Skip to content
NYU Journal of Intellectual Property & Entertainment Law
  • About
  • Blog
    • Privacy Papers Series
  • Submit
  • Masthead
    • Past Mastheads
  • Issues
  • Symposium
    • Past Symposia
  • Sponsors
  • Contact & Subscribe
Ledger Vol. 2 – No. 1

Student Speech in Online Social Networking Sites: Where to Draw the Line

Nov 22, 2010 Michael J. Kasdan

Do Facebook, Twitter, and MySpace require courts to Tinker with the Supreme Court’s student speech trilogy of Tinker to Bethel to Morse?Michael J. Kasdan examines the struggle to define the proper place of so-called “student internet speech.”

Ledger Vol. 2 – No. 1

Regulating the Film Industry in China: A New Approach

Nov 22, 2010 Brian R. Byrne

For U.S. filmmakers, the People’s Republic of China represents a prodigious market opportunity. Yet, true exploitation of the market is simply chimerical due to an obstinate web of import quotas,…

Ledger Vol. 1 – No. 2

Student-Athletes and the NCAA: Playing by the Rules

Apr 26, 2010 Steven Olenick

When student-athletes seek representation or advisement to evaluate post-collegiate playing opportunities, their eligibility may be in jeopardy. Steven Olenick suggests a checks and balance system to truly evaluate post-collegiate playing opportunities for…

Ledger Vol. 1 – No. 2

Contributory Liability for Trademark Counterfeiting in an Ecommerce World

Apr 26, 2010 Scott Gelin And G Roxanne Elings

Scott Gelin and G Roxanne Elings analyze the current standard of contributory liability in the wake of Tiffany (NJ) Inc. v. eBay, in which the Second Circuit affirmed the Southern District’s finding that eBay…

Ledger Vol. 1 – No. 2

Using Clean Hands to Justify Unclean Hands: How the Emergency Exception Provision of the SCA Misapplies an Already Controversial Doctrine

Apr 26, 2010 Brendan J. Coffman

While the government’s encouragement—and even reliance—on third-party monitoring of citizens is not a new phenomenon, the emergency exception to the SCA adopted in the Patriot Act oversteps constitutional bounds by…

Ledger Vol. 1 – No. 2

Software Developers, On Guard!: Offering Software for Sale Can Trigger a Bar to Patentability Even If the Software Is Untested and Incomplete

Apr 26, 2010 Paul A. Ragusa and Jack Chen

Paul A. Ragusa and Jack Chen discuss the on-sale bar to patentability in the context of nascent software. They conclude that a simple investigation concerning whether software code was complete at the time…

Ledger Vol. 1 – No. 1

Foreign Formats – Licensing Optional?: Why ABC’s “Bombshell” Memo regarding Foreign Formats Isn’t Scandalous at All

Dec 2, 2009 Alexandra Schwartz

On June 24, 2008, ABC Executive Vice President Howard Davine wrote a memo to ABC’s executive producers and show-runners which suggested that there may be no need to license a…

Ledger Vol. 1 – No. 1

Girl Talk, Fair Use, and Three Hundred Twenty-Two Reasons for Copyright Reform

Dec 2, 2009 Brian Pearl

The music of the artist known as Girl Talk consists of hundreds of pre-existing samples taken without permission from popular songs. As Girl Talk becomes more prominent, lawyers, journalists and…

Ledger Vol. 1 – No. 1

A New Model for Music Finance

Dec 2, 2009 Josh Kaplan

Josh Kaplan proposes an alternative business model to the “360 deal.” By taking advantage of finance structures more traditionally employed by software and tech start-ups, musicians can partner with equity investors…

Ledger Vol. 1 – No. 1

Elite Knockoffs and Nascent Designers

Dec 2, 2009 David H. Faux

The current debate over increased protection for fashion design is largely focused on whether additional protection is necessary or if it is actually counter-productive for the industry. The proper contrast…

Posts pagination

1 … 65 66 67
Recent Blog Posts
  • JIPEL Vol. 14 No. 2 May 5, 2025
  • The AI Input Class: Constitutional Urgency and Fair Licensing in AI Copyright Class Actions May 5, 2025
  • Unenforceable ‘Infringement’: The Benefits of Makeup Dupes and Legal Copying May 5, 2025
  • Beyond Privacy: Regulating ChatGPT for Young Adults in Educational Contexts May 5, 2025
  • An Empirical Analysis of ‘Scandalous’ and ‘Obscene’ Trade Marks in India May 5, 2025
Archives
Topics
Advertising
Antitrust
Art
Artificial Intelligence
Blockchain
Contracts
Copyright
COVID-19
Criminal Law
Cyber Security
Data Sovereignty
Department of Labor
Entertainment
Environment
Fair Dealing
Fair Use
Fashion
Film / TV
First Amendment
FRAND
Free Speech
Gambling
Healthcare
Industrial Design
Intellectual Property
International Law
Internet
Internet of Things
JIPEL Blog 2016-2017
Misappropriation
Music
NFL
NFTs
Open Source
Patent
Patent Litigation
Pharmaceutical
Photography
Privacy
Social Media
Software
Sports
Tax
Technology
Trade Dress
Trade Secret
Trademark
Unfair Competition
NYU Journal of Intellectual Property & Entertainment Law

Proudly powered by WordPress | Theme: Newsup by Themeansar.