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IPKat Book of the Year Awards 2023 winners announced!

The IPKat

. • Study Guide to the Patents Acts (14th edition), by Doug Ealey. And the winner is: The Proportionality Test in European Patent Law (Bloomsbury) by Léon Dijkman Best Copyright Law Book The nominations were: • Copyright and the Court of Justice of the European Union (2nd edition), by Elenora Rosati. •

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The (forgotten) moral rights in the age of AI

Kluwer Copyright Blog

Debate on AI and IP continues. The US government ran a consultation on AI and IP a few years ago. WIPO has so far had four sessions of their Conversation on AI and IP. The missing bit: moral rights. However, some aspects of IP are missing from this important debate. Moral rights and AI under Australian law.

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Born to be authors: the copyright of the child

Kluwer Copyright Blog

Rather, it focuses on the just safeguards that should exist around the exploitation of those works, both in relation to economic and moral rights. Authorship by children epitomises this view and the significance of building a systematic legal scholarship on a just copyright system for all authors.

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Never Too Late: If you missed the IPKat last week!

The IPKat

If last week passed too quickly to follow all the IP updates , not to worry, this Kat has put together a whistle-stop tour of the news and events you missed: Patents A Kat thinking about law and technology. The book also discusses the real-life issues experienced by authors facing moral rights dilemmas.

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Book review: Reforming Intellectual Property

The IPKat

This is a book review of Reforming Intellectual Property , edited by Gustavo Ghidini, Professor Emeritus, University of Milan and Senior Professor of Intellectual Property and Competition Law, LUISS University and Valeria Falce, Jean Monnet Professor in European Innovation Policy, European University of Rome.

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Copyright case law of the German Bundesgerichtshof 2015 – 2019 – Part 4 of 4: Copyright contract law and enforcement

Kluwer Copyright Blog

The BGH reasoned that a claim for non-material damages was weakened by the fact that there were doubts as to whether the relevant public in that case even attributed the edited images to the author at all. More from our authors: Law of Raw Data. Intellectual Property Law in China, 2nd edition.