Design law: European Union and United States of America
Gespeichert in:
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
London
Sweet & Maxwell
2010
|
Ausgabe: | 2nd ed. |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Klappentext |
Beschreibung: | XXXV, 278 S. |
ISBN: | 1847039065 9781847039064 |
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020 | |a 9781847039064 |9 978-1-847-03906-4 | ||
035 | |a (OCoLC)705374891 | ||
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040 | |a DE-604 |b ger |e rakwb | ||
041 | 0 | |a eng | |
049 | |a DE-M382 |a DE-703 | ||
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100 | 1 | |a Suthersanen, Uma |e Verfasser |4 aut | |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a Design law |b European Union and United States of America |c Uma Suthersanen |
250 | |a 2nd ed. | ||
264 | 1 | |a London |b Sweet & Maxwell |c 2010 | |
300 | |a XXXV, 278 S. | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | CONTENTS
Page
Preface
.................................................
v
Table of Contents
........................................
¡x
Table of Cases
........................................... xix
Table of European Material
............................... xxvii
Table of National Legislation
.............................. xxxi
Table of International Treaties, Conventions and
Agreements
........................................... xxxiii
PART ONE
FOUNDATIONS
Para.
Chapter
1
Origins and Rationales
......................... 1-001
1.1
Justifying Design Law
............................. 1-002
1.2
Historical Origins
................................ 1-003
1.2.1
From Artist to Craftsman
..................... 1-004
1.2.2
Industrial Revolution and Britain
.............. 1-005
(a) Competition and Innovation
.............. 1-006
(b) Factory Systems
........................ 1-007
(c) Consumer Growth
...................... 1-008
(d) Wedgwood and Boulton
................. 1-009
1.2.3
Aftermath of the Industrial Revolution
.......... 1-010
(a) Retail and Advertising
................... 1-011
(b) Machine and Ornamentation
.............. 1-012
(c) Utilitarian Perspectives
.................. 1-013
(d) Economic Pressures
..................... 1-014
1.2.4
Twentieth Century and
Bauhaus............... 1-015
Chapter
2
Legal Etymology
............................... 2-001
2.1
Legal Aspects
................................... 2-002
2.1.1
Industrial Property or Artistic Property?
......... 2-002
2.1.2
Non-consensus at International Level
........... 2-003
2.2
Social and Economic Factors
........................ 2-004
2.2.1
Technology, Competition and Design
........... 2-004
2.2.2
Market-related Definition
.................... 2-005
[ix]
CONTENTS
2.3 Design
Classification..............................
2-006
2.3.1
Product
Design............................ 2-007
2.3.2
Environmental
Design
(Including
Building) ...... 2-008
2.3.3 Graphic and Service Designs................. 2-009
2.4
Terminology
.................................... 2-010
(a)
Copyright
Law.........................
2-011
(b)
Design
Law
........................... 2-012
(c)
Works of Applied Art
.................... 2-013
Chapter
3
International Perspectives
....................... 3-001
3.1
The Major Intellectual Property Instruments
............ 3-002
3.1.1
The Berne Convention
...................... 3-002
(a) Protectable Subject Matter
................ 3-003
(b) National Treatment and Designs
........... 3-007
(c) Illustrative Decisions on National
Treatment (art.2(7))
................... 3-008
(d) Protection Criteria
...................... 3-012
(e) Rights Conferred
....................... 3-014
(f) Duration of Protection
................... 3-015
3.1.2
The Paris Convention
....................... 3-016
(a) Protectable Subject Matter—Utility Models
and Industrial Designs
................. 3-017
(b) National Treatment and Designs
........... 3-018
(c) Priority of Filing
........................ 3-019
(d) Forfeiture of Design
..................... 3-021
(e) Miscellaneous Provisions
................. 3-022
3.1.3
The TRIPS Agreement
....................... 3-023
(a) General Provisions
...................... 3-024
(b) Copyright
............................. 3-025
(c) Industrial Design
....................... 3-026
(d) The European Union and TRIPS
............ 3-034
3.2
Design Related Conventions and Agreements
........... 3-035
3.2.1
The Hague Agreement
...................... 3-035
(a) Problems with the Hague Agreement Prior
to the Geneva Act
.................... 3-036
(b) The Geneva Act
........................ 3-037
(c) Filing an International Design Deposit
....... 3-038
(d) The European Union and the
Geneva Act
1999..................... 3-041
3.2.2
Locarno International Classification for
Industrial Designs
........................ 3-042
Chapter
4
Repair Parts: A Law and Economics Perspective
___ 4-001
4.1
A Dilemma
..................................... 4-001
4.2
Market Failure and Competing Substitutes
.............. 4-002
[x]
CONTENTS
4.3
Compulsory Licensing
............................. 4-003
4.4
Complementary/Complex Products with Components
.... 4-004
4.5
Controlling the After Market Through Refusal of
Protection
.................................... 4-005
4.6
The Repair Clause
—
A Comparative Analysis
.......... 4-006
4.6.1
European Union Law
....................... 4-007
(a) Drafting History
........................ 4-008
(b) The Failed Three-year Approach
............ 4-009
(c) The Failed Compulsory Licensing Approach
... 4-010
(d) The Unsatisfactory Directive Approach
...... 4-011
(e) Commission Proposal for an
EU
Repair Clause
....................... 4-012
4.6.2
United States
............................. 4-013
4.6.3
UK Law
................................. 4-014
4.7
A Law and Economics Approach to Repair
Parts—UK and US
.............................. 4-015
4.7.1
Lifetime Costs
............................. 4-015
4.7.2
Switching costs
............................ 4-016
4.7.3
Market width
............................. 4-017
4.7.4
Relationship with Competition Law
—EU
Approach
.............................. 4-018
4.7.5
Essential facilities doctrine
................... 4-019
PART TWO
EUROPEAN UNION
Chapter
5
An Overview
.................................. 5-001
5.1
History of
EU
Design Policy
........................ 5-001
5.2
Justification for
EU
Design Law
...................... 5-002
5.3
Design, Copyright or Trade Mark?
.................... 5-003
5.3.1
Registered Design Rights
.................... 5-004
(a) National Design Rights and the Design
Directive
........................... 5-005
(b) Community Design Regulation
............ 5-006
5.3.2
Unregistered Rights
........................ 5-007
(a) Unregistered Design Right/Copyright
........ 5-007
(b) Unfair Competition/Passing Off
............ 5-008
5.3.3
Other Registered Rights
..................... 5-009
(a) Patents and Utility Models
................ 5-010
(b) Trade Mark
........................... 5-011
Chapter
6
Registered Community Design
.................. 6-001
6.1
Protectable Designs
............................... 6-001
6.1.1
Definition of Design
........................ 6-001
6.1.2
Definition of Product
....................... 6-002
[xi]
CONTENTS
6.1.3
Appearance
.............................. 6-003
6.1.4
Aesthetic, Industrial and Functional
............ 6-004
6.1.5
Nature and Types of Products
................. 6-005
6.1.6
Parts, Component Parts, and Complex Products
... 6-006
6.1.7
Typographic Typefaces
...................... 6-007
6.1.8
Written Documentation, Prototypes and Models
.... 6-008
6.1.9
Computer Programs and Semi-conductor
Typographies
........................... 6-009
6.2
Excluded Designs
................................ 6-010
6.2.1
Functional Features
........................ 6-011
(a) A Theoretical Perspective
................. 6-012
(b) The Amp Approach
..................... 6-013
(c) The Multiplicity of Forms Approach
(Pre-Lindner)
........................ 6-014
(d) The Lindner Decision
................... 6-015
(e) Abstract Subject Matter
.................. 6-016
6.2.2
Interconnection Features
.................... 6-017
(a) Mechanical Interconnections
.............. 6-018
(b) Function of Interconnections
.............. 6-019
(c) Modular Exception
..................... 6-020
6.2.3
Contrary to Public Policy or Morality
........... 6-021
6.3
Criteria of Protection
.............................. 6-022
6.3.1
Novelty
................................. 6-023
6.3.2
Individual Character
........................ 6-024
(a) Overall Impression
...................... 6-025
(b) Informed User
......................... 6-026
(c) Product Field
.......................... 6-027
(d) Designer s Degree of Freedom
............. 6-028
(e) Summary
............................. 6-029
6.3.3
Visibility Criterion
......................... 6-030
(a) Component Part of Complex Product
........ 6-031
(b) Assembly
............................. 6-032
(c) Visible During Normal Use
............... 6-033
6.3.4
Prior Art and Disclosure
..................... 6-034
(a) Drafting History
........................ 6-035
(b) Reasonable Trade Knowledge
............. 6-036
(c) Relevant Sector and Product
—
Green Lane
Products
v
PMS
International
............ 6-037
(d) Date of Disclosure
...................... 6-038
(e) Confidential Circumstances
............... 6-039
(f) Grace Period
.......................... 6-040
6.4
Scope of Protection
............................... 6-041
6.4.1
Different Overall Impression
................. 6-042
6.4.2
Nature of Product
.......................... 6-043
[xii]
CONTENTS
6.4.3
Freedom of Designer
....................... 6-044
6.5
Infringement
.................................... 6-045
6.5.1
Exclusive or Anti-Copying Right?
.............. 6-045
6.5.2
Infringing Activities
......................... 6-046
(a) Use
................................. 6-047
(b) Making
.............................. 6-048
(c) Offering the Product or Putting it on the
Market
............................. 6-049
(d) Using a Product
........................ 6-050
(e) Importing, Exporting and Stocking
.......... 6-051
(f) Threatened Infringement
................. 6-052
(g) Exhaustion of Rights
..................... 6-053
6.5.3
Deferment of Publication
.................... 6-054
6.5.4
Direct Infringement
........................ 6-055
6.5.5
Indirect Infringement
....................... 6-056
6.5.6
Territorial Factors
.......................... 6-057
6.5.7
Prior User Rights
.......................... 6-058
6.6
Excepted Acts and Defences
........................ 6-059
6.6.1
Private and Non-Commercial Purposes
......... 6-060
6.6.2
Experimental Purposes
...................... 6-061
6.6.3
Citations or Teaching Purposes
................ 6-062
6.6.4
Use, repair and reconstruction of design on
foreign transport
......................... 6-063
6.6.5
Spare Parts
............................... 6-064
6.7
Ownership
..................................... 6-065
6.7.1
First Ownership
........................... 6-066
6.7.2
Employee and Commissioned Designs
.......... 6-067
6.7.3
Claims to Entitlement
....................... 6-068
6.7.4
Dealings with a Unitary CDR
................. 6-069
(a) Applicable Law
........................ 6-070
(b) Assignment and Transfer
................. 6-071
(c) Security, Rights in
Rem
and Bankruptcy
Proceedings
......................... 6-072
(d) Licensing
............................. 6-073
(e) Effects
Vis-à-Vis
Third Parties
.............. 6-074
6.7.5
Position under National Law
................. 6-075
6.8
Duration of Protection
............................. 6-076
(a) Initial Term
............................ 6-076
(b) Renewal and Restoration (Restitutio in
Integrum)
........................... 6-077
6.9
Invalidity
....................................... 6-078
(a) Procedural Rules
....................... 6-079
(b) Presumption of Validity
.................. 6-080
(c) Grounds of Invalidation
.................. 6-081
[xiii]
CONTENTS
(d)
Prior
Conflict
.......................... 6-082
(e) Persons
Entitled to Bring Invalidation
Proceedings
......................... 6-083
6.10
Registration Procedure
............................ 6-084
6.10.1
Formalities and Multiple Registrations
.......... 6-085
6.10.2
International and Exhibition Priority
............ 6-086
6.10.3
Examination
.............................. 6-086
Chapter
7
Unregistered Community Designs
............... 7-001
7.1
Relationship Between the Registered and Unregistered
Regimes
..................................... 7-001
7.2
Protectable Designs
............................... 7-002
7.2.1
General Criteria
........................... 7-002
7.2.2
Disclosure in the European Union
............. 7-003
7.3
Infringement
.................................... 7-004
7.3.1
Scope of Protection
........................ 7-004
7.3.2
Presumption of Validity and Burden of
Proof—art.85(2)
......................... 7-005
7.3.3
Copying
................................. 7-006
7.3.4
Prohibited Acts
............................ 7-007
7.4
Ownership and Protection
......................... 7-008
7.4.1
Ownership and Entitlement
.................. 7-008
7.4.2
Term of Protection
......................... 7-009
7.5
Invalidation
..................................... 7-010
Chapter
8
Distinctive Shapes, Trade Marks and Unfair
Competition
............................................ 8-001
8.1
Justifying Shapes Trade Marks
....................... 8-001
8.1.1
Function of Trade Marks
..................... 8-001
8.1.2
Definition of a Mark
........................ 8-002
8.2
Shape Exclusions—art.7(1)(e)
....................... 8-003
8.2.1
Shapes and Distinctiveness
................... 8-004
8.2.2
The Philips
v
Remington Guidelines
............ 8-005
8.2.3
Nature of the Goods—art.7(1)(e)(i)
............. 8-006
8.2.4
Technical Results
—
art.7(1)(e)(ii)
............... 8-007
8.2.5
Substantial Value
—
art.7(1 )(e)(iii)
............... 8-008
Chapter
9
Copyright and Unfair Competition
............... 9-001
9.1
Cumulation Principle under
EU
Law
.................. 9-002
9.1.1 EU
Copyright Law
......................... 9-002
9.1.2
Design/Copyright Interface
................... 9-003
9.1.3
Unfair Competition
........................ 9-004
9.2
Why
Harmonisation
is Impossible
.................... 9-005
9.2.1
Copyright Cannot Be Harmonised by Design
Legislation
............................. 9-006
[xiv]
CONTENTS
9.2.2 Designers
do not Need
Copyright ............. 9-007
9.2.3
No one can Define Originality or
Artistic Work
.......................... 9-008
9.2.4
Copyright is not for Designs
.................. 9-009
9.2.5
Political Compromise
....................... 9-010
9.3
Copyright Protection in the United Kingdom
............ 9-011
9.3.1
Legislative History
......................... 9-011
9.3.2
Basis of Protection
......................... 9-012
9.3.3
Engravings
............................... 9-013
9.3.4
Sculpture
................................ 9-014
9.3.5
Works of Artistic Craftsmanship
............... 9-015
9.3.6
Limitations to Copyright—s.51
................ 9-020
9.3.7
Limitations to Copyright
—
s.52
................ 9-021
9.4
Unfair Competition Law
........................... 9-022
9.4.1
Rationale of Unfair Competition Law
........... 9-022
9.4.2
Overlap of Protection
....................... 9-023
9.4.3
Examples
................................ 9-024
(a) Netherlands
........................... 9-024
(b) United Kingdom
....................... 9-025
(c) Germany
............................. 9-026
(d) Italy
................................. 9-031
PART THREE
UNITED STATES
Chapter
10
Design Patent Law
............................. 10-001
10.1
Legislative History
................................ 10-002
10.2
Protectable Designs
............................... 10-003
10.2.1
Definition of Design
........................ 10-003
10.2.2
Article of Manufacture
...................... 10-004
10.2.3
Portion of an Article
........................ 10-005
10.3
Novelty
........................................ 10-006
10.3.1
Statutory Rules
............................ 10-006
10.3.2
Standard of Novelty
........................ 10-007
10.4
Originality
...................................... 10-008
10.5
Non-obviousness
................................. 10-009
10.5.1
Graham
v
Deere
.......................... 10-009
10.5.2
Standard of Non-obviousness
................. 10-010
10.6
Ornamentality
................................... 10-011
10.6.1
Non-functional
............................ 10-011
10.6.2
Aesthetic and Eye Appeal
.................... 10-012
10.6.3
Visibility
................................. 10-013
10.7
Functionality
.................................... 10-014
[xv]
CONTENTS
10.7.1 Not Ornamental........................... 10-014
10.7.2
Determining Functionality
................... 10-015
10.8
Scope of Protection and Infringement
................. 10-016
10.8.1
Scope of Protection
........................ 10-016
10.8.2
Test for Infringement
:
Gorham
v
White
......... 10-017
10.8.3
Ex-post Gorham—Points of Novelty Test
........ 10-018
10.8.4
The Egyptian Goddess Abolishes
Point of Novelty
....................... 10-019
10.8.5
Construction of claims
-
the
Markmän
rule
...... 10-020
10.8.6
Effect of Egyptian Goddess
................... 10-021
10.9
Rights and Duration
.............................. 10-022
Chapter
11
Copyright Law
................................ 11-001
11.1
Historical Background
............................. 11-001
11.1.1
Early Jurisprudence
......................... 11 -001
11.1.2
Mazer
v
Stein
............................. 11-002
11.1.3
Partial Accumulation of Protection
............. 11-003
11.1.4
Pictorial, Graphic and Sculptural Works
Under the
1976
Copyright Act
.............. 11-004
11.2
The Separability Doctrine
......................... 11-005
11.2.1
Physical Separability
....................... 11-006
11.2.2
Conceptual Separability
..................... 11-007
(a)
Kieselstein-Cord
Approach
................ 11-007
(b) Carol
Barnhart
Approach
................. 11-008
(c)
Brandir
Approach
...................... 11-009
(d) Other Circuits Approaches
............... 11-010
11.3
Useful Article
.................................. 11-011
11.4
Conditions and Scope of Protection
.................. 11-012
11.4.1
Feist Doctrine
............................. 11-013
11.4.2
Commonplace Features
..................... 11 -014
11.5
Rights Conferred and Duration of Protection
............ 11-015
11.5.1
Economic Rights
........................... 11-015
11.5.2
Moral Rights
.............................. 11-016
11.5.3
Duration of Protection
...................... 11-017
Chapter
12
Trade mark and Trade Dress
.................... 12-001
12.1
Trade Mark Under
Lanham
Act
...................... 12-002
12.2
Trade Dress Under
Lanham
Act
...................... 12-003
12.3
Functionality Doctrine
............................ 12-004
12.4
State Unfair Competition Law
....................... 12-005
12.5
Vessell Hull Design Protection
...................... 12-006
[xvi]
CONTENTS
PART FOUR
LOOKING TOWARDS THE FUTURE
Chapter
13
The Future
................................... 13-001
13.1
Two Tier Regimes
................................ 13-002
Ί
3.2
Alternative Paths
................................. 13-003
13.3
Holistic Approach
................................ 13-004
[xvii]
DESIGN
LAW: EUROPEAN UNION
AND UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
2nd
Edition
Professor
Urna Suthersanen
The protection of designs traverses all aspects of intellectual property law. This edition of Design Law
considers the protection of designs under
EU
and US laws, and analyses not only
sui
generis design
law, but also copyright, trade mark and unfair competition laws. The book specifically examines the
availability of protection under the
EU
Design Regulation and Directive, the Trade Mark Regulation,
national copyright law, international treaties such as the Berne Convention, Paris Convention and
TRIPS Agreements, as well as the US federal design patent, copyright and trade dress laws. It further
investigates the developing body of case law which has been steadily coming out of the
EU
Office for
Harmonisation
in the Internal Market (OHIM) in this area.
Professor
Uma
Suthersanen is Professor in International Intellectual Property Law, at the Centre
for Commercial Law Studies. Queen Mary, University of London. She is the Editor of the European
Copyright and Design Reports (Sweet
&
Maxwell) and is the current Vice-Chairman of the British
Literary and Artistic Copyright Association and an Executive Committee Member of the Association
Litteraire
et Artistique
Internationale
(ALAI).
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Suthersanen, Uma |
author_facet | Suthersanen, Uma |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Suthersanen, Uma |
author_variant | u s us |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV035773435 |
classification_rvk | PU 1547 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)705374891 (DE-599)BVBBV035773435 |
discipline | Rechtswissenschaft |
edition | 2nd ed. |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV035773435 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T22:04:12Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 1847039065 9781847039064 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-018633079 |
oclc_num | 705374891 |
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physical | XXXV, 278 S. |
publishDate | 2010 |
publishDateSearch | 2010 |
publishDateSort | 2010 |
publisher | Sweet & Maxwell |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Suthersanen, Uma Verfasser aut Design law European Union and United States of America Uma Suthersanen 2nd ed. London Sweet & Maxwell 2010 XXXV, 278 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Digitalisierung UB Bayreuth application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=018633079&sequence=000003&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung UB Bayreuth application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=018633079&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Klappentext |
spellingShingle | Suthersanen, Uma Design law European Union and United States of America |
title | Design law European Union and United States of America |
title_auth | Design law European Union and United States of America |
title_exact_search | Design law European Union and United States of America |
title_full | Design law European Union and United States of America Uma Suthersanen |
title_fullStr | Design law European Union and United States of America Uma Suthersanen |
title_full_unstemmed | Design law European Union and United States of America Uma Suthersanen |
title_short | Design law |
title_sort | design law european union and united states of america |
title_sub | European Union and United States of America |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=018633079&sequence=000003&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=018633079&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT suthersanenuma designlaweuropeanunionandunitedstatesofamerica |