Marquette Intellectual Property Law Review

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COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved

from January 2007
Last Number: June 2020

Marquette University Law School
ISSN 1092-5899




Cantidad de documentos en esta fuente: 205

January 01, 2007

  • Available remedies for copyright infringement.

  • Place of infringement and questions of choice of law.

  • Exercising rights in the right forum - questions of jurisdiction.

  • The failed Hague draft convention - an explanation of its ineffective negotiations.

  • Proposed mechanism.

  • Probable extraterritorial effects and a public choice democracy perspective.

  • Conclusion.

  • The proper scope of patentability in international law.

  • What is patentable subject matter? The Supreme Court dismissed LabCorp v. Metabolite Laboratories, but the issue is not going away.

  • Trade secrets and their history.

  • Property as a potential justification.

  • The justification for trade secrets.

  • The marginal utility of trade secrets.

  • Appendix: an illustrative example.

  • Gone in a blink: the overlooked privacy problems caused by contactless payment systems.

  • Breaking the law to break into the black: patent infringement as a business strategy.

  • June 22, 2007

  • Creating consumer confidence or confusion? The role of product certification marks in the market today.

  • Finding common ground in the world of electronic contracts: the consistency of legal reasoning in clickwrap cases.

  • Copyright's empire: why the law matters.

  • Fixing through legislative fixation: a call for the codification and modernization of the staple article of commerce doctrine as it applies to copyright law.

  • The extended protection of "strong" trademarks.

  • Intellectual property, competition rules, and the emerging internal market: some thoughts on the European exhaustion doctrine.

  • January 01, 2007

  • Introduction.

  • Introduction.

  • Conclusion.

  • June 22, 2008

  • Intellectual property rights and global warming.

  • Geographical indications: a discussion on the TRIPs regulation after the Ministerial Conference of Hong Kong.

  • I have a secret? Applying the Uniform Trade Secrets Act to confidential information that does not rise to the level of trade secret status.

  • Kewanee revisited: returning to first principles of intellectual property law to determine the issue of federal preemption.

  • The experimental use exception and undergraduate engineering projects.

  • Phillips v. AWH, Corp., a doctrine of equivalents case?

  • January 01, 2008

  • Antitrust liability for refusal to license intellectual property: a comparative analysis and the international setting.

  • Speaking words of wisdom: let it be the reexamination of the human embryonic stem cell patents.

  • What do we do with a doctrine like merger? A look at the imminent collision of the DMCA and idea/expression dichotomy.

  • In re Seagate: did it really fix the waiver issue? A short review and analysis of waiver resulting from the use of a counsel's opinion letter as a defense to willful infringement.

  • Medimmune, Microsoft, and KSR: the United States Supreme Court in 2007 tips the balance in favor of innovation in patent cases, and thrice reverses the Federal Circuit.

  • Wagging the dog? Reconsidering antitrust-based regulation of IP-licensing.

  • June 22, 2009

  • Annual intellectual property law review banquet speech: three cases: a practitioner's life in copyright.

  • Not all grace periods are created equal: building a grace period from the ground up.

  • Rethinking patent fraud enforcement in a reform era.

  • The Copyright Revision Act of 2026.

  • Fixing continuing application practice at the USPTO.

  • Trademark fair use: Braun(R) versus the bunny.

  • Toward a more reliable fact-finder in patent litigation.

  • Emerging scholars series: cross-border injunctions in U.S. patent cases and their enforcement abroad.

  • January 01, 2009

  • Navigating the safe harbor rule: the need for a DMCA compass.

  • What goes around, comes around: how Indian Tribes can profit in the aftermath of Seminole Tribe and Florida Prepaid.

  • International legal protection of trademarks in China.

  • Nanobiotechnology, synthetic biology, and RNAi: patent portfolios for maximal near-term commercialization and commons for maximal long-term medical gain.

  • The Eleventh Annual Honorable Helen Wilson Nies Memorial Lecture in intellectual property; rethinking the role of clinical trial data in international intellectual property law: the case for a public goods approach.