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On 12 March 2024 the Centre for Intellectual Property and Information Law held the 2024 Annual International Intellectual Property Lecture, delivered by Professor Oren Bracha (William C. Conner Chair in Law, The University of Texas, Austin).
Abstract: It is a universal truism that the subject matter of modern intellectual property law is intangible information. Yet the field is haunted by a stubborn specter of physicalism. Time and again, courts and commentators engage in reasoning that relies on physicalist and quasi-physicalist assumptions or fails to absorb the implications of the intangible object of property. This happens in a wide variety of contexts, spanning from the patentability of DNA sequences to copyright infringement by training Generative Artificial Intelligence systems. The lecture explores persisting physicalism in intellectual property law, diagnoses its sources, and argues that we should go beyond it.
For more information see:
On 3/2/2017 Kavita Philip offered her History and Theory of New Media Lecture Series lecture on "the Pirate Function," dealing with post-colonial piracy.
On 3/2/2017 Kavita Philip offered her History and Theory of New Media Lecture Series lecture on "the Pirate Function," dealing with post-colonial piracy.
Health Minister of Turkey, Fahrettin Koca has recently proclaimed that the Turkish government now aims for its trademark in health care tourism and that the process has already begun. For view source: www.trademarkmaldives.com/blog/turkish-government-seeks-t...
On 12 March 2024 the Centre for Intellectual Property and Information Law held the 2024 Annual International Intellectual Property Lecture, delivered by Professor Oren Bracha (William C. Conner Chair in Law, The University of Texas, Austin).
Abstract: It is a universal truism that the subject matter of modern intellectual property law is intangible information. Yet the field is haunted by a stubborn specter of physicalism. Time and again, courts and commentators engage in reasoning that relies on physicalist and quasi-physicalist assumptions or fails to absorb the implications of the intangible object of property. This happens in a wide variety of contexts, spanning from the patentability of DNA sequences to copyright infringement by training Generative Artificial Intelligence systems. The lecture explores persisting physicalism in intellectual property law, diagnoses its sources, and argues that we should go beyond it.
For more information see:
The eighteenth Annual International Intellectual Property Lecture was delivered by Robert P. Merges, Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati Professor of Law and Technology at UC Berkeley School of Law, on 18 March 2025.
The lecture entitled 'Cousins, Not Twins: Patent Claim Scope vs. The Breadth of Patent Enforcement' took place at Emmanuel College, Cambridge.
We went to see the Ansel Adams exhibit at the Art Gallery of Ontario. Of course, no photography is allowed, not even without a flash. I vehemently disagree with these policies. In HIGH irony though, one of the photos I PAID to see, was this photo that Adams took of a Georgia O'Keefe painting hanging in a gallery. I paid money and had to surrender my camera to see this photo that Adams took of a painting in a gallery. I did buy the Collection Catalogue though... am I a sucker?
Winners of the 2011 Rock the House music competition which took place on the House of Commons Terrace overlooking the Thames. Pictured here with Mike Weatherley MP.
More info here....
www.mikeweatherleymp.com/2011/07/01/we-really-rocked-the-...
and their own site here...
On 3/2/2017 Kavita Philip offered her History and Theory of New Media Lecture Series lecture on "the Pirate Function," dealing with post-colonial piracy.