Search Results for MB-220 Zertifizierung 😑 MB-220 Simulationsfragen 🗣 MB-220 Prüfungen 👧 Suchen Sie auf { www.itzert.com } nach ⏩ MB-220 ⏪ und erhalten Sie den kostenlosen Download mühelos 🤕MB-220 Fragen Antworten

Jarecki v. Ohoven: MedImmune as a Sword for Certain Copyright Owners

...s ‘all rights’ in a work (e.g. a screenplay) is critical to the successful commercial exploitation of a motion picture and/or television project. In such a highly–competitive, interchangeable industry, projects are unlikely to generate significant interest from investors, studios, production companies, and other key parties if there is even a slight risk that an adverse legal claim in an underlying work exists. Accordingly, the purported owner of...
Read More

2004-05 Archive

...ment Right of Access to Administrative Adjudications: A Position Paper The Committee on Communications and Media Law of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York Publicity Rights as Property Rights David Westfall & David Landau Law, Geography and Cyberspace: The Case of On-Line Territorial Privacy Daniel Benoliel When You Wish Upon Dastar: Creative Provenance and the Lanham Act Mary LaFrance NOTES For-Bid Scalping Online?: Anti-Scalping L...
Read More

Blogging without Logging FTC Lawsuits: A Panel Discussion

...act with the vast array of these social networking outlets can effectively comply with Federal Trade Commission (FTC) disclosure regulations in light of the increase in sponsored content online. Robert DeBrauwere, co-chair of the Digital Media Group at Pryor Cashman LLP, and former Cardozo Arts & Entertainment Law Journal editor, moderated the discussion. The FTC views the reasonable consumer as having a “healthy skepticism” toward conventional ad...
Read More

The ‘MetaBirkin’ and the Beginning of Trademark Litigation in the NFT Space

...and dilution.15 It is clear that Hérmes has trademarked the “Birkin” name “under categories including leather goods and leather handbags.”16 The brand “assert[ed] that it ‘did not authorize nor consent to the commercialization or creation’ of 100 virtual Birkin bag-centric non-fungible tokens.”17 Prior to any action taken by Hérmes, Rothschild explained that “this is [his] artistic take on an icon, [his] remix.”18 Existing trademark law seems like...
Read More

70 Years of Dance: Copyrighting Choreography Since 1952

...Charlie Puth’s “How High.”25 Hanagami lost the suit; the district court found that his series of steps were “identical to the emote but unprotectable” in their expression.26 Despite the complications over the last seventy years, chorographical copyright has continued to adapt in a world of technological and creative advancement. With the proper acknowledgment and education, there is hope that choreographers and dancers will be able to continue to...
Read More

New Jersey Becomes the First State to Eclipse $1 Billion Sports Betting Monthly Handle: What Does that Mean for the Rest of the Country?

...has opened up as a part of the physical arena.10 The facility essentially combines a casino and a sports bar, offering fans a place to grab a bite to eat and watch the games, while also providing a place to place bets 365 days a year.11 So while the actual arena may only be active during sporting events or concerts, Caesars Sportsbook will be open every day. Soon, this may be the norm, as other arenas and stadiums around the country could incorpo...
Read More

Custom Characters that Look Exactly Like You: Misappropriation or Creative Take?

...to extend its technology to its users within video games, then it would become easier for gamers to create and upload characters that appropriate another’s likeness without their consent. It is foreseeable that high- and low-profile individuals would not want their likeness associated with video games, especially if the video game features violent themes. There were 2.69 billion video game players reported in 2020, and the number has only risen i...
Read More

Cardozo AELJ’s Spring 2024 Symposium Explores the Implications of the Warhol and Bad Spaniels Decisions on Copyright and Trademark Law

...al Arts, Inc. v. Goldsmith. Professor Adler highlighted that this decision underscores the broader issue of courts determining the meanings and messages of visual art, whether courts should discern such meaning, and if so, how courts should go about this. The first panel, focusing on copyright law, discussed how the Warhol opinion should have been structured while also acknowledging the correctly decided elements of the decision. The panelists pre...
Read More