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3D Printing and Beyond: Intellectual Property and Regulation

3D Printing and Beyond: Intellectual Property and Regulation

Mark Lemley
0/5 ( ratings)
This ground-breaking and timely contribution is the first and most comprehensive edited collection to address the implications for Intellectual Property law in the context of 3D Printing and Additive Manufacturing. Providing a coverage of IP law in three main jurisdictions including the UK, USA and Australia. 3D Printing and Beyond brings together a team of distinguished IP experts and is an indispensable starting point for researchers with an interest in IP, emerging technologies and 3D printing.

Along with experts from around the world, Mendis, Lemley and Rimmer consider the legal and intellectual property implications relating to 3D printing and emerging technologies in the UK, USA, and Australia.

This edited book will consider the legal and intellectual property implications relating to 3D printing and emerging technologies from the perspective of UK, USA and Australia.

The book aims to provide an in-depth consideration of the intellectual property implications of 3D printing, before moving on to a consideration of the legal and intellectual property challenges posed by future and emerging technologies. As such, the book will set out some of the most pressing challenges for intellectual property in the present times, as a result of 3D printing before moving on to a consideration of the future by discussing not only intellectual property, but also other legal challenges as a result of emerging technologies with the focus kept firmly on the three chosen jurisdictions.

Introduction

From the Maker Movement to the 3D Printing Era: Opportunities and Challenges - Dinusha Mendis, Mark Lemley and Matthew Rimmer

Chapter 1:

IP in a world without scarcity – Mark Lemley

PART ONE UNITED KINGDOM

Chapter 2: ‘Mind the gap’: From engravings to 3D designs and 3D scans – re-evaluating copyright law in a 3D printing world – Dinusha Mendis

Chapter 3: Design rights and 3D printing in the UK: Balancing innovation and creativity in a harmonised and fragmented legal framework – Thomas Margoni

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

Chapter 5: 3D printing and patent law – apt and ready? – Marc Mimler

Chapter 6: Transformative technologies and responsive legal scholarship – Roger Brownsword

PART TWO UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

Chapter 7: 3D printing and US copyright law: implications for software, enforcement and looking ahead to business strategies – Peter Menell and Ryan Vacca

Chapter 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

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

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

Chapter 11: How democratized production challenges society’s ability to regulate – Deven Desai

PART THREE AUSTRALIA

Chapter 12: Makers Empire: Australian copyright law, 3D printing and the ‘Ideas Boom’ – Matthew Rimmer

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

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

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

Chapter 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
Language
English
Pages
432
Format
Hardcover
Release
February 01, 2019
ISBN 13
9781786434043

3D Printing and Beyond: Intellectual Property and Regulation

Mark Lemley
0/5 ( ratings)
This ground-breaking and timely contribution is the first and most comprehensive edited collection to address the implications for Intellectual Property law in the context of 3D Printing and Additive Manufacturing. Providing a coverage of IP law in three main jurisdictions including the UK, USA and Australia. 3D Printing and Beyond brings together a team of distinguished IP experts and is an indispensable starting point for researchers with an interest in IP, emerging technologies and 3D printing.

Along with experts from around the world, Mendis, Lemley and Rimmer consider the legal and intellectual property implications relating to 3D printing and emerging technologies in the UK, USA, and Australia.

This edited book will consider the legal and intellectual property implications relating to 3D printing and emerging technologies from the perspective of UK, USA and Australia.

The book aims to provide an in-depth consideration of the intellectual property implications of 3D printing, before moving on to a consideration of the legal and intellectual property challenges posed by future and emerging technologies. As such, the book will set out some of the most pressing challenges for intellectual property in the present times, as a result of 3D printing before moving on to a consideration of the future by discussing not only intellectual property, but also other legal challenges as a result of emerging technologies with the focus kept firmly on the three chosen jurisdictions.

Introduction

From the Maker Movement to the 3D Printing Era: Opportunities and Challenges - Dinusha Mendis, Mark Lemley and Matthew Rimmer

Chapter 1:

IP in a world without scarcity – Mark Lemley

PART ONE UNITED KINGDOM

Chapter 2: ‘Mind the gap’: From engravings to 3D designs and 3D scans – re-evaluating copyright law in a 3D printing world – Dinusha Mendis

Chapter 3: Design rights and 3D printing in the UK: Balancing innovation and creativity in a harmonised and fragmented legal framework – Thomas Margoni

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

Chapter 5: 3D printing and patent law – apt and ready? – Marc Mimler

Chapter 6: Transformative technologies and responsive legal scholarship – Roger Brownsword

PART TWO UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

Chapter 7: 3D printing and US copyright law: implications for software, enforcement and looking ahead to business strategies – Peter Menell and Ryan Vacca

Chapter 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

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

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

Chapter 11: How democratized production challenges society’s ability to regulate – Deven Desai

PART THREE AUSTRALIA

Chapter 12: Makers Empire: Australian copyright law, 3D printing and the ‘Ideas Boom’ – Matthew Rimmer

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

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

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

Chapter 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
Language
English
Pages
432
Format
Hardcover
Release
February 01, 2019
ISBN 13
9781786434043

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