Parody - it's a Scream; Final JIPLP for 2006
The Gowers Review proposes introducing into UK copyright law a variety of fresh defences to an action for copyright infringement, for example that the allegedly infringing copy is a parody, pastiche, caricature or tranformative use. Today is the posthumous birthday of Norwegian artist Edvard Munch, whose painting The Scream (right) has been adapted for the Google search page (below) to mark the event.
Right: Luxembourg in the snow.European Court of Justice employees are following the tracks of a patent infringement suit, to see whether it crosses the border ...
Issue 13 of the Journal of Intellectual Property Law and Practice (JIPLP), published by Oxford University Press, is now published. Exciting features in this issue include
* The rise and fall of cross-border jurisdiction and remedies in IP disputes: Paul Joseph (Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer, London) gives a pithily diagrammatic account of the law in Europe following the recent ECJ decisions, while Marc Döring and Francis van Velsen (Simmons & Simmons) view the same issue from a civil lawyer's perspective;Full contents of this issue here
* Toronto practitioners Ronald E. Dimock and Sangeetha Punniyamoorthy (Dimock Stratton) pick up a familiar theme on theneed for equilibrium between the needs of copyright owners and users of their works in the digital age, but give it a freshly Canadian flavour;
Right: no, not that sort of digital balance ...
* Christian Rohnke (academic-cum-White & Case partner, Hamburg) savages the European Commission's approach towards dictating how Microsoft can brand its own products.
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