0 results for 'The Wall Street Journal'
Supreme Court Reaffirms Prior Registration Requirement for Infringement Actions
Copyright Law columnists Robert J. Bernstein and Robert W. Clarida discuss 'Fourth Estate Public Benefit v. Wall-Street.com, et al.', one of two recent, unanimous Supreme Court opinions construing provisions of the Copyright Act relating to procedural requirements for commencing infringement actions and interpreting the term “full costs” in awarding them to the prevailing party.No Shortcut to Copyright Registration, High Court Rules
Applying and paying is not enough to clear the way for an infringement suit, the U.S. Supreme Court justices ruled in a blow to owners. The copyright register must also sign off, which can take weeks.Photographer Accuses Attorney General's Campaign of Copyright Infringement
A professional photographer is suing the campaign of Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr, claiming that the campaign of the state's top legal officer used a photograph without securing permission or a licensing agreement. Another photographer has a similar infringement suit pending against Gov. Brian Kemp's campaign.Photographer Sues Georgia GOP, Kemp Campaign for Copyright Infringement
The photo in question is of Democratic gubernatorial challenger Stacey Abrams, which was originally published in The New York Times.View more book results for the query "The Wall Street Journal"
Copyright Owners Face Uphill Battle at Supreme Court
Several justices sounded convinced that the Copyright Act requires owners to complete registration before suing for infringement, even though the process can take more than a year.Inside Track: Right Click for Not Happy. Plus, Hacking in the Rain and In-House Movers
Welcome back. I'm Law.com reporter Dan Clark and this is the latest edition of your favorite newsletter Inside Track. This week, eyes have been…What's Next: Law Bot Goes Berserk, Plus: Google's Watchful Eye
In a major automation fail, a bot sent a hefty batch of bogus DMCA notices. Also on deck: Could Google's secretly keeping tabs on users mean legal action?Judge Denies New Trial in Street Art Case, Faults Property Owner for 'Misleading' Court
Judge Frederic Block said that at a trial held last year to explore protections for artists' works housed at the 5Pointz aerosol art gallery in Long Island City, Queens, the judge discovered that property owner Gerald Wolkoff had previously misled about his required timeline for razing the buildings that make up 5Pointz.5Pointz Artists Awarded $6.75M in Damages
If a building owner finds itself in a position where it must remove art protected by VARA and no written VARA waiver was obtained, the owner should proceed cautiously and in good faith in the destruction or removal of the art.Corporate Transparency Act Resource Kit
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