Sat.Jan 27, 2024 - Fri.Feb 02, 2024

article thumbnail

Richard Prince and the Future of Fair Use

Plagiarism Today

Richard Prince has agreed to pay two photographers whose work he used in his art. Here's what it means for fair use moving forward. The post Richard Prince and the Future of Fair Use appeared first on Plagiarism Today.

Fair Use 268
article thumbnail

More Balanced Interpretation of US “Transformation” Fair Use Test gives Rightsholders Better Leverage to Protect their Works

Hugh Stephens Blog

Photo: Author A couple of recent cases in the US involving (mis)appropriation of copyrighted photographs indicate the tide may be changing with respect to the interpretation of what constitutes fair use, moving from a very liberal interpretation of “transformation” that has been used in recent years to justify unauthorized reproduction of copyrighted works by making … Continue reading "More Balanced Interpretation of US “Transformation” Fair Use Test gives Rightsholders Better Levera

Fair Use 162
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

International Trademark Registration Basics

Erik K Pelton

The following is an edited transcript of our video International Trademark Registration Basics Trademark rights are generally limited to the country in which they are registered, but there are international agreements that allow you to file a single application to obtain trademark protection in more than one country at once. This includes regional areas which give you trademark protection in all the countries that are member to the agreements that create them.

article thumbnail

Looking Ahead in the UK - Technology, Data Privacy, Cybersecurity and IP developments in 2024

JD Supra Law

Intellectual Property - Generative AI – ongoing impacts - Since 2022, the popularity and availability of generative AI has continued to grow. It is estimated that 79% of internet users aged 13-17, and 31% of those aged 16 and above, use generative AI tools and services.

Privacy 132
article thumbnail

Software Composition Analysis: The New Armor for Your Cybersecurity

Speaker: Blackberry, OSS Consultants, & Revenera

Software is complex, which makes threats to the software supply chain more real every day. 64% of organizations have been impacted by a software supply chain attack and 60% of data breaches are due to unpatched software vulnerabilities. In the U.S. alone, cyber losses totaled $10.3 billion in 2022. All of these stats beg the question, “Do you know what’s in your software?

article thumbnail

The Bizarre Case of the Serial Lit Mag Plagiarist

Plagiarism Today

Recently, pseudonymous author John Kucera has become the bane of literary magazine editors for his flagrant and ongoing plagiarism. The post The Bizarre Case of the Serial Lit Mag Plagiarist appeared first on Plagiarism Today.

article thumbnail

Disney ‘Cracks Down’ on Mickey Mouse ‘Steamboat Silly’ Pirates

TorrentFreak

For several decades, Disney has managed to keep the earliest footage of its iconic mouse protected. Notably, the 1998 U.S. Copyright Term Extension Act, also dubbed the Mickey Mouse Protection Act , extended copyright protection to 95 years. When Walt Disney released “ Steamboat Willie ” in 1928, he couldn’t have envisioned how important this short film would become, or that its entrance into the U.S. public domain would spark headlines worldwide.

More Trending

article thumbnail

California Church Wins Permanent Injunction Prohibiting Wedding Venue From Using Church’s Distinctive Trade Dress For Chapel

JD Supra Law

Wayfarers Chapel, a Rancho Palos Verdes church, sued Malibu wedding chapel Calamigos Ranch on trademark and trade dress infringement grounds, as well as unfair competition. Interestingly, Wayfarers Chapel alleged in their complaint dated January 25, 2023 that the defendants copied the “distinctive architectural trade dress of the chapel itself.”.

Copying 120
article thumbnail

3 Count: 78 RPMs

Plagiarism Today

Internet Archive hits back in music label lawsuit, German police seize billions worth of bitcoin and Nightshade gets 250K downloads. The post 3 Count: 78 RPMs appeared first on Plagiarism Today.

article thumbnail

Battle Between Newspaper Giant and Generative AI Boils Down to Definition of Fair Use

IP Watchdog

The training of artificial intelligence models using copyrighted material continues to stir debate and prompt litigation. In the latest salvo, the New York Times Company sued Microsoft and OpenAI – the creator of ChatGPT – for infringement under the federal Copyright Act. As often is the case with claims like these, the merits will center on the fair-use doctrine, a well-recognized legal principle in copyright law that aims to balance the interests of copyright holders with the public benefit of

Fair Use 116
article thumbnail

Ninth Circuit Pulls Back Rogers Test in Light of Jack Daniels Decision

The IP Law Blog

The holding in the Supreme Court case, Jack Daniels Properties v VIP Products , the case of the infringing Bad Spaniels dog toy, limits the applicability of the Rogers test. A recent case in the Ninth Circuit, Punchbowl Inc v. AJ Press , addressed the interplay between the decision in Jack Daniels and the Rogers test. The Rogers test comes from the 1989 Second Circuit case Rogers v.

article thumbnail

IPO Diversity in Innovation Toolkit

Women and diverse employees have the technical skill and knowledge, yet their contributions are not patented at the same rate as those of their male counterparts.This toolkit can help organizations move the needle on achieving gender parity in innovation.

article thumbnail

Is Your Super Bowl Marketing Campaign Playing by the Rules? 5 Tips to Help You Avoid Getting a Penalty

JD Supra Law

With the Super Bowl coming up, it is important for brands looking to capitalize on football-themed promotions to remember that the terms “Super Bowl” and “Super Sunday” are registered trademarks guarded by the National Football League (NFL) more closely than a shutdown corner on a wide receiver.

article thumbnail

3 Count: Substantially Unsimilar

Plagiarism Today

Kat Von D wins tattoo trial, Richard Prince settles dispute with photographers and Ironmace gets win in Dark and Darker case. The post 3 Count: Substantially Unsimilar appeared first on Plagiarism Today.

article thumbnail

ISP Suggests That Record Labels Can Sue Torrent Client Developers

TorrentFreak

Late 2022, several of the world’s largest music companies including Warner Bros. and Sony Music prevailed in their lawsuit against Internet provider Grande Communications. The record labels accused the Astound-owned ISP of not doing enough following complaints about pirating subscribers. Specifically, the labels alleged that the company failed to terminate repeat infringers.

article thumbnail

Squawking over butter chicken: The mystery of the real master chef

SpicyIP

Image from here Butter chicken is one of the most famous Indian dishes available all over India and outside. This culinary delight is now the subject of an intellectual property rights dispute before the Delhi High Court. The INR 2 crore (USD 240,000) squabble is between the Gujrals, founders of the restaurant chain Moti Mahal (and Moti Mahal Deluxe), and the grandson of another one of the founders – Daryaganj.

article thumbnail

Richard Prince Effectively Settles, Dodging Post-Warhol Fair Use Ruling

IP Watchdog

On Thursday, final judgments were issued in a pair of copyright infringement cases that arose from a now infamous 2014/2015 project New Portraits, where appropriations artist Richard Prince displayed Instagram photos and user comments as a purported commentary on social media and art. The two nearly identical final judgments were entered in favor of the photographer plaintiffs’ claims that Prince and the exhibiting galleries willfully infringed on their photographs, and the court dismissed all t

Fair Use 110
article thumbnail

3 Count: Llama Drama

Plagiarism Today

ISP says music companies could sue file sharers directly, Copyright Office reviews music licensing systems and Meta creates Llama drama. The post 3 Count: Llama Drama appeared first on Plagiarism Today.

Music 206
article thumbnail

Viewing Illegal Streams: No Cautions, Fines or Arrests Say GM Police

TorrentFreak

Last Friday, we reported on two Freedom of Information Act requests directed at two regional police forces in the UK. In almost identical requests, which appear to have been filed by the same person, Wiltshire Police and West Yorkshire Police were asked eight questions relating to enforcement measures taken against suppliers, distributors, and consumers of illegal streaming services.

article thumbnail

USPTO Slams Lundbeck's PTSD Drug Patent Term Suit

IP Law 360

The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office is going for an early win in Virginia federal court where Danish drugmaker H. Lundbeck A/S is seeking to extend the life of a patent for a PTSD drug by three months, calling the case straightforward.

Patent 105
article thumbnail

January 2024 Roundup of Copyright News

Copyright Alliance

In January, there was big copyright news coming out from the courts, including two final judgments entered by a court involving concessions of willful copyright infringement and forfeiture of the […] The post January 2024 Roundup of Copyright News appeared first on Copyright Alliance.

Copyright 106
article thumbnail

3 Count: Carlin’s Ghost

Plagiarism Today

George Carlin estate sues podcasters over AI comedy special, Jimi Hendrix bandmates to sue over royalties and USCO looks at AI royalties. The post 3 Count: Carlin’s Ghost appeared first on Plagiarism Today.

article thumbnail

Authorities Secure $2 Billion in Bitcoin from Pirate Site Operators

TorrentFreak

Pirate sites were early adopters of cryptocurrency. The Pirate Bay, for example, started accepting bitcoin donations in 2013. At the time, a single bitcoin was worth roughly $120, just a fraction of today’s price of $43,000. If The Pirate Bay had kept all donations received it would have millions in bitcoin today. Movie2K was another pirate site that showed an early interest in bitcoin.

article thumbnail

The Federal Circuit Could Make the ITC a More Appealing Forum

IP Watchdog

In a pending case, the Federal Circuit is primed to provide much-needed clarity on the economic prong of the domestic industry requirement at the United States International Trade Commission (ITC). In ruling, the court will likely resolve a long-running dispute between individual commissioners regarding how to apply the so-called “mere importer” test when determining whether the domestic industry requirement is met.

Inventor 105
article thumbnail

A Win for Employee Rights: Nelligan Law Helps Secure Victory in Wrongful Dismissal Case

Nelligan Law

Reading Time: 3 minutes In Koshman v Controlex Corporation , 2023 ONSC 7045 , Nelligan Law played a pivotal role in successfully representing engineer Martin Koshman against his former employer, Controlex Corporation, in a wrongful dismissal action. The Court, recognizing the gravity of the situation, awarded Mr. Koshman 24 months’ notice ($471,461.68), $50,000 in aggravated damages, $50,000 in punitive damages, along with $192,112.19 in legal costs.

Law 105
article thumbnail

The Norway Plagiarism Scandal

Plagiarism Today

In Norway, one prominent minster has resigned and another is fighting for their position following a pair of predictable plagiarism scandals. The post The Norway Plagiarism Scandal appeared first on Plagiarism Today.

article thumbnail

Music Labels ‘Vinyl’ Copyright Lawsuit Comes Too Late, Internet Archive Says

TorrentFreak

Founded in 1996, the Internet Archive has built an unparalleled library of digital artifacts in less than three decades. Many people are familiar with the website archiving project “Wayback Machine” but the non-profit also has many other preservation projects underway. These meticulous archiving skills are a vital part of the digital history books, which are being ‘written’ as we speak.

Music 115
article thumbnail

Iancu, Michel and Other PTAB Masters Panelists Float Ways to Make the System Better

IP Watchdog

Speakers at IPWatchdog’s PTAB Masters 2024 program this week predicted there will be little movement on the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office’s (USPTO) Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking anytime soon, but some pinned their hopes for change at the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB) to the pending Promoting and Respecting Economically Vital American Innovation Leadership (PREVAIL) Act.

Patent 105
article thumbnail

AI Inventorship Patent Options After UK Supreme Court Ruling

IP Law 360

The U.K. Supreme Court's recent ruling in Thaler v. Comptroller-General of Patents, Designs and Trade Marks that an AI system cannot be an inventor raises questions about alternative approaches to patent protection for AI-generated inventions and how the decision might affect infringement and validity disputes around such patents, says David Knight at Brown Rudnick.

Inventor 105
article thumbnail

Harvard’s Chief Diversity Officer Accused of Plagiarism

Plagiarism Today

In the latest plagiarism scandal involving Harvard, the school's chief diversity offer faces allegations of plagiarism in two separate works. The post Harvard’s Chief Diversity Officer Accused of Plagiarism appeared first on Plagiarism Today.

article thumbnail

Film Companies Counter Reddit: “An IP Address is Not a Person”

TorrentFreak

Over the past decade and a half, hundreds of thousands of alleged BitTorrent pirates were taken to court for sharing mostly video content without permission from rightsholders. While this activity is still ongoing, at least to a degree, not all courts have welcomed this type of lawsuit. On several occasions, courts dismissed piracy claims after ruling that “an IP address is not a person” In 2014, for example, Florida federal court Judge Ursula Ungaro dismissed a lawsuit ruling that I

IP 113
article thumbnail

Think You Understand Online Trespass to Chattels Law? Think Again–In re Meta Healthcare Pixels

Technology & Marketing Law Blog

This is one of the many pending “Pixel” cases. If you don’t recall, a “pixel” is a 1×1-pixel image file that is imperceptible to web visitors. A website adds code to its web page that summons the pixel from a third-party source. By delivering the pixel and related items like cookies, the third party can independently and automatically gather information about the web visitor.

Law 111
article thumbnail

Biden Admin and U.S. Chamber Clash Over IRA Drug Pricing Impact

IP Watchdog

Today, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) made its initial offers to pharmaceutical companies pursuant to the Biden Administration’s Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 (IRA), which allows the U.S. Government to “negotiate” Medicare drug prices under a set framework based upon the amount of time a drug has spent on the market. Opponents of the program, including the U.S.

article thumbnail

Some Thoughts on the Draft Patent (2nd Amendment) Rules, 2024

SpicyIP

Image from here [ This post has been co-authored with SpicyIP Intern Pranav Aggarwal. Pranav is a second-year student pursuing B.A.LL.B.(Hons) at Rajiv Gandhi National University of Law, Punjab. His previous post can be accessed here. ] On August 2, 2023, the extremely problematic Jan Vishwas Act, 2023 was passed by the Parliament. As highlighted by Aparajita, here and here , the amendments introduced by the Jan Vishwas Act, 2023 dilute the obligation to submit the working statement and introduc

Patent 106
article thumbnail

Jury finds Kat Von D tattoo does not infringe. But stand by.

The Illusion of More

Last Friday, a Los Angeles jury returned a verdict that celebrity tattoo artist Kat Von D did not infringe the copyright rights of photographer Jeff Sedlik when she made a tattoo that (it must be said) is strikingly similar to Sedlik’s portrait of Miles Davis. Sedlik filed a copyright infringement suit in response to Kat […] The post Jury finds Kat Von D tattoo does not infringe.

article thumbnail

Global Brand Protection – How to Manage an Anti-Counterfeiting Program

IP Tech Blog

For every successful brand, it is critical to properly protect and to productively develop and use the underlying intellectual property (IP) in that brand to ensure its long-term growth. Trademark and registered design portfolio It goes without saying: maintaining a comprehensive trademark portfolio is key. It is important for brand owners to register its core trademarks (both in relation to the overall brand names and in relation to any individual products which are produced by the brand owner)

Branding 101
article thumbnail

FTC Hosts Tech Summit on Artificial Intelligence

JD Supra Law

On Thursday, January 25, the Federal Trade Commission’s (FTC) Office of Technology hosted the FTC Tech Summit to discuss key developments in artificial intelligence (AI). The FTC brought together thought leaders from across the AI landscape to consider how to foster a fair and inclusive AI marketplace given the rapid development of large language models and generative AI.