WIPO Copyright Treaty Part 1

WIPO Copyright Treaty Part 1

 

1

A Model Copyright Exemption to Serve the Visually Impaired: An Alternative to the Treaty Proposals Before WIPO
Patrick Hely
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law
Volume 43, Number 5, November 2010 p.1369

LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

2

Effective Technological measures in Jordanian Copyright Protection Law
Ramzi Madi
Entertainment Law Review
Volume 21, Issue 7, 2010 p.263

LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

This article gives an overview of the “effective technological measures”provisions in Jordanian law and considers the extent to which they implement the anti-circumvention obligations under art. 11 of the WIPO Copyright Treaty and art. 18 of the WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty. It also examines the meaning of effective technological protection measures, and their categories and restricted acts, and the possible exceptions. Finally, the article addresses the civil and criminal enforcement provisions.

3

Rethinking the Berne-Plus Framework: From Conflicts of Laws to Copyright Reform
PAUL EDWARD GELLER
European Intellectual Property Review
Volume 31, Issue 8, 2009 p.391

LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

Copyright laws, globally, are in crisis. We propose to rethink the international framework for copyright reform in order to start resolving this crisis. The Berne Convention, plus the TRIPs Agreement and the WIPO Copyright Treaty, constitute this framework. Berne-plus bundles of rights and exceptions, we here argue, have to be reconceptualised in terms of a core author’s right of communication. We also here illustrate how courts, in proliferating cases of conflicts of copyright laws, may commence this paradigm shift.

4

THE CONSTITUTIONALITY OF WIPO’S BROADCASTING TREATY: THE ORIGINALITY AND LIMITED TIMES REQUIREMENTS OF THE COPYRIGHT CLAUSE
Adam R. Tarosky
Duke Law & Technology Review
Volume 2006, Articles 16-20

LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

2006 Duke L. & Tech. Rev. 0016 – Because the proposed WIPO Broadcasting Treaty extends perpetual copyright-like protections to unoriginal information, its implementation would violate at least two fundamental limitations on Congress’s Copyright Clause power: the originality and “limited times”requirements. But Congress has a trump card–the Commerce Clause. This iBrief argues that to give proper effect to the limitations of the Copyright Clause, Congress should not be allowed to implement copyright-like legislation under the less restrictive Commerce Clause.

5

Sui Generis Database Legislation: A Critical Analysis
Samuel Trosow
Yale Journal of Law & Technology
Volume 7, Spring Issue, 2004-2005 p.94

LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

Over the last decade, one of the most contentious issues in intellectual property has been the question of statutory protection for databases and compilations. A number of factors had converged during the 1990’s to place this issue on the policy agenda, including court decisions holding that the factual elements within collections of information are not necessarily covered by copyright laws, the adoption within the European Union of a Directive on the subject, and the continued advances in informational technologies that have made database collections increasingly vulnerable to misappropriation. The efforts of proponents of new, or sui generis database protections to enact new legislation in the United States had been unsuccessful in the 104th, 105th, 106th and 108th Congresses, and an effort to bring database protections within the ambit of the World Intellectual Property Organization’s (WIPO) system of treaties failed to gain approval at its 1996 diplomatic conference. The continuing efforts of the European Union to place the issue of a new database treaty at the fore of the WIPO agenda through its Standing Committee on Copyright and Related Rights, has been unsuccessful in the face of growing resistance from developing countries. In the United States, various efforts to mediate the disparate position of the various stakeholders have been largely unsuccessful. This paper presents the drive towards sui generis legislation for databases as a case study that exemplifies the expansionary nature of the contemporary intellectual property policy environment. Section I places the problem in context by discussing the strategic importance of databases for the contemporary research enterprise. Focusing on what databases are, how they are used by researchers, how they are becoming increasingly central to the process of scientific research, and how sui generis legislation would disrupt these processes helps frame the subsequent discussion of particular legislative proposals. Section II outlines and evaluates the three primary justifications advanced by proponents of sui generis database legislation; the need to fill in a perceived gap caused by lack of adequate protection under U.S. copyright law, the need to harmonize U.S. law with the European Union Database Directive, and the increased risks of misappropriation brought about by technological advances. Section III turns to the legislative response in the U.S., describing the database legislation that has been introduced in the 104th, 105th, 106th, and 108th Congresses, and setting forth the principle arguments raised by proponents and opponents of the measures. Section III also contains a discussion of the draft Database Treaty that had been considered by the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) in 1996. Section IV provides an assessment of the validity of the claims of the proponents of database legislation by placing the database debate in a deeper political and economic context. The conclusion is reached that sui generis database legislation would hamper the goals of promoting scientific progress, and that such attempts should be rejected by policymakers.

 

Conclusion

Notes

See Also

References and Further Reading

About the Author/s and Reviewer/s

Author: international

Mentioned in these Entries

Berne Convention, EU Copyright Directive Part 3, International copyright Part 5, International copyright1, List of international public law topics, List of international trade topics, Trade and Commercial Relations conventions.


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