Remove Due Diligence Remove Magazine Remove Social Media
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Getting over the fear of copyright in photoshoots

Intellectual Property Office Blog

As an interior stylist who produces photoshoots for some of the country’s biggest magazines and commercial brands, getting the shots right is a must. These ranged from how to use art, to how much of a magazine you can share on your social media channels. Copyright is scary. Really scary. At least it used to be!

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U.S. Treasury Study Rejects Immediate Need for New Regulation of Art Market

LexBlog IP

The Report commended optional guidelines that some auction houses have already adopted to conduct due diligence (sometimes operating through formal compliance teams) and hoped for less client resistance to these policies. [18]. ” [25] This is especially true on third-party sales websites (social media marketplaces, eBay, etc.),

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Second Circuit signals some minimal flexibility on Polaroid analysis in another strip club false endorsement case

43(B)log

Appellants, current and former professional models, appealed their summary judgment loss on a variety of claims arising from the use of their images in social media posts promoting a “gentlemen’s club” operated by EIE. Several had appeared in magazines, advertising campaigns, television episodes, and films. 59 Murray Enters.,

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Less to the FTC’s Notice of Penalty Offenses Than Meets the Eye?

LexBlog IP

The second (Ar-Ex) involved a finding that a company had falsely represented that its products had been endorsed by a consumer magazine. Cliffdale offers no guidance as to what degree of due diligence is required. The third (A.P. Finally, the fourth case (R.J.