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I believe that Winston & Strawn will eventually prevail based upon a fairuse defense, but it is still an embarrassing situation for the firm and attorneys involved. In this case, HLG alleges that Winston & Strawn plagiarized a motion to dismiss that HLG had filed on behalf of a client in an earlier consolidated patent case.
De La Santos mentions these allegations in his response to the lawsuit, which also makes arguments of fairuse and that he is an “innocent infringer,” an argument that could potentially lessen any damages against him. The post 3 Count: Nirvana’s Inferno appeared first on Plagiarism Today.
“Defendants are taking the Publishers’ work with impunity and are using the Publishers’ journalism to create GenAI products that undermine the Publishers’ core businesses by retransmitting ‘their content’—in some cases verbatim from the Publishers’ paywalled websites—to their readers.”
“Defendants are taking the Publishers’ work with impunity and are using the Publishers’ journalism to create GenAI products that undermine the Publishers’ core businesses by retransmitting ‘their content’—in some cases verbatim from the Publishers’ paywalled websites—to their readers.”
The Centre for Intellectual Property Research and Advocacy [CIPRA] of Symbiosis Law School, Hyderabad is organizing its first blog writing competition in collaboration with us on the theme of Literature, Journalism and IP. Analysing the impact of Indian copyright law on fairuse in academic and critical writing.
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