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Intellectual Property and Entertainment Law Group
 
Advanced Entertainment Law - INDL 9314
Advanced Intellectual Property Theory - INDL 9313
Advanced Topics in Intellectual Property - INDL 9308
Biotechnology and the Law - INDL 7315
Communications Law and Policy - INDL 7310
Copyright - INDL 8301
Electronic Commerce - INDL 7307
Entertainment Contract Negotiation and Drafting - INDL 9312
Entertainment Law - INDL 7305
Get a [2d] Life: Legal Issues in Online Communities and Multi-Player Gaming Sites - INDL 9327
Information Privacy Law - INDL 7304
Intellectual Property - INDL 7301
Intellectual Property and Antitrust Law - INDL 8305
Intellectual Property Aspects of Pharmaceutical and Biotech Businesses - INDL 8310
Intellectual Property Licensing - INDL 8317
Internet Law - INDL 8309
Law and Genetics - INDL 7312
Law in the Music Industry - INDL 8312
Mass Media Law - INDL 9323
Patent Claim Drafting - INDL 9305
Patent Law and Practice - INDL 8303
Practical Application of IP in Technology Agreements - INDL 9320
Sports Law - INDL 7308
Technology, Human Rights, and Equality - INDL 9235
Trademark and Unfair Competition - INDL 8302
Trademark Registration - INDL 9322
Trademark Theory - INDL 9316
United States Patent Application Preparation and Prosecution - INDL 9310
 

 
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Advanced Entertainment Law (INDL9314)
 

ADVANCED ENTERTAINMENT LAW (INDL9314)
2 credits. Seminar.
Prerequisite: Entertainment Law.


This seminar involves an in-depth look at certain areas of the entertainment and media industry introduced in the survey course such as television, music licensing and publishing as well as an in-depth look at areas not dealt with in the survey course, such as independent film production, news gathering, advertising, video games, character licensing, and gambling. Assigned reading, class discussion and presentations by various specialists will be used to explore current legal issues, legislation and litigation.

 
 

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indl9313
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Advanced Intellectual Property Theory (INDL9313)
 

ADVANCED INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY THEORY (INDL9313)
2 or 3 credits. Seminar.
Prerequisites: Intellectual Property, or Patent Law & Practice, Copyright and Trademark & Unfair Competition 


This seminar focuses on the theoretical foundations for patent, copyright, and trademark law, including public goods theory,which is the traditional basis for patent and copyright law, and competition theory and search-cost theory, which are traditional bases for trademark law. This seminar focuses on these theories and the common ground shared by all theories of intellectual property, which is providing incentives for suppliers of intangible creations and preventing free riding by others.

 
 

 

indl9308
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Mass Media Law (INDL9308)
 

ADVANCED TOPICS IN INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY (INDL9308)
2 credits. Seminar.
Prerequisite:  Intellectual Property or Patent Law and Practice.


This seminar will focus on emerging issues in intellectual property law and policy, including digital rights management and the Digital Millennium Copyright Act; peer-to-peer networking; copyright term and online content; international patent policy, access to essential technologies, and indigenous cultural products; gene and other biotechnology patents; and patent policy with respect to generic medicines.

 
 

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indl9302
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Advanced Topics in Sports Law (INDL9302)
 

ADVANCED TOPICS IN SPORTS LAW (INDL9302)
2 or 3 credits. Seminar.
Prerequisite: Sports Law.


This seminar treats both amateur and professional athletics. For amateur athletics, it deals with administrative and regulatory functions, including rule making and enforcement of amateur athletic organizations and the rights of amateur athletes. For professional athletics, the seminar surveys rules concerning league governance, the contractual relationship between player and club, labor relations, antitrust aspects of restraints on player and franchise movement and the relationships among athletes, agents and media.

 
 

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indl7312
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Law & Genetics (INDL7312)

 

LAW & GENETICS (INDL7312)
2 credits. Lecture.


Rapid advances in genetics are having extensive effects on our life both within and outside the medical arena. This course will examine the legal transformations taking place in a broad range of legal fields to accommodate these technological innovations. Among the topics to be examined in this course are: (1) genetic testing in the clinical scenario, such as duty to warn issues; (2) Privacy and discrimination related to collection of information by insurers and employers and by the government; (3) Commercialization of genetic research, focusing on gene patents; and (4) Use of genetic information in the courtroom.

 
 

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indl9319
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Biotechnology and the Law (INDL9319)
 

BIOTECHNOLOGY AND THE LAW (INDL7315)
2 credits. Course.


Counseling new or small businesses on intellectual property issues is challenging. They have limited resources, and often have personnel who are not familiar with the intricacies of intellectual property laws. However, without effective counsel, they will fail to maximize the value of their own intellectual property and run the risk of being shut down because they violate someone else's rights. Using a hypothetical biotechnology company, this course will navigate a series of complex intellectual property issues that counsel for a start-up company will likely confront. For each of the topics, students will review the current state of the law and explore ways to respond to the concerns and questions of employees of the hypothetical company.

 
 

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indl7310
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Communications Law and Policy (INDL7310)
 

COMMUNICATIONS LAW AND POLICY (INDL7310)
2 credits. Lecture.


This lecture provides an intensive study of the law and public policy relating to communications, with special emphasis on telecommunications.  We will study the history and structure of the telecommunications industry in the United States, and recent developments toward creating competition in formerly monopoly markets.  We also will review the sources of communications law and policy (federal and state agencies and courts), explore a layman's understanding of the technical network fundamentals, and evaluate content issues.  We will discuss practical client concerns as they evaluate entry into new lines of business and defending existing lines of business from competitive threat.

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indl8301
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Copyright (INDL8301)
 

COPYRIGHT (INDL8301)
3 credits. Lecture.


This course covers all phases of common law and statutory copyright including works subject to protection; securing protection; rights of copyright holder and succession to those rights by agreement and inheritance; international problems; and fair use and infringement questions.

 
 

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indl9313
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Electronic Commerce (INDL7307)
 

ELECTRONIC COMMERCE (INDL7307)
 3 credits. Lecture.


This course will consider how developments in information technology affect commercial transactions.  The course will consider issues related to information (including rules for protecting information, intellectual property and privacy) and various types of transactions in the electronic contexts (sales between businesses and/or consumers, website issues, and payments), as well as cross-border dispute-resolution issues.  Particular emphasis will be placed on the social, political, and economic issues underlying those legal doctrines.

 
 

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indl9312
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Entertainment Contract Negotiation and Drafting (INDL9312)
 

ENTERTAINMENT CONTRACT NEGOTIATION AND DRAFTING (INDL9312)
2 credits. Seminar.
Prerequisite: Entertainment Law.


In this seminar students develop contract negotiation and contract drafting skills through mock negotiations and contract drafting. The class will include lecture, material and practical experience, negotiation deal points, and then drafting the final contract. Contracts will be negotiated in the motion picture, theatrical, music, television and publishing fields.

 
 

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indl7305
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Entertainment Law (INDL7305)
 

ENTERTAINMENT LAW (INDL7305)
3 credits. Lecture.


This course is a general survey and analysis of substantive areas of law relating to the production, distribution and exhibition of products and services in the entertainment and media industries. Areas surveyed include music, film, television, cable, publishing, legitimate stage, the online entertainment industry and the regulation of attorneys, agents and managers. It treats the creation, ownership and regulation of entertainment speech with emphasis on the first amendment, defamation, the right of privacy, the right of publicity, copyright, trademark, unfair competition, the law of ideas, moral rights, theories of credit, contract law and sources of regulation of professionals who work in the entertainment and media industry.

 
 

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indl9327
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Get a [2d] Life: Legal Issues in Online Communities and Multi-Player Gaming Sites (INDL9327)
 

GET A [2D] LIFE: LEGAL ISSUES IN ONLINE COMMUNITIES AND MULTI-PLAYER GAMING SITES (INDL9327)
3 credits. Seminar.
Recommended: Internet Law


This seminar will be co-taught by Professor Jennings, Professor Shannon from the Stillman School of Business, and Len Nuara, Chair of the IP section of Thacher, Proffittt & Wood. Students from the business school and members of the seminar will enroll in Second Life, with law students researching and analysing legal problems that arise as businesses are formed and conducted on the internet.

The second part of the semester will be spent preparing papers, which may take the form of opinion letters, annotated contracts legal briefs, or judicial decisions which emanate from those analyses. The written product will include sufficient evidence of original research and writing to satisfy the writing requirement.

 
 

 

indl8310
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Intellectual Property Aspects of Pharmaceutical and Biotech Businesses (INDL8310)
 

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY ASPECTS OF PHARMACEUTICAL AND BIOTECH BUSINESSES (INDL8310)
Prerequisite:  Intellectual Property.
2 credits. Lecture.


This course focuses on the recent case law, relevant legislation, and underlying policies, related to intellectual property protection in the pharmaceutical and biotech industry.  We will concentrate on key patent cases from the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit and U.S. Supreme Court, and aspects of the FDA law that form the basis for IP protection in these industries.  Recent patent cases, including those on enablement, written description, inherent anticipation, infringement under the doctrine of equivalents, inequitable conduct, and research tools, will be reviewed.  We will also analyze the Hatch-Waxman Act and competition law that impact both the innovative and generic drug industries, and proposed legislation that is currently being considered by Congress that could dramatically affect these industries.

 
 

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indl7304
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Information Privacy Law (INDL9234)
 

INFORMATION PRIVACY LAW (INDL9234)
2 or 3 credits. Seminar.


In recent years new information technologies have greatly transformed our everyday lives. The effects of these technologies on our personal privacy have become a particularly pressing matter under constant scrutiny in both the popular discourse and the law-making process. This seminar will focus among other topics on: (1) Internet privacy, including issues related to anonymity, commercial profiling and spam; (2) Health and genetic privacy, including issues relating to medical records, confidentiality of physician-patient relationships, DNA databases and genetic discrimination; (3) Law enforcement privacy, including issues related to wiretapping, surveillance, and counter-terrorism and post 9/11 reactions. In the seminar we will examine the effect of technological change on our social conceptions of privacy and evaluate the legal reactions to these changes.

 
 

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indl7301
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Intellectual Property (INDL7301)
 

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY (INDL7301)
3 credits. Lecture.


This course is a survey of the law of patent, copyright and trademark. It serves as an introduction to the scope of protection of ideas and creation of legal monopolies and provides a foundation in the area for those who intend to undertake further training in more specialized areas of proprietary rights.

 
 

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indl8305
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Intellectual Property and Antitrust Law (INDL8305)
 

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AND ANTITRUST LAW (INDL8305)
2 credits. Lecture.


An advanced antitrust course that focuses on the special legal issues that are present at the intersection of antitrust and intellectual property.  The course will consider several issues, including: the important role that innovation and intellectual property play in a competitive economy, market definition and innovation markets, the essential facilities doctrine and unilateral refusals to deal when intellectual property is present, intellectual property licensing and antitrust, antitrust issues arising in litigation over IP rights, and mergers and consent decree remedies that involve intellectual property.

 
 

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indl9315
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Intellectual Property Licensing (INDL8317)
 

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LICENSING (INDL8317)
2 credits. Lecture.
Prerequisite: Intellectual Property or Copyright or Trademark and Unfair Competition.


The seminar will provide a comprehensive study of all aspects of Intellectual Property licensing and related issues. Students will analyze and draft various trademark, copyright, music, software, patent and technology licenses, and develop related negotiation skills and litigation strategies. The focus will be practical and will show how value can be unleashed in Intellectual Property Assets through licensing.

 
 

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indl8309
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Internet Law (INDL8309)
 

INTERNET LAW (INDL8309)
3 credits. Lecture.
Recommended: Intellectual Property.


This course surveys legal issues related to the use and misuse of global electronic networks including the Internet. Topics to be discussed include: regulation of digital content; privacy and control of personal data; legal and constitutional implications of public key infrastructure; and regulation of electronic commerce.

 
 

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indl9319
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Biotechnology and the Law (INDL9319)
 

BIOTECHNOLOGY AND THE LAW (INDL7315)
2 credits. Course.


Counseling new or small businesses on intellectual property issues is challenging. They have limited resources, and often have personnel who are not familiar with the intricacies of intellectual property laws. However, without effective counsel, they will fail to maximize the value of their own intellectual property and run the risk of being shut down because they violate someone else's rights. Using a hypothetical biotechnology company, this course will navigate a series of complex intellectual property issues that counsel for a start-up company will likely confront. For each of the topics, students will review the current state of the law and explore ways to respond to the concerns and questions of employees of the hypothetical company.

 
 

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indl9320
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Practical Application of IP in Technology Agreements (INDL9320)
 

PRACTICAL APPLICATION OF IP IN TECHNOLOGY AGREEMENTS(INDL9320)
2 credits. Seminar.


This course is a practical survey and application of technology law, predominately covering patent, copyright and trade secret protection for a critical business asset - the information technology system upon which virtually all commerce rests. After covering essential intellectual property concepts, the course will apply these concepts and focus on how to effectively analyze, negotiate and draft the following types of agreements: software licenses, software development agreements including website/e-commerce development agreements and maintenance/support and technology services agreements from both the acquirer and the provider side.

The course will also address the fundamentals of resolving disputes arising from those agreements, including intellectual property infringement and failures of performance, with underlying liability theories, vendor defenses and litigation strategy.
 

 
 

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indl8312
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Law in the Music Industry (INDL8312)
 

LAW IN THE MUSIC INDUSTRY (INDL8312)
2 credits. Lecture.
Prerequisite: Entertainment Law


This course focuses on the daily legal issues facing attorneys in the music industry. It will consider the various legal relationships within a musical group and between the artist and his various representatives. It will then discuss the most heavily negotiated agreements in the music industry, beginning with demonstration, sample and producer agreements. The course will next explore legal pitfalls of production company agreements, and will then dissect various provisions of both recording and music publishing agreements. The course will then consider music industry unions and the American Federation of Musicians and the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists impact of the artist and the record company. Finally, the course will discuss the legal issues facing music industry attorneys in the 21st century, with specific focus on digital transmission of music, down-loading of music over the internet and alternative methods of music delivery.

 
 

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indl9323
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Mass Media Law (INDL9323)
 

MASS MEDIA LAW (INDL9323)
2 credits. Seminar.


This seminar surveys the constitutional principles, laws and regulatory policies that shape the mass media.  It has two principal goals:  to engage students in a critical review of the substantive case law governing the gathering and dissemination of  information by print, television and internet; and to facilitate an understanding of the adequacy of the constitutional protection which this body of law affords the nation's major media institutions.

Note:  Students cannot apply both this course and The First Amendment in the Twenty-First Century (PUBR9184) towards degree requirements.

 
 

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indl9305
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Patent Claim Drafting (INDL9305)
 

PATENT CLAIM DRAFTING (INDL9305)
2 credits. Seminar.
Prerequisite: Patent Law and Practice.


This drafting seminar will focus on the "claim" or "claims" appended to a patent specification. The claim defines the scope of the grant, or the technical extent of the exclusive privilege the patent accords to its owner. Claim drafting assignments will be distributed to the students before each class. Each student's work will be reviewed on an individual basis, with rewriting and revision as needed.

NOTE: Students are required to have a degree in engineering or a physical science.

 
 

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indl8303
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Patent Law and Practice (INDL8303)
 

PATENT LAW AND PRACTICE (INDL8303)
2 credits. Lecture.


This course undertakes an intensive examination of the nature of patents and questions of patent validity and procurement, primarily for those intending to specialize in the patent area in their future practice. It includes: nature of patent property; problems in the procurement of patents including filing date, obtention and maintenance; international practice and problems; patent office practice; problems of validity including novelty, utility and non-obviousness; and transfers of property rights in patents.

 
 

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Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Practical Application of IP in Technology Agreements (INDL9320)
 

PRACTICAL APPLICATION OF IP IN TECHNOLOGY AGREEMENTS(INDL9320)
2 credits. Seminar.


This course is a practical survey and application of technology law, predominately covering patent, copyright and trade secret protection for a critical business asset - the information technology system upon which virtually all commerce rests. After covering essential intellectual property concepts, the course will apply these concepts and focus on how to effectively analyze, negotiate and draft the following types of agreements: software licenses, software development agreements including website/e-commerce development agreements and maintenance/support and technology services agreements from both the acquirer and the provider side.

The course will also address the fundamentals of resolving disputes arising from those agreements, including intellectual property infringement and failures of performance, with underlying liability theories, vendor defenses and litigation strategy.
 

 
 

 

indl9303
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Sports Industry Contracts and Negotiations (INDL9303)
 

SPORTS INDUSTRY CONTRACTS AND NEGOTIATIONS (INDL9303)
2 credits. Seminar.


The study of the formation, interpretation, negotiation and tax implications of sports industry contracts with emphasis on team-player agreements, agent contracts, sports marketing contracts, collective bargaining agreements and antitrust implications facility leases and related agreements.  The course will also address the ethical rules governing lawyers in their interactions in the sports industry.

 
 

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indl7308
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Sports Law (INDL7308)
 

SPORTS LAW (INDL7308)
2 credits. Lecture.


A survey of the major topics in sports law. Special attention is given to the regulation of professional and amateur athletics, the organizational structure of sports leagues and associations, labor-management relations, international sports regulatory agencies, individual rights of athletes and spectators, and the application of tort and criminal law principles to sports. This course is designed for law students with an interest in the interrelationship of American sports and the legal system and not exclusively for those interested in careers as sports lawyers.

 
 

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indl9235
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Technology, Human Rights, and Equality (HLTH)

 

TECHNOLOGY, HUMAN RIGHTS, AND EQUALITY (INDL9235)
2 or 3 credits. Seminar.



This seminar will focus on recent legal efforts to restrict (and encourage) controversial medical technologies. Case studies will include 1) stem cell and genetic engineering research, 2) global access to "essential medicines" (e.g., AIDS treatments), and 3) Medicare coverage decisions (i.e., how this social insurance program decides whether to pay for advanced procedures). Readings will include basic journalistic and philosophic accounts of the controversies involved, and primary and secondary legal materials. Students with a background in intellectual property law, health care law, or administrative law should find the seminar particularly rewarding.

Seminar participants will be expected to write a paper advocating for or against a regulation (or proposed regulation) related to the seminar topic.

 
 

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indl8302
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Trademark and Unfair Competition (INDL8302)
 

TRADEMARK AND UNFAIR COMPETITION (INDL8302)
3 credits. Lecture.


This course treats common law and statutory protection of ideas, trade secrets, and trademarks, including: acquisition and loss of trademark rights; registration and licensing; problems of infringement, dilution, and misappropriation of trademarks; fair use and Internet use of trademarks; and related remedies.  

 
 

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indl9322
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Trademark Registration (INDL9322)
 

TRADEMARK REGISTRATION (INDL9322)
2 credits. Seminar.
Prerequisite:  Intellectual Property or Trademark and Unfair Competition


Federal registration provides important benefits to trademark owners.  Registration work is a staple of many law firm and in-house intellectual property practices.  This class will cover the basics of trademark registration practice, from selection of a mark and initial screening through opposition proceedings.  Assignments will include hands on drafting of opinion letters, registration papers, and pleadings drawn from real-world examples.

 
 

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indl9316
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > Trademark Theory (INDL9316)

 

TRADEMARK THEORY (INDL9316)
2 or 3 credits. Seminar.
Prerequisite: Intellectual Property or Trademark and Unfair Competition


This seminar will discuss the theoretical foundations of trademark law, how the structure of trademark law reflects various
goals the law is designed to meet, and how the theory and structure of trademark law compares to the theory and structure of copyright and patent law.

 
 

 

indl9316
Home > Registrar/Bursar > Courses > Course Index > United States Patent Application Preparation and Prosecution (INDL9310)
 

UNITED STATES PATENT APPLICATION PREPARATION AND PROSECUTION (INDL9310)
2 credits. Seminar.
Prerequisite: Patent Law and Practice.


This seminar develops the writing and analytical skills required to draft applications for United States patents. Patent claim drafting skills are not undertaken in this course. Patent prosecution techniques, however, including evaluation of Patent and Trademark Office Official Actions and preparation of responses to these Official Actions are studied. There also is practice in drafting appellate briefs for submission to the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences.

NOTE: Students are required to have a degree in engineering or a physical science.

 
 

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