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NFTs (non-fungibletokens) have become a buzzword in recent years. That artwork itself is a copyrighted work and the NFT owner will only have rights to that copyrighted work if these have been specifically assigned or licensed to them as required by law. Creative Commons’ position on NFTs.
To ensure you don’t miss out on interesting IP law developments reported on our other IP blogs, we will, on a regular basis, provide you with an overview of the most-read posts from each of our IP law blogs. Top 3 Kluwer Copyright Blog posts. Top 3 Kluwer Copyright Blog posts. ” Top 3 Kluwer Trademark Blog posts.
The emergence of blockchain-supported Non-FungibleTokens (NFTs) has captured the interest of the entertainment and business worlds in the past couple of years. It starts with the Chinese translation of Non-FungibleTokens. Is this the same in the US and China? If yes, under what circumstances?
Intellectual property owners need to add the metaverse to places to watch for possible infringement, specifically, trademark or copyright infringement in the form of NFTs or non-fungibletokens. So from our perspective, NFTs stands not only for “non-fungibletokens” but also “New Frontiers for Trademarks.”.
The emergence of blockchain-supported Non-FungibleTokens (NFTs) has captured the interest of the entertainment and business worlds in the past couple of years. It starts with the Chinese translation of Non-FungibleTokens. Is this the same in the US and China? If yes, under what circumstances?
As previously reported on this blog , non-fungibletokens (or “NFTs”) recently emerged as one of the hottest new items on the art market—artists, auction houses, museums, sports organizations and others have jumped at the chance to create and sell their own versions of these unique tokens.
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