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Announcing the SpicyIP Inaugural Doctoral Fellow!

SpicyIP

Yogesh is a second year student from the National Law School of India University, Bengaluru and Tejaswini is a third year student from Dr. Ram Manohar Lohiya National Law University, Lucknow. Yogesh and Tejaswini were among our most diligent interns and subsequently joined the team as a part of the coveted SpicyIP Fellowship Programme.

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Sunday Surprises

The IPKat

The event is designed to encourage interactive discussions among participants through panel debates, with each of them covering 4 or 5 key topics related to each specific sector. There will also be panels on CJEU and General Court case law, judicial approaches to parasitic competition, and international design protection strategies.

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Biden administration releases wide-ranging executive order on AI

LexBlog IP

In the coming weeks, we will dive deeper into critical topics covered by the new EO. Support American workers through education, job training and labor impact understanding. Safeguard privacy and civil liberties with lawful, secure data handling. Advance equity and civil rights.

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ChatUSG: What Companies Doing Business with the Government Need to Know About Artificial Intelligence

Intellectual Property Law Blog

Further, the joint statement reiterates that these agencies “take seriously our responsibility to ensure that these rapidly evolving automated systems are developed and used in a manner consistent with federal laws, and each of our agencies has previously expressed concern about potentially harmful uses of automated systems.”

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ChatUSG: What Companies Doing Business with the Government Need to Know About Artificial Intelligence

LexBlog IP

Further, the joint statement reiterates that these agencies “take seriously our responsibility to ensure that these rapidly evolving automated systems are developed and used in a manner consistent with federal laws, and each of our agencies has previously expressed concern about potentially harmful uses of automated systems.”

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A Roundup of German Caselaw Regarding Emojis and Emoticons (Guest Blog Post)

Technology & Marketing Law Blog

by guest blogger Dr. Matthias Pendl , Max Planck Institute for Comparative and International Private Law. Only the State Labor Court of Baden-Württemberg depicted the relevant emoji in its ruling of 22 June 2016 (involving the monkey/bear face emoji depicted below); but it referred to them as “emoticons.” Introduction.

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WIPIP Concurrent Session #6 Copyright Theory

43(B)log

Justin Koo, Exporting Fair Use to Developing Copyright Systems Difficult to grow when the law doesn’t have flexibility—across the Commonwealth Carribean. A relatively new willingness to litigate, but lack of awareness/understanding of copyright law in Carribean is a barrier. This also involves using © rights in appropriate ways.