US Second Circuit Decision Opens Questions Of Transformative And Fair Use
Last Updated on Friday, 30 July 2010 01:14 Written by Leslee Friedman, Intellectual Property Watch Friday, 30 July 2010 01:09
By Leslee Friedman, Intellectual Property Watch
There is a familiar, unattributed quote that goes, “there are no new stories, only different ways of telling them.” In the world of intellectual property, this is a foundational concept, central to the ideal balance of IP rights and freedom of expression.
Experts spent last week at the World Intellectual Property Organization tackling just this issue, among others, in drafting an instrument of protection for traditional cultural expressions. Questions about the meanings of “derivative” or “adapted,” about when such derivation or adaptation makes a work an infringement, or when it adds to a living traditional cultural expression, or creates something entirely new arose repeatedly in the process.
At the same time, the United States awaits answers to similar questions in the arena of published fiction. In April of this year, the Second Circuit overturned an injunctive ruling against a piece of writing relying heavily on the text Catcher in the Rye. In Salinger v. Colting, the court vacated a decision by the lower court granting injunction and remanded it to the lower court, with an order that Colting’s fiction be considered under each of the four prongs in the US Supreme Court’s eBay Inc. v. MercExchange LLC standard, previously applied only in patent cases. The test as stated in that case is as follows:
Issuance of injunctive relief against [the defendants] is governed by traditional equitable principles, which require consideration of (i) whether the plaintiff would face irreparable injury if the injunction did not issue, (ii) whether the plaintiff has an adequate remedy at law, (iii) whether granting the injunction is in the public interest, and (iv) whether the balance of the hardships tips in the plaintiff’s favor.
Read more: US Second Circuit Decision Opens Questions Of Transformative And Fair Use
300 Years of Copyright: From Statute of Anne to Digital Copyright 2010
Last Updated on Monday, 24 May 2010 18:50 Written by Administrator Monday, 24 May 2010 18:37
300 Years of Copyright: From Statute of Anne to Digital Copyright 2010
Second International Conference on Content Industries and Intellectual Property
Second Forum of the Sino-Australian Intellectual Property Research Collaboration
5 + 6 November 2010East China University of Political Science and Law, Shanghai, China
An initiative of the ECUPL-QUT Sino-Australian Intellectual Property Research Collaboration + the National Institute for Digital Copyright Research
Convenors: Prof Brian Fitzgerald (QUT) + Prof Gao Fuping (ECUPL) + Prof Zhang Ping (Peking University)
East China University of Political Science and Law (ECUPL), Queensland University of Technology (QUT) and the National Institute for Digital Copyright Research are pleased to announce the Second International Conference on Content Industries and Intellectual Property, hosted by the Intellectual Property School of ECUPL and the Intellectual Property School of Peking University, to be held at ECUPL in Shanghai, China, from 5 to 6 November 2010.
2010 marks the 300th anniversary of the Statute of Anne (UK, 1709) which is widely regarded as the template for modern copyright law. It is also the 20th anniversary of Copyright Law of China. This provides a unique opportunity to investigate and examine the historical development and future role of copyright law especially in the context of the challenges and opportunities raised by the emergent networked information society.
Read more: 300 Years of Copyright: From Statute of Anne to Digital Copyright 2010
More Articles...
- Australia’s legal system – its origins and evolution and why Australia is distinctive form the USA and England
- QUT Faculty of Law PhD Final Seminar - Sampsung Shi
- National and International Dimensions of Copyright’s Public Domain (An Australian Case Study)
- The Birth of Biopolitics: Reading Group
- ‘Positive Noises’ On Resuming Talks On WIPO Audiovisual Performances Treaty
- The Rule of Law in China and the Communist Party
- Dr Francis Gurry, Director-General, WIPO: The Changing Landscape of Intellectual Property
- Swedish Author’s Take On The Catcher In The Rye Copyright Court Case
- Now Video Wants To Be Free And Open Too: IP Policy Considerations
- Woman ordered to pay $1.9 million in music download case
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Welcome to Sampsung's Blog
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US Second Circuit Decision Opens Questions Of Transformative And Fair Use By Leslee Friedman, Intellectual Property Watch There is a familiar, unattributed quote that goes,...
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300 Years of Copyright: From Statute of Anne to Digital Copyright 2010 300 Years of Copyright: From Statute of Anne to Digital Copyright 2010 Second International Conference...
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Australia’s legal system – its origins and evolution and why Australia is distinctive form the USA and England 澳大利亚的法律体系 - 起源、进化及其与英美两国的区别 Australia’s legal...
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QUT Faculty of Law PhD Final Seminar - Sampsung Shi Towards a Relational Theory of Copyright Law: Reconfiguring the Authors’ Economic Rights to Facilitate...
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National and International Dimensions of Copyright’s Public Domain (An Australian Case Study) 1. The value of Australia’s copyright public domain 1.1 Introduction: What do these innovations have...
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The Birth of Biopolitics: Reading Group In light of considerable interest in the term “neo‐liberalism”, its historical origins, and its...
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‘Positive Noises’ On Resuming Talks On WIPO Audiovisual Performances Treaty The World Intellectual Property Organization this week may have witnessed the beginnings of a resumption...
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The Rule of Law in China and the Communist Party This webiste has been hosting a online discussion for QUT law students on the topic of rule of law (see...
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Dr Francis Gurry, Director-General, WIPO: The Changing Landscape of Intellectual Property At the launch of the QUT WIPO Master of Intellectual Property Law, Dr Gurry has presented a seminar "The...
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Swedish Author’s Take On The Catcher In The Rye Copyright Court Case COPENHAGEN – Windupbird Publishing owned by Swedish author Fredrik Colting, alias John David California,...
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