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Indiana Intellectual Property Blog

~ Trademark and Copyright Law Updates in Indiana

Indiana Intellectual Property Blog

Category Archives: Intellectual Property

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

Patent Professor Mark Janis to teach at IU-Bloomington

09 Monday Mar 2009

Posted by Kenan Farrell in Intellectual Property, Patent

≈ Leave a comment

janisWord on the street is that Mark Janis, one of the most highly cited patent law professors of all time, is leaving his longtime post at the University of Iowa to take up teaching at IU-Bloomington.

Professor Janis has taught courses in patents, trademarks and unfair competition, as well as seminars on advanced problems in intellectual property.  His scholarly research focuses on patent and trademark law, the intellectual property/antitrust interface, and intellectual property protection in the agricultural biotechnology industry.  Professor Janis is a member of the Indiana bar and is registered to practice before the United States Patent and Trademark Office.  He formerly practiced with Barnes & Thornburg in Indianapolis, Indiana, where he specialized in patent prosecution and litigation.

Prof. Janis is certainly a welcome return to the Indiana intellectual property community.

Kenny Crews to speak on Copyright Law and International Fair Use

04 Wednesday Mar 2009

Posted by Kenan Farrell in Copyright, Intellectual Property

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Copyright, Indiana, Intellectual Property

Copyright maven Kenny Crews will speak tomorrow at Yale University about his landmark 2008 study for the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), in which he compares fair use and other copyright limitations/exceptions across some 150 countries.kennycrews

Kenny Crews has a distinguished career in copyright and fair use issues. He is currently the Director of the Copyright Advisory Office at Columbia University.  Until his appointment at Columbia in January 2009, he 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.

Th speech is co-hosted by the Yale University Library and the Yale Law School’s Information Society Project.

When: Thursday, March 5, 3:00 p.m.
Where: Sterling Memorial Library Lecture Hall, 128 Wall Street
Cost: Free and open to public

Disclosure – Kenny Crews taught my Intellectual Property & Copyright courses back in law school. Therefore, I’d have to hold him at least partially responsible for my career in intellectual property law.  He’s an enthusiastic and engaging speaker.  I look forward to seeing the results of his study.

What I’m Reading

11 Wednesday Feb 2009

Posted by Kenan Farrell in Intellectual Property, What I'm Reading

≈ Leave a comment

On top of all the blogs, law journals, and case updates that I read each day, I also make sure to set aside time to read one Intellectual Property or Tech law book each month.  When I find a book that might be useful for clients, I’ll post a quick review:

Intellectual Property: The Tough New Realities That Could Make or Break Your Business by Paul Goldstein, Stanford Law School.

GoldsteinThe Amazon description:

“The definitive guide to intellectual property for business managers.

How can a product of the mind—an innovation, a song, a logo, a business secret—become the subject of precise property rights? No idea is entirely original; every innovative business borrows, sometimes extensively, from its competitors and others. So how do we draw the line between fair and unfair use?

Billions of dollars ride on that question, as do the fates of publishers, software producers, drug companies, advertising firms, and many others. It’s also a key question for individuals—for instance, if you quit your job after mastering the company’s secrets, what can you do with that information?

With the growth of the internet and global markets, having a smart IP strategy is more essential than ever. Intellectual Property is the ideal book for non-lawyers who deal with patents, trade secrets, trademarks, and copyrights—all essential business issues that have changed rapidly in the last few years.

Every business decision that involves IP is also a legal decision, and every legal decision is also a business decision. Lawyers and managers need to work together to navigate these murky waters, and this book shows how.”

My take:

Paul Goldstein is a frequent author on intellectual property topics.  In fact, he’s written all types of books…fiction novels, treatises, textbooks and “General Interest” works like the book above.  I recall using one of his IP textbooks back in law school.

Intellectual Property: The Tough New Realities That Could Make or Break Your Business provides a nice ground-level view of intellectual property.  Each area of IP law (patent, trademark, copyright, trade secret) is placed into historical context, helping the reader understand the current state of the law and to identify trends for the future.   Goldstein provides the principles and rationales behind our laws, to help the reader understand the ongoing struggle to define the boundaries of IP protection.  The book also details the influence of heavyweight industries (biotech, software/electronics, movie studios and music labels) in expanding and contracting IP law via lobbying and strategic litigation.  Besides being useful to anyone with an interest in basic intellectual property law, this book can also be helpful to experienced IP attorneys in that it can suggest new ways to express complicated IP concepts in layman terms.

“The central lesson of this book is that every decision involving intellectual assets is ultimately a legal decision, and that every legal decision is at bottom a business decision. If intellectual property is economically too important to be left to lawyers, it is also too legally charged to be left to managers.”

 

What I'm Reading

11 Wednesday Feb 2009

Posted by Kenan Farrell in Intellectual Property, What I'm Reading

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Intellectual Property

On top of all the blogs, law journals, and case updates that I read each day, I also make sure to set aside time to read one Intellectual Property or Tech law book each month.  When I find a book that might be useful for clients, I’ll post a quick review:

Intellectual Property: The Tough New Realities That Could Make or Break Your Business by Paul Goldstein, Stanford Law School.

GoldsteinThe Amazon description:

“The definitive guide to intellectual property for business managers.

How can a product of the mind—an innovation, a song, a logo, a business secret—become the subject of precise property rights? No idea is entirely original; every innovative business borrows, sometimes extensively, from its competitors and others. So how do we draw the line between fair and unfair use?

Billions of dollars ride on that question, as do the fates of publishers, software producers, drug companies, advertising firms, and many others. It’s also a key question for individuals—for instance, if you quit your job after mastering the company’s secrets, what can you do with that information?

With the growth of the internet and global markets, having a smart IP strategy is more essential than ever. Intellectual Property is the ideal book for non-lawyers who deal with patents, trade secrets, trademarks, and copyrights—all essential business issues that have changed rapidly in the last few years.

Every business decision that involves IP is also a legal decision, and every legal decision is also a business decision. Lawyers and managers need to work together to navigate these murky waters, and this book shows how.”

My take:

Paul Goldstein is a frequent author on intellectual property topics.  In fact, he’s written all types of books…fiction novels, treatises, textbooks and “General Interest” works like the book above.  I recall using one of his IP textbooks back in law school.

Intellectual Property: The Tough New Realities That Could Make or Break Your Business provides a nice ground-level view of intellectual property.  Each area of IP law (patent, trademark, copyright, trade secret) is placed into historical context, helping the reader understand the current state of the law and to identify trends for the future.   Goldstein provides the principles and rationales behind our laws, to help the reader understand the ongoing struggle to define the boundaries of IP protection.  The book also details the influence of heavyweight industries (biotech, software/electronics, movie studios and music labels) in expanding and contracting IP law via lobbying and strategic litigation.  Besides being useful to anyone with an interest in basic intellectual property law, this book can also be helpful to experienced IP attorneys in that it can suggest new ways to express complicated IP concepts in layman terms.

“The central lesson of this book is that every decision involving intellectual assets is ultimately a legal decision, and that every legal decision is at bottom a business decision. If intellectual property is economically too important to be left to lawyers, it is also too legally charged to be left to managers.”

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