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December 20, 2021 | Law.com

Recent Rulings on 'Embedding' Foreshadow Circuit Split: What Does That Mean For Content Use Now?

When and how can you display someone else's visual content on your website without running afoul of copyright law? When and how can someone else display your visual content? A recent ruling out of the Southern District of New York may upend the current paradigm.
17 minute read
December 08, 2021 | Texas Lawyer

Can a Law Student Sue Their Law School When It Profits Off The Student's Name, Image, and Likeness?

Ultimately, when a business uses someone to craft a redemption narrative, they need to be prepared when it goes profoundly wrong, as it has for Ryerson University here.
6 minute read
November 12, 2021 | Texas Lawyer

Can the Law Really Accommodate NFTs?

The notion of possessing something online that is truly unique is where most people think the value of NFTs is - but this is a misconception. The real value comes in being able to prove ownership of the original from which everything else was derived.
5 minute read
September 13, 2019 | New York Law Journal

Taylor Swift Shines Spotlight on Re-Recordings

This July, Taylor Swift voiced strong dissatisfaction with not owning her early recordings, which were sold by her former record label. Her efforts to purchase the masters for herself reportedly failed when the transaction was conditioned on her remaining with the label, and it has been suggested that she might re-record several albums to compete with the originals. In their Entertainment Law column, Neil J. Rosini and Michael I. Rudell discuss the situation, which has shined a spotlight on re-recording restrictions in agreements between recording artists and their record labels.
7 minute read
August 02, 2019 | Law.com

Skilled in the Art: Federal Circuit Gets to Core of $440M Apple Appeal + Will UC Litigation Funding Deal Embolden Other Schools?

The full Federal Circuit has signed off on a $440 million patent infringement judgment against Apple.
6 minute read
July 31, 2019 | New York Law Journal

Networks Sue Locast, a Service That Streams TV for Free

The country's biggest TV networks — ABC, CBS, NBC and Fox — have sued Locast, a streaming service that transmits their broadcasts for free, in federal court in New York.
3 minute read
July 01, 2019 | National Law Journal

Orrick Partner Again Advising on Local TV Initiative

David Hosp and Locast founder David Goodfriend say they've found a way to retransmit local TV broadcasts over the Internet without violating copyright laws.
4 minute read
May 31, 2019 | Law.com

Whistle Stop: 'Andy Griffith Show' Theme Writers' Heirs Sue CBS Over Alleged Copyright Violation

The heirs of Earle Hagen and Herbert Spencer, the composers of "Theme for 'The Andy Griffith Show,'" claim CBS is using the theme without a license on DVDs of the TV show.
2 minute read
August 21, 2018 | Law.com

Skilled in the Art: Good Luck, Bad Luck in Copyrights + IP Fee Lit Practice Tip

A look at events leading to Irell & Manella's defeat in an appeal over the rights to pre-1972 sound recordings and more big lateral news in the IP space.
7 minute read
August 21, 2018 | Litigation Daily

Daily Dicta: In EpiPen Suit, Kansas Judge Sticks it to Mylan

When you've got a 6-year-old who suddenly can't breathe, the notion of an EpiPen as a profit center becomes obscene.
7 minute read

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