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Book Review - Intellectual Property Law: Copyright, Patents, Trade-marks, 2nd Ed.

Book Review - Intellectual Property Law: Copyright, Patents, Trade-marks, 2nd Ed.

Hashim Ghazi is a JD candidate at Osgoode Hall Law School. Professor David Vaver’s Intellectual Property Law: Copyright, Patents, Trade-Marks, 2nd ed., takes up where the first edition left off, providing a complete and informative review of intellectual property law in Canada. David Vaver is the Professor of IP Law at Osgoode Hall Law School […]

US Court of Appeals Rejects Freelance Authors’ Settlement In Follow Up To Tasini Precedent

US Court of Appeals Rejects Freelance Authors’ Settlement In Follow Up To Tasini Precedent

Nora Sleeth is a JD candidate at Osgoode Hall Law School. The National Writers Union, The Authors Guild, and the American Society of Journalists and Authors, along with 21 individual writers, have filed a class action lawsuit against several major print and electronic publications. On August 17, 2011, the US Court of Appeals for the […]

Justice Rothstein Finds US Patent Standard Neither Clear Nor Convincing

Justice Rothstein Finds US Patent Standard Neither Clear Nor Convincing

Brent Randall is a JD candidate at the University of Ottawa. Justice Marshall Rothstein of the Supreme Court of Canada recently spoke at the American Bar Association’s Intellectual Property Law Luncheon held on August 6, 2011, in Toronto. His speech was largely focused on how the Supreme Court of Canada may arrive at different conclusions […]

Intellectual Property And Development: Closing The Conceptual Gap

Intellectual Property And Development: Closing The Conceptual Gap

Alysia Lau is a JD candidate at Osgoode Hall Law School. I spent this past summer interning with the UN Development Programme (UNDP) in Jakarta, Indonesia. Preparing to take part in the new Osgoode IP Law & Technology Intensive Program this coming fall gave me an opportunity to reflect on the intersection between IP issues […]

Japan: Farewell Analog, Welcome Digital

Japan: Farewell Analog, Welcome Digital

Elisa Bertolini is a member of the MediaLaws Steering Committee and an academic at the Università Commerciale Luigi Bocconi. The re-posting of this analysis is part of a cross-posting collaboration with MediaLaws: Law and Policy of the Media in a Comparative Perspective. Japanese broadcasters completed the switch to digitized terrestrial TV broadcasting at noon Sunday, […]

Ontario Court of Appeal Rules In Tucows v. Renner: Domain Names Are Personal Property

Ontario Court of Appeal Rules In Tucows v. Renner: Domain Names Are Personal Property

Matt Lonsdale is a graduate of the Schulich School of Law at Dalhousie University. It’s no secret that domain names have value on the secondary market, with desirable domain names fetching upwards of $1 million. A recent Court of Appeal of Ontario decision (Tucows.com Co. v. Lojas Renner S.A., 2011 ONCA 548) has clarified that, at […]

London MP Seeks To Quell Rioting Through Surveillance Of BlackBerry Messages

London MP Seeks To Quell Rioting Through Surveillance Of BlackBerry Messages

Michael Gilburt is a JD candidate at Osgoode Hall Law School. David Lammy, Member of Parliament for Tottenham, has called for the suspension and surveillance of the BlackBerry Messenger (“BBM”) service after evidence indicated that the popular communication platform helped facilitate the London riots.

Some Nortel Patents To Remain Canadian Via RIM Following Apple Consortium Bid Win

Some Nortel Patents To Remain Canadian Via RIM Following Apple Consortium Bid Win

Jennifer O'Dell is a JD candidate at Osgoode Hall and Denise Brunsdon is a social media writer and researcher. For anyone with family members at Apple, Research in Motion, Microsoft, Ericsson, Sony and EMC, don't forget to put "A Nortel patent" on your wish list this Christmas. There's at least 6, 000 to go around.

Book Review — ­Global Copyright: Three Hundred Years Since The Statute Of Anne, From 1709 To Cyberspace

Book Review — ­Global Copyright: Three Hundred Years Since The Statute Of Anne, From 1709 To Cyberspace

Rex Shoyama is a Legal Product Developer at Thomson Reuters and an MI candidate in the Faculty of Information, University of Toronto. He was IP Osgoode’s Assistant Director from 2008 to 2010. The following is an excerpt from a forthcoming book review in the Intellectual Property Journal. The Statute of Anne is often referred to […]