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Book Review: Research Handbook on IP and Moral Rights

The IPKat

This is a book review of the Research Handbook on Intellectual Property and Moral Rights , curated by Ysolde Gendreau (Université de Montréal, Canada), provided by Francesca Mazzi , Lecturer in AI, Innovation and Law at Brunel University London. Such gestures couldn't be overlooked in a book on moral rights.

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WIPIP Session 8 (copyright)

43(B)log

Karp agrees that (c) is not like land, which preexisted the public domain and was acquired and distributed by gov’t. (c) c) does grant authors “rights in something he created” and that “already belong to him” at common law and is taken after a few short years from him and his heirs. Cites Henry George.

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AI and Intellectual Property: Ethics and Morality in the Age of Artificial Intelligence

IP and Legal Filings

AI has created new legal issues as its capabilities continue to advance, especially when it comes to identifying who owns what rights and ownership of works or innovations. Patent law has historically acknowledged that people are the ones who create new technology. This led to a historic court dispute in both the US and the UK.