Archives

  • Open Source Innovation, Patent Injunctions, and the Public Interest
    By: James Boyle This Article explores the difficulties that high technology markets pose for patent law and, in particular, for patent injunctions. It then outlines the ways in which “open source innovation” is unusually ...
  • Ensuring an Impartial Jury in the Age of Social Media
    By: Amy J. St. Eve & Michael A. Zuckerman The explosive growth of social networking has placed enormous pressure on one of the most fundamental of American institutions—the impartial jury. Through social networking services ...
  • The “25% Rule” for Patent Infringement Damages After Uniloc
    By: Roy J. Epstein The 2011 decision by the Federal Circuit in Uniloc v. Microsoft properly condemned the “25% Rule,” which bases a reasonable royalty on 25% of an infringer’s profits. Nonetheless, at least ...
  • The Path of Internet Law: An Annotated Guide to Legal Landmarks
    By: Michael L. Rustad & Diane D’Angelo The evolution of the Internet has forever changed the legal landscape. The Internet is the world’s largest marketplace, copy machine, and instrumentality for committing crimes, torts, and ...
  • Copyright for Couture
    By: Loni Schutte Fashion design in America has never been covered by the extensive intellectual property (IP) protections afforded to other categories of creative works or to the art in other countries. As a ...