article thumbnail

A more robust internal licensing market would boost China’s IP development

IAM Magazine

Saturday Opinion: Recent signs point toward more patent licensing negotiations between Chinese tech companies. That’s good news for the country’s IP system.

article thumbnail

3 Count: Slumlord Millionaire

Plagiarism Today

In 1981, Goldsmith licensed a photo that she took of the musician Prince to Vanity Fair magazine, with the intent that the magazine would have Warhol create a painting based on it. This prompted his lawsuit, claiming that Netflix took his ideas, concepts and even marketing direction.

Fair Use 181
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

3 Count: Warhol Battle

Plagiarism Today

In 1984, Lynn licensed one of her photographs of the musician Prince to be converted into a painting by Warhol for Vanity Fair magazine. The 3 Count Logo was created by Justin Goff and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License. 2: Textile Designer Sues Zulily for Copyright Infringement.

article thumbnail

Early patent licensing strategy, investment helped GE Licensing revolutionise LED displays

IAM Magazine

As its PFS licensing programme turns 10, GE’s IP executives reflect on lessons learned in cracking a brand new market

article thumbnail

CCC Participates in Key Academic Conferences

Velocity of Content

CCC will be showcasing its licensing and permissions services at three major conferences in the Academic market: ISTE, NCSA, and ALA in June 2024. CCC provides copyright licensing and content solutions for the world’s most sought-after books, journals, magazines, newspapers, and more. Visit us at Booth 641!

article thumbnail

No Free Use in the Purple Rain – U.S. Supreme Court Finds License of Andy Warhol’s “Orange Prince” Infringes Photographer’s Copyright

LexBlog IP

In 1984, Vanity Fair sought to license the photograph for an “artist reference” in a story about the musician. Goldsmith agreed to license a one-time use of the photograph with full attribution. AWF licensed the “Orange Prince” to Condé Nast for an article about Prince.

article thumbnail

What Goldsmith Means to AI Trainers

IP Intelligence

Warhol created these silkscreens from a photograph of Prince taken by Lynn Goldsmith, who claimed copyright infringement when the Warhol estate licensed Orange Prince to Conde Nast after Prince’s passing in 2016 to illustrate an article about Prince’s life and music. at 1289 (Gorsuch, concurring) (emphasis added). at 1290 (Gorsuch, J.,

Fair Use 105