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Ownership

Book Review - Copyright, Contracts, Creators: New Media, New Rules

Book Review - Copyright, Contracts, Creators: New Media, New Rules

Nathan Fan is a JD candidate at Osgoode Hall Law School. In this digital era where authors and creators are scrambling to regain a hold on the copyright in their works, Professor Giuseppina D’Agostino’s new book, Copyright, Contracts, Creators: New Media, New Rules, is a timely and compelling contribution to the world of copyright literature. […]

A ‘classical’ example of issues in copyright: Professor Roger Fisher’s Lecture on Haydn, Pleyel and the Two Piano Trios

A ‘classical’ example of issues in copyright: Professor Roger Fisher’s Lecture on Haydn, Pleyel and the Two Piano Trios

Leslie Chong is a J.D. student at Osgoode Hall Law School On 17 November 2010, IP Osgoode hosted Professor Fisher’s lecture about the 18th century copyright infringement lawsuit involving piano trios written by classical composers Franz Joseph Haydn and Ignaz Pleyel. While the court documents of the case had long been lost and only recently […]

What is Mine is Not Yours and What is Yours is in Fact Mine: Copyright, Consumers and First Sale

What is Mine is Not Yours and What is Yours is in Fact Mine: Copyright, Consumers and First Sale

Pascale Chapdelaine is a member of IP Osgoode, Ph.D. (candidate) Osgoode Hall Law School and is Adjunct Professor at the Faculty of Law, University of Toronto. My current research work to substantiate and better define consumers’ rights to copies of copyrighted works recurrently leads towards one of the great contemporary legal challenges: the nature of […]

Focus on Gaming: Q&A with Susan Abramovitch

Focus on Gaming: Q&A with Susan Abramovitch

Susan H. Abramovitch is a partner in Gowlings' Toronto office, practising exclusively in entertainment law. Susan's practice covers all aspects of music industry transactions, as well as film, television, live theatre, multimedia, videogaming and book publishing. IPilogue Editor Stuart Freen sat down with her earlier this week to talk about the video gaming industry and […]

Locking Out Lawful Users

Locking Out Lawful Users

Carys Craig is an Associate Professor at Osgoode Hall Law School Michael Geist’s edited collection of essays on copyright reform is being released on October 14th, and you are welcome to attend its launch. This exciting and timely publication, entitled ‘From “Radical Extremism” to “Balanced Copyright”: Canadian Copyright and the Digital Agenda’, contains twenty chapters […]

Intersections: Negotiating the Spaces of Intellectual Property Under the Conditions of Neoliberalism

Intersections: Negotiating the Spaces of Intellectual Property Under the Conditions of Neoliberalism

Nicole Aylwin is a Ph.D. Candidate in the Communication and Culture Graduate Programme at York University On September 23, 2010, the York Centre for Public Policy and Law brought together one anthropologist, one political scientist and one socio-legal scholar to discuss the potential for ‘protecting’ the knowledge and heritage of indigenous people under international law […]

Copyright, Contracts, Creators – New Media, New Rules

Copyright, Contracts, Creators – New Media, New Rules

Professor Giuseppina D’Agostino (Osgoode Hall Law School) has authored a new book entitled “Copyright, Contracts, Creators – New Media, New Rules”.  The book is briefly described below. The digital world has put content within arm’s reach of desire. No longer can an author be satisfied that her intellectual property is safely encased in a bound […]

Copyright Termination: How Authors can Reclaim their Copyrights

Copyright Termination: How Authors can Reclaim their Copyrights

Amanda Carpenter is a JD Candidate at Osgoode Hall Law School. To help protect authors, the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976 provided for inalienable termination rights, rights unique to the United States. An inalienable termination right means that when an author assigns their copyright rights to a publisher, and even if that assignment agreement stipulates […]

Uncovering the IP in eHealth Records: Who Should Own Your Medical History?

Uncovering the IP in eHealth Records: Who Should Own Your Medical History?

Steven Zuccarelli is a 2012 J.D Candidate at Osgoode Hall Law School As technology in health care races ahead, individuals will readily imagine innovative, cutting edge medical techniques that may cure them of an ailment, or perhaps extend the length of their years.  However, an often-overlooked feature of technologically advanced health care is a unified, […]