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3D Printing and Beyond -

3D Printing and Beyond

Intellectual Property and Regulation
Buch | Hardcover
432 Seiten
2019
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd (Verlag)
978-1-78643-404-3 (ISBN)
CHF 229,95 inkl. MwSt
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This ground-breaking and timely contribution in the field of intellectual property law explores the implications of 3D printing and additive manufacturing in three core jurisdictions: the UK, USA and Australia.
This ground-breaking and timely contribution to the field of Intellectual Property law explores the implications of 3D Printing and Additive Manufacturing in three core jurisdictions: the UK, USA and Australia. Providing in-depth analysis of the current state of affairs, as well as outlining future issues and developments, 3D Printing and Beyond addresses both the challenges and opportunities created by 3D Printing.

Bringing together both academic and practical experts, the original contributions to this book consider the regulation of new, emerging and future technologies and their implications for the legal landscape. The book goes beyond 3D printing and its relationship with intellectual property to the realms of ethics, contracts, socio-legal aspects and economics.

Intellectual property academics will greatly benefit from reading this book, as it not only explores the myriad ways in which 3D printing has altered the horizon of IP law, but also offers ideas for areas of future research. Practitioners and policy makers will also benefit from the useful examples and cases used in this book.

Contributors include: T. Berger, S. Bradshaw, R. Brownsword, A. Daly, D. Desai, E. Ferrill, T. Holbrook, D. Hong, K. Horn, M. Lemley, R. MacKichan, T. Margoni, C. McKinley, D. Mendis, P. Menell, M. Mimler, D. Nicol, J. Nielsen, M. Rimmer, A. Scardamaglia, R. Vacca

Edited by Dinusha Mendis, Professor of Intellectual Property and Innovation Law, Co-Director, Centre for Intellectual Property Policy and Management (CIPPM), Bournemouth University, UK, Mark Lemley, William H. Neukom Professor of Law, Director, Stanford Program in Law, Science and Technology, Stanford Law School, Stanford University, California, US and Matthew Rimmer, Professor of Intellectual Property and Innovation Law, Faculty of Business and Law, Queensland University of Technology (QUT), Australia

Contents:

Preface

Introduction
From the maker movement to the 3D printing era: opportunities and challenges
Dinusha Mendis, Mark Lemley and Matthew Rimmer

1. IP in a world without scarcity
Mark A. Lemley

Part I United Kingdom
2. Mind the gap’: From engravings to 3D designs and 3D scans: re-evaluating copyright law in a 3D printing world
Dinusha Mendis

3. Design rights and 3D printing in the UK: Balancing innovation and creativity in a (dis)harmonised and fragmented legal framework
Thomas Margoni

4. Digital trade mark infringement and 3D printing implications: What does the future hold?
Dukki Hong and Simon Bradshaw

5. 3D printing and patent law – a UK perspective: apt and ready?
Marc D. Mimler

6. Transformative technologies and responsive legal scholarship
Roger Brownsword

Part II United States of America
7. 3D printing and US copyright law: implications for software, enforcement and business strategies
Peter S. Menell and Ryan Vacca

8. Integrating a classic tool for a modern US challenge: US design patents implications for 3D printing
Elizabeth Ferrill, Robert MacKichan, Christopher McKinley and Kelly Horn

9. How 3D printing disrupts trade dress protection and resurrects the need for source and quality assurance
Deven Desai

10. Remedies for digital patent infringement: A perspective from USA
Timothy Holbrook

11. How democratized production challenges society’s ability to regulate
Deven Desai

Part III
Australia
12. Makers Empire: Australian copyright law, 3D printing and the ‘Ideas Boom’
Matthew Rimmer

13. ‘Substantial similarity’ under Australian design law: application to 3D printing
Tyrone Berger

14. Trade mark controversies in 3D printing: An Australian perspective
Amanda Scardamaglia

15. The reform challenge: Australian patent law and the emergence of 3D printing
Jane Nielsen and Dianne Nicol

16. Don’t believe the hype? Recent 3D printing developments for law and society
Angela Daly

Conclusion: The future of printcrime: intellectual property, innovation law and 3D printing
Dinusha Mendis, Mark Lemley and Matthew Rimmer

Index

Erscheinungsdatum
Verlagsort Cheltenham
Sprache englisch
Maße 156 x 234 mm
Themenwelt Informatik Grafik / Design Digitale Bildverarbeitung
Recht / Steuern EU / Internationales Recht
Recht / Steuern Wirtschaftsrecht Urheberrecht
ISBN-10 1-78643-404-0 / 1786434040
ISBN-13 978-1-78643-404-3 / 9781786434043
Zustand Neuware
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