Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Joker Obama: Copyright Infringement or Political Parody?


It’s certainly no joke. Yet another image of Obama has stirred up “copyright infringement concerns,” according to the photo-sharing website Flickr. This time, the image features U.S. President Barack Obama painted with the Joker’s clown makeup from the movie, “The Dark Knight.” Firas Alkhateeb, a 20-year-old college student from Chicago, created the image by using Adobe Photoshop to “Jockerize” the Obama photo. During the time that the Obama-Joker photo was hosted on Flickr.com, it generated over 20,000 pageviews until Alkhateeb received an email from the website informing him that the photo had been removed due to “copyright infringement concerns.” Now, many are lashing out at the website, insisting that image constitutes fair use as a political parody, a protected form of free speech. For this reason, there has been much controversy over whether Flickr’s removal amounted to political censorship.

More about this story can be found at LA Times.

Monday, May 4, 2009

Prof. Christopher Yoo on "The Transformation of the Internet"

The emergence of the Internet as the dominant means of communication over the past decade represents one of the most remarkable developments of our nation's technological history. A medium that began as a way for academics to send e-mail and exchange files has become a nearly ubiquitous phenomenon that has transformed almost every aspect of daily life.

The vision of the Internet as it existed in the late 1990s continues to serve as the starting point for current debates over communications policy. In framing the issues in this manner, policymakers overlook important changes in the economic and technological environment surrounding the Internet, including:

* The number and nature of Internet users
* The nature and variety of Internet applications
* The variety of networking and end user technologies
* The diversity of business relationships
* The maturation of the industry

In this lecture, delivered on April 21, 2009, Professor Christopher Yoo of the University of Pennsylvania Law School analyzed the nature of these changes and explored their potential for reframing current debates over Internet policy.

Friday, April 10, 2009

SEAS will host Lawrence Lessig on Friday the 17th.

The page with information about the event does not specify whether the event is open to the entire campus or not. The information is as follows:

For anyone who has ever used an image or other digital media under the "creative commons" license, or who would like to learn more about digital rights and intellectual property issues with respect to the internet, the following event will be of particular interest:

"Change v2: What Changes Obama Will Need"
Lawrence Lessig, Professor of Law, Stanford Law School
Friday, April 17, 2009, 5:00 pm
Location: Wu and Chen Auditorium, Levine Hall

In discussing the advice being given to our elected officials and current technological policies, Lessig, founder of the creative commons, will bring to light current problems and issues we now face when it comes to copyright law in a digital platform.

Lessig is a professor of law at Stanford Law School and is a former board member of the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), was advisor on technical issues to Barack Obama during his presidential campaign, and is author of several books on the policy issues of intellectual property.

This event is sponsored by Penn Engineering, the Science and Technology Wing and The Dining Philosophers.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Symposium: Global Trademark Protection

The second panel presentation discussed trademark protection in a globalized world. Panelists discussed the economics of trademark protection, new issues in protecting trademarks internationally, and the impact of the recession on counterfeiting. Speakers on the panel included:

Moderator: The Honorable Kent Jordan, Third Circuit Court of Appeals
Glenn Gundersen, Dechert LLP
Marcia Paul, Davis Wright Tremaine LLP
Jef Pearlman, Public Knowledge
Martin Schwimmer, Trademark Blog and Moses & Singer
Peter Vogl, Jones Day


Symposium: Trademark Use in Virtual Environments

The first panel presentation of the day discussed the use of trademarks in virtual environments. Panelists discussed what it means to have virtual trademark, how trademarks in virtual worlds differ from real-world trademarks, and what types of issues arise in the new medium. Speakers on the panel included:

Moderator: Professor Christopher Yoo, University of Pennsylvania Law School
Bryce Coughlin, Steptoe & Johnson
Kevin Goldstein, Stradley Ronon Stevens & Young, LLP
James Grimmelmann, New York Law School
Sharon Marsh, US Patent & Trademark Office

Video Coming Soon

Friday, March 27, 2009

PIPG to Host International Trademark Symposium

Penn Intellectual Property Group's second annual symposium, to be held on Wednesday, April 1st, is titled "Trademark Law in a Global Economy." We are interested in exploring modern issues in trademark law that have arisen as a result of the globalization of businesses and the rise of the Internet. Specific panel topics are (1) trademark use in virtual environments, and (2) trademark protection in a globalized world (discussing the trademark problems businesses face as they attempt to expand globally, as well as the increasing importance of the Internet for global IP law).

The symposium will be held on the Penn Law campus in Philadelphia, and will run from approximately 10:00am - 3:00pm.

PIPG would like to thank Jones Day for its generous support.

The full schedule is as follows:

10:00: Check-in and breakfast

10:30-12:00: Panel 1
“Trademark Use in Virtual Environments”
Moderator: Prof. Christopher Yoo
• Bryce Coughlin, Steptoe & Johnson
• Kevin Goldstein, Stradley Ronon Stevens & Young
• James Grimmelmann, New York Law School
• Sharon Marsh, U.S. Patent & Trademark Office

12:00-12:30: Lunch

12:30-1:15: Bret Parker, VP, Chief Trademark & Copyright Counsel, and Asst. GC, Wyeth
"View from the Corporate Frontline: Practical Thoughts on the Benefits and Pitfalls for Brand Owners in the Global Online World"

1:15-1:30: Break

1:30-3:00: Panel 2
“Trademark Protection in a Globalized World”
Moderator: The Hon. Kent Jordan
• Glenn Gundersen, Dechert
• Marcia Paul, Davis Wright Tremaine
• Jef Pearlman, Public Knowledge
• Martin Schwimmer, Moses & Singer
• Peter Vogl, Jones Day

If you are a practicing attorney or a law student and you would like to attend, please contact me at karenac@law.upenn.edu. There are 3.5 CLE credits available for this event.

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

VIDEO: FCC Commissioner Deborah Taylor Tate at Penn Law

In December, FCC Commissioner Deborah Taylor Tate gave a presentation entitled "From the Boardroom to the Classroom: Piracy Impacts and Solutions." Her talk was sponsored by Penn Intellectual Property Group and the Center for Technology, Innovation, and Competition.

Commissioner Tate focused on industry innovations to guard against piracy, explained the effect of "net neutrality" on those efforts, and defined what the government's role should be in ensuring that intellectual property rights are not infringed upon in the digital communications age.

Video of Commissioner Tate's presentation is available here.

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

It's All About Change: Fairey v. AP

Did Shepard Fairey, creator of the ubiquitous images that formed a central part of the Obama campaign, change a photograph by an Associate Press photographer enough to qualify for a fair use defense?

A federal judge in Manhattan will ultimately decide the issue, but both images are posted here so that you can draw your own conclusions (courtesy of the NY Times). Fairey has asked the court to grant a declaratory judgment against any potential copyright infringement claims advanced by the AP.

More about the case can be found via the New York Times, WSJ's Law Blog, and Am Law Daily.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

International: Software Pirates - where do they all come from?

The Pirate Bay has just released a Google-powered map that tracks the number of IP-infringing connections per country.

The TorrentFreak's "pirate bay map" records bittorrent communication, logging the locations to and from which its trackers are transferred. The map indicates the origin of the users who are connecting to its trackers, and it updates in real time.

According to the map at the time of this posting, the leader in traffic is China. The map indicates that 33% of all connections to the trackers originate from the .cn domain, which equals about 7 million peers. Considering that the site is officially blocked in China, these numbers are even more impressive.

Other Asian locations host massive amount of users as well, with 5.9% of connections coming from Taiwan and 4.2% from Japan.

The United States is a home to 8% of the users, and Sweden - the home of the Pirate Bay - hosted over 1% of them. Sweden had about 250,000 peers, which--out of a population of nine million --is not nearly as bad as some of the other countries.

In Europe, Spain has been the leading country, owning a little less that 5% of the connections.

The map is arguably only the beginning of a larger project to provide detailed statistics on the tracker’s users.

Read more here and here.


Monday, January 26, 2009

International: Pirates in Britain will not be disconnected from the internet

One of the new strategies of the music industry internationally is to find new policemen to enforce its rights in the digital world.

ISPs are extremely appealing candidates in this regard, since they can disconnect users from the Internet. Using ISPs can prevent repeated infringements and deter new ones. The music industry lobbied aggressively in various countries to enact a law that will force ISPs to disconnect repeated infringers from the Internet. The BRI, which represents the British record industry, has almost succeeded in passing such legislation in Britain, as the British government had seriously intended to compel internet companies to cut off customers who ignore warnings not to download music and video files illegally.

However, an interview with The Times with Mr. David Lammy, the British Intellectual Property Minister, revealed that the Government had ruled out creating a law. He questioned whether such a law can actually be possible.

While the music industry expressed disappointment of the reverse turn, ISPs--who consistently objected the heavy hand of the legislator being involved in their business--expressed satisfaction, saying that it is impossible to attract people to use the Internet and at the same time to scare them away.

Seven million British share files illegally every year, and the damage to the industry is said by the industry to amount to £180million a year.