March 19, 2020 | New York Law Journal
En Banc Ruling in Led Zeppelin LitigationFor the past five years, the copyright bar and the music industry have carefully followed the many twists and turns of 'Skidmore v. Led Zeppelin', a potentially monumental infringement case. On March 9, 2020, a unanimous en banc panel of the Ninth Circuit resolved some thorny issues involving substantial similarity and copyright scope that will be important for future litigants. In their Copyright Law column, Robert W. Clarida and Robert J. Bernstein review some of the main takeaways from decision.
By Robert W. Clarida and Robert J. Bernstein
9 minute read
January 29, 2020 | New York Law Journal
'Fearless Girl' Abroad and the Extraterritorial Limitation on U.S. Copyright LawIn their Copyright Law column, Robert J. Bernstein and Robert W. Clarida discuss infringement litigation stemming from the "Fearless Girl" statue, specifically that a replica and photographs of the statue were being used in Australia for purposes explicitly prohibited by the copyright license agreement.
By Robert J. Bernstein and Robert W. Clarida
7 minute read
December 03, 2019 | New York Law Journal
Judges Gonna Judge: When Are Short Phrases Protectable?It's a common fact pattern: A songwriter alleges that another songwriter has infringed the lyrics of Song A by using a similar short phrase, frequently a current slang phrase, in the lyrics of Song B. With this context, Robert W. Clarida and Robert J. Bernstein discuss the recent Ninth Circuit decision in 'Hall v. Swift' in this month's edition of their Copyright Law column.
By Robert W. Clarida and Robert J. Bernstein
9 minute read
September 19, 2019 | New York Law Journal
Andy Warhol's 'Prince Series' Works Held To Make Fair Use of Prince PhotographOn July 1, 2019, the U.S. District Court Judge John Koetl for the Southern District of New York held that a series of silkscreen paintings and prints by Andy Warhol based on a photograph of the rock star Prince taken by Lynn Goldsmith constituted a transformative and fair use. In their Copyright Law column, Robert J. Bernstein and Robert W. Clarida discuss the decision, which will be appealed to the Second Circuit.
By Robert J. Bernstein and Robert W. Clarida
11 minute read
August 29, 2019 | Daily Business Review
New EB-5 Regulations Carry Significant Consequence to the South Florida MarketAs a result of a new agency rule, potential EB-5 investors will be scurrying to invest in the EB-5 program in rapid fashion, many of whom desire to invest in the South Florida economy and emigrate to South Florida.
By Roger Bernstein, Ronald R. Fieldstone, Julian Montero and Rohit Kapuria
5 minute read
May 24, 2019 | The Recorder
'Mash-Up' of Dr. Seuss and Star Trek Held Fair UseIn Dr. Seuss Enterprises v. ComicMix, the Southern District of California granted summary judgment to defendants, affirming its prior findings that a ComicMix illustrated book combining elements of several Seuss children's books with characters, themes and other features of the popular sci-fi series Star Trek was a non-infringing fair use of the Seuss material from which it had admittedly been “slavishly” copied.
By Robert W. Clarida and Robert J. Bernstein
8 minute read
May 24, 2019 | New York Law Journal
'Mash-Up' of Dr. Seuss and Star Trek Held Fair UseIn their Copyright Law column, Robert Clarida and Robert Bernstein discuss Dr. Seuss Enterprises v. ComicMix, where the Southern District of California granted summary judgment to defendants, affirming its prior findings that a ComicMix illustrated book combining elements of several Seuss children's books with characters, themes and other features of the popular sci-fi series Star Trek was a non-infringing fair use of the Seuss material from which it had admittedly been “slavishly” copied.
By Robert W. Clarida and Robert J. Bernstein
8 minute read
March 14, 2019 | New York Law Journal
Supreme Court Reaffirms Prior Registration Requirement for Infringement ActionsCopyright Law columnists Robert J. Bernstein and Robert W. Clarida discuss 'Fourth Estate Public Benefit v. Wall-Street.com, et al.', one of two recent, unanimous Supreme Court opinions construing provisions of the Copyright Act relating to procedural requirements for commencing infringement actions and interpreting the term “full costs” in awarding them to the prevailing party.
By Robert J. Bernstein and Robert W. Clarida
8 minute read
January 30, 2019 | New York Law Journal
Second Circuit Affirms 'ReDigi': No 'Resale' of Digital Music FilesCopyright Law columnists Robert Clarida and Robert Bernstein discuss the Second Circuit's long-awaited ruling in 'Capitol Records v. ReDigi,' a case that raised issues of first impression concerning first sale and fair use in the age of digital music distribution.
By Robert W. Clarida and Robert J. Bernstein
7 minute read
January 30, 2019 | New York Law Journal
Particularity Pleading for Judiciary Law §487 Complaints That Allege Attorney DeceitInstead of compelling plaintiffs to prove judge-made add-ons not found in the statute, New York courts hearing §487 claims should maintain focus on particularity pleading as provisioned in CPLR 3016(b).
By Anita Bernstein and John Crain
9 minute read
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