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Indiana Intellectual Property Blog

~ Trademark and Copyright Law Updates in Indiana

Indiana Intellectual Property Blog

Category Archives: Copyright

Sotomayor's Supreme Court Case History – Intellectual Property

28 Thursday May 2009

Posted by Kenan Farrell in Copyright, Intellectual Property, Litigation, Supreme Court

≈ Leave a comment

During Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor’s 17 years as a federal judge, the U.S. Supreme Court has reviewed her decisions on at least eight occasions, including the following copyright case:

Tasini vs. New York Times, et al (1997), 972 F. Supp. 804: As a district court judge in 1997, Sotomayor heard a case brought by a group of freelance journalists who asserted that various news organizations, including the New York Times, violated copyright laws by reproducing the freelancers’ work on electronic databases and archives such as “Lexis/Nexis” without first obtaining their permission. Sotomayor ruled against the freelancers and said that publishers were within their rights as outlined by the 1976 Copyright Act. The appellate court reversed Sotomayor’s decision, siding with the freelancers, and the Supreme Court upheld the appellate decision (therefore rejecting Sotomayor’s original ruling). Justices Stevens and Breyer dissented, taking Sotomayor’s position.

Source: CNN

Indiana Copyright Litigation Update

13 Wednesday May 2009

Posted by Kenan Farrell in Copyright, Litigation

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NEW Copyright Ligitation Alert:

Court Case Number: 4:09-cv-00035-AS-PRC
File Date: Tuesday, May 05, 2009
Plaintiff: UMG Recordings Inc, Atlantic Recording Corporation, Sony Music Entertainment
Plaintiff Counsel: James Dimos, Joel E. Tragesser of Frost Brown Todd LLC
Defendant: Alexander Schmidt
Cause: 17:501 Copyright Infringement
Court: Indiana Northern District Court
Judge: Judge Allen Sharp
Referred To: Magistrate Judge Paul R. Cherry

Kenny Crews on Protecting Your Scholarship

11 Monday May 2009

Posted by Kenan Farrell in Copyright, Intellectual Property

≈ Leave a comment

kenny-crewsKenneth Crews, copyright maven and founding director of the Copyright Advisory Office at Columbia University, spoke today at an event co-sponsored by the Harvard Office for Scholarly Communication, Harvard Law School Library, and the Berkman Center for Internet and Society.  Professor Crews discussed the issues affecting authors and creators of copyrightable works, from books, articles, lectures and class notes, to software, databases, websites, schematics, drawings, blueprints, renderings, movies, songs, lyrics, sculpture, choreography, landscape designs, and many other products of human creativity.

To listen to a full mp3 of the discussion, visit the Berkman Center’s podcast website.

Until his appointment at Columbia in January 2009, Kenny Crews was a professor at Indiana University School of Law – Indianapolis and the IU School of Library and Information Science. His work has won wide acclaim, and he has been active in projects and initiatives on copyright law in the United States and around the world. You can read more about his work here.

Indiana Copyright Litigation Update

24 Friday Apr 2009

Posted by Kenan Farrell in Copyright, Litigation

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Brooks-Ngwenya v. Indianapolis Public Schools (U.S. Court Of Appeals, Seventh Circuit)
No: 08-1973 (April 15, 2009)
Before: Posner, Williams, and Tinder

COPYRIGHT; RIGHT TO SUE (Registration denial does not preclude an applicant from initiating a copyright suit.)

Opinion (Per Curiam): Brooks-Ngwenya, a middle school teacher sued the Indianapolis Public Schools (“IPS”) for copyright infringement related to an educational program that she had developed.  The District Court granted summary judgment to IPS, on the ground that Brooks-Ngwenya’s copyright registration was denied prior to the filing of the suit.  The Seventh Circuit disagreed with this reasoning by relying on section 411(a) of the Copyright Act, which allows an applicant to file a copyright suit, even if the registration was denied.  Brooks-Ngwenya claimed that IPS copied the ideas of her program, without proving that IPS copied the documents related to her educational program.  Therefore, on substantive grounds, the Seventh Circuit found that Brooks-Ngwenya’s copyright claim failed due to the lack of evidence that IPS copied the original expression of Brooks-Ngwenya’s idea, since the idea itself is not copyrightable.  Affirmed.

Click here for full opinion.

Source: Willamette Law Online

ips2

Dear KLF Legal,

05 Sunday Apr 2009

Posted by Kenan Farrell in Copyright, Dear KLF Legal, Intellectual Property

≈ 2 Comments

From time to time, people write in with short questions about intellectual property law. We’re always happy to help educate the public about their IP rights, so KLF Legal tries to respond to each inquiry as best we can. The answers tend to be brief since the questions don’t typically include a lot of information. However, I thought it might be helpful to share these questions from time to time in a new post category entitled “Dear KLF Legal”…enjoy!

Dear KLF Legal,

Q: Can I use public & historical names for characters I intend to use in a fictional book? Example: doll A is General Patton & doll B is Tai Babalonia.

A: Juliet:
“What’s in a name? That which we call a rose
By any other name would smell as sweet.”
Romeo and Juliet (II, ii, 1-2)

Intellectual property law will not generally prevent you from using the names of historical figures. While certain figures have protected their names as trademarks in connection with specific goods or services, names alone will not be protected.

If you start to go beyond use of a name into utilizing the likeness or persona of historical figures, you’ll want to consider not only trademark but “right of publicity” law. The right of publicity is generally defined as an individual’s right to control and profit from the commercial use of his/her name, likeness and persona. Take a look at “right of publicity” resources on the internet and familiarize yourself with the requirements.

Hope this helps.

KLF Legal

Dear KLF Legal

Q: My Chiropractor is accused of using another companies Q & A on her website. She in fact found the info elsewhere and the page the company says she took it from is not accessible unless you know it’s there – there are no links to it. The company sent a letter demanding she remove the content AND pay them $1400 – OR she can sign up with them to provide a site redesign and hosting for a nominal monthly fee. Can they do this? She’s removed the content but is what they’ve demanded acceptable?

A: They can absolutely attempt to do that. Here are some key things she should be thinking about:

First, can she identify the location where she found the info? If so, she could prove she did not copy their work. Even if the info is identical, if she didn’t copy them, she won’t be subject to copyright penalties.

Second, not all information is copyrightable. Facts and ideas are not. On the other hand, the layout of facts is copyrightable. She might want to have a copyright attorney review the information to determine whether it’s even something that can be protected by copyright law.

As far as whether what they’ve requested is acceptable, I’ll give you an idea about copyright damages. If their work has been registered with the U.S. Copyright Office (which presumably it was prior to sending the demand letter), they could be eligible to receive statutory damages ranging from $750-30,000. If the infringement is considered willful, the award could be up to $150,000. So some level of risk definitely exists if she’s shown to have copied their work.

Hope this helps.

KLF Legal

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