“Fred is a total copyright rockstar. He has some of the deepest knowledge and most thoughtful views I have encountered in the world of IP. He knows the case law backwards and forwards and is a well regarded in influential thinker in the space. Anywhere he works is lucky to have him!”
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To no credible economist’s surprise, implementing a massive tax on the American public and creating massive uncertainty for businesses might be bad…
To no credible economist’s surprise, implementing a massive tax on the American public and creating massive uncertainty for businesses might be bad…
Liked by Fred von Lohmann
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We have surpassed 5M paying business users on ChatGPT, up from 3M in June. Our Team and Enterprise offerings make it simple for you to securely…
We have surpassed 5M paying business users on ChatGPT, up from 3M in June. Our Team and Enterprise offerings make it simple for you to securely…
Liked by Fred von Lohmann
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The Copyright Office recently released a new set of 100 digitized bound historical record volumes. We now have over 17,873 volumes online, and we’ll…
The Copyright Office recently released a new set of 100 digitized bound historical record volumes. We now have over 17,873 volumes online, and we’ll…
Liked by Fred von Lohmann
Experience & Education
Publications
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The New Wave: Copyright and Software Interfaces in the Wake of Oracle v. Google
Harvard Journal of Law and Technology
In the years following the Federal Circuit's 2014 ruling in Oracle v. Google, there has been a new wave of software interface cases that fit a recurring pattern: a market leader asserts a copyright claim over an interface - the method of operating the software - in an effort to bar a competitor from entering the market. The claim is not that the competitor is copying and redistributing the incumbent's source or object code. Instead, the allegation focuses on the competitor creating original…
In the years following the Federal Circuit's 2014 ruling in Oracle v. Google, there has been a new wave of software interface cases that fit a recurring pattern: a market leader asserts a copyright claim over an interface - the method of operating the software - in an effort to bar a competitor from entering the market. The claim is not that the competitor is copying and redistributing the incumbent's source or object code. Instead, the allegation focuses on the competitor creating original software that reimplements some or all of the interface. The goal in each of these cases is to force competitors to create an entirely original interface as a precondition of market entry, thereby keeping switching costs high for the incumbent's existing customers. It is difficult to see why copyright law should tolerate these kinds of claims, and their proliferation should trouble those interested in preserving competitive entry and innovation in software-driven industries.
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Google on what is driving creativity and innovation in the digital economy
WIPO Magazine
Much ink has been spilled explaining how the protection of exclusive rights in intellectual property (IP) has spurred innovation, creativity and culture. In today’s digital economy, however, a corollary to this axiom has emerged: Sensible limitations on those exclusive rights are just as crucial for innovation, creativity and culture. For copyright, in particular, limitations on exclusive rights are driving economic growth, opening new opportunities for creators and incubating new technologies.…
Much ink has been spilled explaining how the protection of exclusive rights in intellectual property (IP) has spurred innovation, creativity and culture. In today’s digital economy, however, a corollary to this axiom has emerged: Sensible limitations on those exclusive rights are just as crucial for innovation, creativity and culture. For copyright, in particular, limitations on exclusive rights are driving economic growth, opening new opportunities for creators and incubating new technologies. This perspective reveals limitations on and exceptions to copyright not as grudging concessions, but rather as coequal partners with exclusive rights in copyright’s mission to create incentives for culture and innovation.
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Fair Use as Innovation Policy
Berkeley Tech. Law Journal
American consumers increasingly take iPods, TiVos and similar private copying technologies for granted. Yet copyright law lacks a coherent account for this private, nontransformative copying. This article contends that copyright law's historical tolerance for such copying as a fair use has served as an important element of both copyright and innovation policy.
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Measuring the Digital Millennium Copyright Act Against the Darknet: Implications for the Regulation of Technological Protection Measures
Loyola of Los Angeles Entertainment Law Review
This paper argues that the DMCA fails in light of its stated goal—namely, reducing the threat of copyright infringement in the digital age. Trends in digital distribution technologies, moreover, indicate that any regulatory regime focused on TPMs as a solution to this problem may be doomed to fail. In short, the developments of the last five years suggest that policy-makers should reevaluate whether legal prohibitions against the circumvention of TPMs represent the best regulatory lever for…
This paper argues that the DMCA fails in light of its stated goal—namely, reducing the threat of copyright infringement in the digital age. Trends in digital distribution technologies, moreover, indicate that any regulatory regime focused on TPMs as a solution to this problem may be doomed to fail. In short, the developments of the last five years suggest that policy-makers should reevaluate whether legal prohibitions against the circumvention of TPMs represent the best regulatory lever for addressing what has come to be known as copyright’s “digital dilemma.”
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Closing out a long but inspiring week with this bad boy. Wish me luck, ya’ll. #northbeach #bucatini
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Day 4 of LexLab @ UC Law San Francisco's Law and Artificial Intelligence certification program (LAIC) started with a masterful class about the…
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An intellectual property right can easily pose obstacles to the sustainable reuse of protected material in the circular economy. But what if there is…
An intellectual property right can easily pose obstacles to the sustainable reuse of protected material in the circular economy. But what if there is…
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I have eagerly been awaiting this new report on the importance, efficacy, and powerful ripple effects of community-based approaches to reduce climate…
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