The right of publicity — the most recently developed type of intellectual property — allows a person...
No country in the world is so driven by personality as is the United States. Since 1953, when the ri...
A person\u27s right to publicity may often contradict with another person\u27s rights under the Firs...
This Comment will analyze Section 102 of the Copyright Act,the right of publicity in common law and ...
This Article challenges the standard account of the creation of the right of publicity. In legal lit...
In their eagerness to reward celebrities for the power of their “images,” and to prevent other peopl...