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27 Sep 2021, 11:37 am by Jonathan Bailey
In 2008, law professors Dotan Oliar and Christopher Sprigman published a paper that looked at the norms comics had established with the issue. [read post]
14 May 2020, 3:30 am by Dotan Oliar
Dotan Oliar Economic activities often conflict: a rancher’s stray cattle may reduce the value of a neighboring farmer’s crops, or a tech company’s file-sharing app may reduce the value of music labels’ records. [read post]
30 May 2019, 3:30 am by Dotan Oliar
Dotan Oliar Most people assume, if implicitly, that there is a substantial element of uniformity in our IP system. [read post]
26 Jun 2018, 3:30 am by Dotan Oliar
Dotan Oliar The early legal literature on law and social norms tended to paint a rosy picture. [read post]
2 Sep 2016, 6:47 am by Terry Hart
Copyright’s Race, Gender and Age: A First Quantitative Look at Registrations — Robert Brauneis and Dotan Oliar crunch the numbers on copyright registration applications from 1978 through 2012 to see what demographic information can be revealed. [read post]
10 Jun 2016, 3:30 am by Dotan Oliar
Dotan Oliar Zahr Said’s Reforming Copyright Interpretation puts its finger on an important, yet little studied, aspect of copyright law: judicial interpretation. [read post]
11 May 2016, 10:38 am by Rebecca Tushnet
(Some of Kraut’s accounts of physical fights between black dancers sound like the fights among stand-up comics recounted by Chris Sprigman & Dotan Oliar.) [read post]
23 Mar 2016, 2:35 pm by Lisa Larrimore Ouellette
L.J. 885 (2008) 17 80 Oliar, Dotan; Sprigman, Christopher There's No Free Laugh (Anymore): The Emergence of Intellectual Property Norms and the Transformation of Stand-Up Co [read post]
28 Jan 2014, 3:30 am by Dotan Oliar
Dotan Oliar The constitution empowers Congress to promote the useful and the expressive arts, which Congress does through the laws governing patents and copyrights. [read post]
17 Sep 2013, 10:04 am by Terry Hart
“[W]ithout question, the exercise of the [copyright] power has operated as an encouragement to native genius, and to the solid advancement of literature and the arts. [read post]
30 Jul 2012, 1:08 pm by Rebecca Tushnet
A long time ago, I worked on a piece about Chris Sprigman and Dotan Oliar’s great article on stand-up comics that is reprised in Chris Sprigman and Kal Raustiala’s The Knockoff Economy: How Imitation Sparks Innovation (review copy). [read post]
30 May 2012, 6:14 am by Bridget Crawford
Rev. 907 The Copyright-Innovation Tradeoff: Property Rules, Liability Rules, and Intentional Infliction of Harm Dotan Oliar 64 Stan. [read post]
11 May 2012, 8:08 am by Lawrence Solum
Dotan Oliar (University of Virginia School of Law) has posted The Copyright-Innovation Trade-Off: Property Rules, Liability Rules, and Intentional Infliction of Harm (64 Stan. [read post]
4 May 2012, 3:00 am by propertyprof
Dotan Oliar (Virginia) has posted The Copyright-Innovation Trade-Off: Property Rules, Liability Rules, and Intentional Infliction of Harm (Stanford Law Review) on SSRN. [read post]
17 Oct 2011, 4:00 am by Terry Hart
A letter written by Thomas Jefferson to Isaac McPherson in 1813 has become canonized into the copyright skepticism movement. [read post]
6 May 2011, 11:02 am by Rebecca Tushnet
Dotan Oliar How platforms affect the type of things that are created on the platform. [read post]
18 Jan 2011, 6:29 pm by Sonia Katyal
This work, as Anderson acknowledges, joins the work of other scholars (Dotan Oliar, Christopher Sprigman, Jacob Loshin, Mark Schultz, Emanuel Fauchart and Eric von Hippel, among others), both in and outside of the law, who study norm-based practices among chefs, comedians, jambands, magicians, and others, to name just a few areas. [read post]
10 Dec 2010, 11:13 am by Media Law Prof
Dotan Oliar and Christopher Jon Sprigman, both of the University of Virginia Law School, have published Intellectual Property Norms in Stand-Up Comedy in the collection The Making and Unmaking of Intellectual Property (University of Chicago Press, 2010). [read post]