| Blog results | Results 1 - 10 of about 3,550 for Worthy v. Library of Congress Copyright Office. (0.33 seconds) |
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| 27 Jul 2007 by Pamela Samuelson 1823 (1975) (statement of Barbara Ringer, Register of Copyrights, Library of Congress) (asserting that games are uncopyrightable without saying whether their exclusion falls within § 102(b)). 148. The post-1976 Act case law seems to .... Professor Walter Derenberg of New York University Law School submitted one such study to the Office in 1956. See S TAFF M EMBERS OF THE N EW Y ORK U NIVERSITY L AW R EVIEW U NDER THE G UIDANCE OF W ALTER J. D ERENBERG , S TUDY N O . ... eScholarship Repository - http://repositories.cdlib.org/ [ More results from eScholarship Repository ] |
| 27 Mar 2009 by Daryl Lang The only way to insure you receive the rights due a photographer with an infringement is to register images with the U.S. Copyright Office. No copyright registry company adds any more protection or rights under copyright law. ... If new legislation follows the same intent as previous bills, the Library of Congress will certify official registries. Until that time arrives, if it does, be cautious and examine any claim for the need to register images before taking action. ... PDNPulse - http://www.pdnpulse.com/ - References |
| 22 Sep 2009 by Dennis Crouch Here, the court found that the Library of Congress records did not create accessibility because those records were (at that time) not searchable by subject or keyword. Rather the LOC records could on be searched by title (beginning with .... And in the alternative, if this were a patent-worthy application, the delay would be even more inexcusable. It reminds me of the outrage of In re Comiskey, where the Fed. Cir. sua sponte raised a 101 issue that had never been raised ... Patent Law Blog (Patently-O) - http://www.patentlyo.com/patent/ - References [ More results from Patent Law Blog (Patently-O) ] |
| 31 Mar 2009 by admin It was a soap opera worthy of prime-time television, but for the substantial amounts of money that were involved. We didn't set out to abolish the CRT, the CRT invited it. I was minding my own business in the subcommittee's offices .... All three of Justice Scalia's tests for what constitutes a department require that the body be in the Executive Branch — a literal reading of Justice Scalia's opinion would imply that if the Library of Congress is in the Executive Branch, ... Ex©lusive Rights - http://www.exclusiverights.net/ - References |
| 13 Dec 2006 Of particular import here, the Court held that several specific decisions made by the photographer rendered his photograph"an original work of art . . . of a class of inventions for which the Constitution intended that Congress should secure to him the exclusive ... 2d at 417 (photographs of "common industrial items" including electrical products); Pagano v. Chas. Beseler Co., 234 F. 963, 964 (S.D.N.Y. 1916) (photograph of a scene including the New York Public Library). ... PennTags Feed for / - http://tags.library.upenn.edu/ [ More results from PennTags Feed for / ] |
| 25 May 2007 by marcorandazza See U.S. v. Steffens, U.S. v. Wittemann, and U.S. v. Johnson, 100 U.S. 82, 25 L.Ed. 550 (1879) (collectively known as “The Trademark Cases”). Congress' power to regulate patents comes from the Intellectual Property Clause. See US CONST. Art . I, Sec. ... Being a member of the Patent Bar, or “registered to practice before the United States Patent and Trademark Office” doesn't even mean that the person so-described is licensed to practice law. It certainly doesn't mean that ... The Legal Satyricon - http://randazza.wordpress.com/ - References |
| 1 May 2007 by Tony To register a work, an application form is sent to the Library of Congress, Copyright Office, together with a filing fee of $45 for each application and a deposit of the work being registered. The deposit requirements vary in ... Although the search can be expensive, it is a worthy investment. Even if the trademark search does not score any direct hits respecting the desired mark, it can provide important insights as to other arguably similar marks in use by others. ... The MELON Feed - http://beatblog.typepad.com/melon/ - References |
| 20 May 2008 The world of copyright may be about to change because of pending legislation, but in a guest post, James V. DeLong, says that Congress' hard work is only beginning. Read this blog post by Charles Cooper on Coop's Corner. ... Publishers object on the grounds that making a digital copy is itself an infringement, especially if the copy is then shared with a library that may have expansive ideas of its rights to disseminate it further. They suggest that digitizers must get ... CNET News.com - http://news.cnet.com/ |
| 28 Mar 2007 by Brand New and if the Library of Congress Changes the Law which they are contemplating. My conversation with Mentors was an Argument about the Legitimacy or illegitimacy of. U Tube. In reference to Partons uploading Portions of Copyrighted Material from Film and Television ... Now if the King County had been some other name, and they were passionate enough to want to rename & rebrand their county in honor of Dr. King then that would be worth talking about and truly worthy of note. ... Brand New - http://www.underconsideration.com/brandnew/ - References |
| 17 Jun 2008 sum of its parts. The Office of Digital Collections and Research is a resource to help colleagues in the University of. Maryland Libraries navigate the rapidly changing, acronym-laden, dynamic world of digital library initiatives. ...... Washington DC: Library of Congress. Retrieved December. 13, 2005 from http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/techdocs/conserv83199b.html. McDonough, Jerry. Preservation-Worthy Digital Video, or How to Drive Your Library into Chapter 11. ... PennTags // Feed ... - http://tags.library.upenn.edu/entry/ |
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