Niklas Bruun, Graeme B. Dinwoodie (Chicago-Kent College of Law), Marianne Levin, Ansgar Ohly
The nature and content of intellectual property (IP) law, which is heavily contingent on the state of technology and on social and market developments, has always been subject to ongoing transitions. How those transitions are effected and the shape they take is crucial to the ability of IP to achieve its stated goals and provide the necessary climate for investment in creativity, innovation and brand differentiation. Yet the need for change can run headlong into a desire for coherence. A search for coherence tests the limits of the concept of “intellectual property,” is imperiled by...
The nature and content of intellectual property (IP) law, which is heavily contingent on the state of technology and on social and market developments...
Niklas Bruun, Graeme B. Dinwoodie (Chicago-Kent College of Law), Marianne Levin, Ansgar Ohly
The nature and content of intellectual property (IP) law, which is heavily contingent on the state of technology and on social and market developments, has always been subject to ongoing transitions. How those transitions are effected and the shape they take is crucial to the ability of IP to achieve its stated goals and provide the necessary climate for investment in creativity, innovation and brand differentiation. Yet the need for change can run headlong into a desire for coherence. A search for coherence tests the limits of the concept of “intellectual property,” is imperiled by...
The nature and content of intellectual property (IP) law, which is heavily contingent on the state of technology and on social and market developments...