Article

Interview with Lord Justice Arnold – Article from #2 2020

Interview with Lord Justice Arnold – By Riana Harvey and Alexandre Miura - Lord Justice Arnold is renowned in the UK and the EU for his judicial contributions to the field of intellectual property (IP), and currently sits as a Justice of Appeal in the England and [...]

Interview with Lord Justice Arnold – Article from #2 20202021-04-25T11:55:23+01:00

Copyright protection for public artworks in a digitalised world – a case study – Article from #2 2020

Copyright protection for public artworks in a digitalised world - By Carla Zachariasson and Anna Li - The growing digital landscape indeed imposes new questions and challenges for legislators and courts when adopting and adapting intellectual property law. For example, when artworks located in public outdoor spaces [...]

Copyright protection for public artworks in a digitalised world – a case study – Article from #2 20202021-04-25T11:55:12+01:00

Some similarity but not a minimum degree of similarity?: Are narrowly defined levels of abstraction in the similarity of goods-test contrary to EU trade mark law policy? – Article from #2 2020

Some similarity but not a minimum degree of similarity?: Are narrowly defined levels of abstraction in the similarity of goods-test contrary to EU trade mark law policy? – By Gustav Gierlöff – A minimum degree of similarity among goods (and services) is required for a global appreciation [...]

Some similarity but not a minimum degree of similarity?: Are narrowly defined levels of abstraction in the similarity of goods-test contrary to EU trade mark law policy? – Article from #2 20202021-04-25T11:55:02+01:00

Artificial Intelligence creates, invents … and challenges Intellectual Property Law – Article from #2 2020

Recent developments in technology are leading to the production of machines with the intellectual capacity to create and invent, just like humans. Artificial Intelligence (AI) is challenging copyright and patent law, as the actual author and inventor is no longer a natural person, but a machine. This article focuses on creative and innovative outputs [...]

Artificial Intelligence creates, invents … and challenges Intellectual Property Law – Article from #2 20202021-04-25T11:56:18+01:00

Inclusive Rights of Copyleft – Article from #2 2020

The current legal climate does not yet provide sufficient clarity on the workings, limits and rights conferred through licences granted on Free Open Source Software (FOSS). Generally, copyright is accepted as applying to FOSS and therefore the granted licence; by contrast, whether patents on the computer implemented invention (CII) encompassed in the software are [...]

Inclusive Rights of Copyleft – Article from #2 20202021-04-25T11:56:24+01:00

Towards fair pricing in technology trade and licensing – Article from #1 2020

In today’s complex and digital business landscape, innovation is typically not an effort of a lonely genius or an activity confined to a single corporate R&D lab. Instead, the innovation process often involves open innovation, technology trade, and intellectual property (IP) licensing between multiple firms in what is sometimes referred to as an innovation ecosystem. [...]

Towards fair pricing in technology trade and licensing – Article from #1 20202020-06-30T13:18:21+01:00

The Direct Liability of Online Intermediaries for IPR Infringements – Article from #1 2020

One of the most interesting and relevant developments in respect of online intermediaries concerns the emerging possibility – especially in the copyright field – to go beyond the traditional approach to their liability based on the safe harbour legislation and, with that, the system of secondary/accessory legislation and root, instead, their liability within a primary/direct [...]

The Direct Liability of Online Intermediaries for IPR Infringements – Article from #1 20202020-06-25T23:48:51+01:00
Go to Top