Termination of Copyright Transfers – July CincyIP Monthly Meeting – July 12, 2011

CincyIP Presents:
Termination of Copyright Transfers

Featuring
Stephen E. Gillen
Partner, Wood, Herron & Evans, LLP

Timothy K. Armstrong
Professor, University of Cincinnati College of Law

and

Davida Isaacs
Professor, University of Kentucky College of Law

July 12, 2011

11:45am – 1:30pm

The Cincinnatian Hotel
This course has been approved by the Supreme Court of Ohio Commission on Continuing Legal Education for 1.0 total CLE hour instruction.

In order to protect authors of older works from being bound to an unfair deal they entered into when they had little bargaining power, the Copyright Act provides for certain opportunities to terminate the transfer of a copyright, thus recapturing control of the copyright. Currently, such rights of termination are not waiveable by contract or other means.

This program will describe the contours of these opportunities for termination, as well as their costs and benefits. In addition, program participants will discuss the impact of these statutory provisions on public grants under widely used “open content” licensing arrangements, such as the GNU General Public License (“GPL”) for software or the Creative Commons family of licenses for other sorts of expressive works. Users of such works must confront the possibility that the licenses may be revoked in the future and the works effectively withdrawn from public use, with potentially chaotic results. Participants will also consider Professor Armstrong’s proposed legislative solution, which would authorize authors to make a nonwaiveable, irrevocable dedication of their works to the public — a possibility that the Patent Act expressly recognizes, but the Copyright Act presently does not.

Stephen E. Gillen is a partner at Wood, Herron & Evans, LLP. Prior to entering private practice in 1994, Steve served as house counsel for South-Western Publishing Company (an educational publisher owned by Cengage, f/k/a The Thomson Corporation). In addition, Steve has served on copyright and permissions committees with the Association of American Publishers. He has written and spoken nationally on various publishing and copyright topics and teaches a course in Media Business and Law at the University of Cincinnati and a course in Electronic Media Law at the College Conservatory of Music. He currently serves on the Council of Advisors to the Text and Academic Authors Association, the Board of Trustees of Voyageur Media Group, Inc., and is a member of the Authors Guild. Steve’s practice emphasizes publishing and entertainment transactions and disputes, internet issues, advertising law, computer law, copyrights, technology transfer, trade secrets, and related matters. His clients include several East Coast publishers as well as authors, artists, photographers, videographers, independent producers, Internet service providers, multimedia developers, and software programmers from Maine to California.

Timothy K. Armstrong is a Professor at the University of Cincinnati College of Law. Professor Armstrong earned his bachelor’s and master’s degrees from The University of
Texas at Austin and his law degree, with high honors, from the University of Texas School of Law. Following his clerkship with the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, Professor Armstrong practiced with the law firm of Howrey, Simon, Arnold & White in Washington,
D.C. He has also earned a Master of Laws degree from Harvard Law School.
During his career in private practice, he specialized in Supreme Court and appellate litigation. Professor Armstrong’s other primary areas of experience in practice included administrative law, antitrust law and trade regulatory issues, labor arbitration, and government contract disputes. Before joining the University of Cincinnati College of Law faculty, Professor Armstrong worked as a Clinical Teaching Fellow for the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School. Professor Armstrong is a co-author of Info/Law, a weblog focusing on legal issues arising from the domain of high technology and the Internet. His research interests include copyright issues as well as other issues surrounding free and open-source software, among others. He is the author of “Shrinking the Commons: Termination of Copyright Licenses and Transfers for the Benefit of the Public”, recently published in the Harvard Journal on Legislation.

Davida H. Isaacs is a Professor at the University of Kentucky College of Law. Professor Isaacs graduated magna cum laude from Brandeis University, then with her law degree from New York University School of Law where she was Associate Editor of the NYU Review of Law and Social Change. She then practiced intellectual property law (primarily litigation) at Kaye, Scholer, Fierman, Hays and Handler in New York and Venable, Baetjer, Howard and Civiletti in Washington, D.C., handling clients including Pfizer, Teva, Johnson & Johnson, Coach, and New Line Productions.

She has taught intellectual property courses, including copyright law, at a variety of law schools including Northern Kentucky University and the University of Maryland. She is currently on the faculty at the University of Kentucky, teaching copyright. Professor Isaacs’ scholarly focus is the balance between the rights of intellectual property owners and the public interest, including issues such as which intellectual property qualifies as ’property’, what is the scope of those property rights, and when the public interest justifies limiting intellectual property owners’ rights. Her article on the copyrightability of legal documents has been the subject in numerous fora, including academic conferences, The Wall Street Journal’s legal blog, and most recently several blog posts concerning Apple’s current patent and trade dress lawsuit against Samsung.

PRICES (including lunch):
• $20 for Members (includes 1 Hr Ohio CLE) [cart-button item=”4″]
• $30 Non-Member with CLE [cart-button item=”5″]
• $20 Non-Member without CLE [cart-button item=”6″]
• $15 Students and Full-Time Academics [cart-button item=”7″]

Registration ends at noon on Wednesday, July 6.

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Gray Goods and First Sale – CincyIP June 2011 Meeting

CincyIP Presents:
Gray Goods and First Sale

Featuring
Jonathan Polak – Taft, Stettinius & Hollister, LLP
and
Joseph Schaeff – Dinsmore & Shohl LLP

June 14, 2011

11:45am – 1:30pm

The Cincinnatian Hotel

CLE: This course has been approved by the Supreme Court of Ohio Commission on Continuing Legal Education for 1.0 total CLE hour instruction.

The presentation will include the definition of gray market goods, how they are treated by various IP laws, as well as the contours of permissible and impermissible sales under the first sale doctrine. The panel will review recent case law and discuss enforcement options where imported and sold products cross the line from permissible sales to infringing goods.

Jonathan Polak is a member of Taft’s Intellectual Property, Business and Litigation groups. He concentrates his practice in the areas of complex commercial litigation and intellectual property litigation. Mr. Polak has litigated intellectual property infringement claims on behalf of nationally-recognized rights holders, including Hershey’s, Volkswagen, Heineken, and Indiana University. He has also established a national practice in the area of the right of publicity, representing such personalities as Marilyn Monroe, Duke Ellington, John Wayne, Rosa Parks and John Dillinger.

Joe Schaeff is a partner in Dinsmore’s Intellectual Property practice group. Mr. Schaeff has practiced in the fields of trademark law and copyright law for more than 30 years. He is a 1975 graduate of The Ohio State University Moritz College of Law and a 1972 graduate of the University of Dayton. He is listed in the The Best Lawyers in America, selected for the Ohio Super Lawyers® List, Listed in Who’s Who Legal – The International Who’s Who of Business Lawyers.

PRICES (including lunch):
• $20 for Members (includes 1 Hr Ohio CLE)
• $30 Non-Member with CLE
• $20 Non-Member without CLE
• $15 Students and Full-Time Academics

Registration ends at noon on Wednesday, June 8.

For more information on upcoming IP events in the area, click here.

Cancellations will not be accepted without a 24 hour notice.

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How Do I Decide Where to File Patent Applications Internationally? – May 2011 CincyIP Meeting

How Do I Decide Where to File Patent Applications Internationally?
Featuring
Tim Guffey
Senior Patent Advisor, The Procter & Gamble Company

May 10, 2011

11:45am – 1:30pm

The Cincinnatian Hotel
This course has been approved by the Supreme Court of Ohio Commission on Continuing Legal Education for 1.0 total CLE hour instruction.

One of the most important and difficult decisions an applicant has to make is whether to file any given patent application internationally, and if so, where to file. Furthermore, applicants must take into consideration the pros and cons of filing regimes, such as the PCT, and when to file in particular jurisdictions. This presentation will review questions to ask applicants in order to help determine if an application should be filed internationally, and will propose a model for how to determine where to file.

Tim Guffey is a Senior Patent Advisor at The Procter & Gamble Company. Tim joined P&G 30 years ago as a product development engineer, and has been involved in a variety of assignments in product development, including patent strategy development, global patent cost management, and has served as a technical witness in a number of US prosecutions and EPO oppositions for a major development project. Tim transferred to the Intellectual Property Division in 1994. He manages P&G’s Global Patent Services group, which is responsible for the filing of all P&G post-priority patents globally, and managing the costs associated with P&G’s total portfolio. Tim was admitted to practice before the USPTO as a patent agent in 1997 and holds a Bachelor of Chemical Engineering from The Georgia Institute of Technology.

PRICES (including lunch):
• $20 for Members (includes 1 Hr Ohio CLE)
• $30 Non-Member with CLE
• $20 Non-Member without CLE
• $15 Students and Full-Time Academics

Registration ends at noon on Wednesday, May 4.

For more information on upcoming IP events in the area, click here.

To renew your membership for 2011: https://cincyip.org/?p=38
Thank you to those who have already renewed their memberships!

Cancellations will not be accepted without a 24 hour notice.

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