Knowledge, ownership (and technology) IT, Globalization and Culture 2013 21-09-2015· 1.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Section 17.1.
Advertisements

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
Introduction to Copyright Principles © 2005 Patricia L. Bellia. May be reproduced, distributed or adapted for educational purposes only.
Intellectual Property Basics for Business Owners David M. Knasel, Esq. Dominion Business Law PLC Tysons Corner | Leesburg, VA
Intellectual Property
Peter D. Aufrichtig, Esq..  Intellectual Property clients look and sound like all other clients.
Chapter 7.5 Intellectual Property Content, Law and Practice.
Chapter 14 Legal Aspects of Sport Marketing
Copyright vs. trademark
1 Intellectual Property Patents, Trademarks and Copyrights.
3-1 Patent, Trademark, and Copyright Patent, trademark, service marks, and copyrights provide a mean to promote new ideas and inventions and at the same.
UNITED STATES COPYRIGHT OFFICE Copyright Registration for Musical Compositions.
IP=Increased Profits How to Make Your IP Work For You Rachel Lerner COSE Fall 2006.
T5-1ENT Tools for Innovation: Intro to Intellectual Property Jonathan Weaver UDM Mechanical Engineering Department
Protecting Your Ideas and Inventions: Patents, Trademarks, Servicemarks and Copyrights.
Trademarks, Copyrights & Patents. What do you already know?
 Copyright is a form of protection given to authors/creators of original works.  This property right can be sold or transferred to others.
Protecting Intellectual Property (IP) Evan Kuenzli Grant Miller.
Characteristics of a Market Economy
I DENTIFYING AND P ROTECTING I NTELLECTUAL P ROPERTY Tyson Benson
Overview of IP Protection Mechanisms in the United States Presented by: Daniel Waymel UT Dallas – August 2013.
1 Intellectual Property Patents, Trademarks and Copyrights.
What is Intellectual Property ? Patents- protection of technology Trademarks- protection of domain names and product identity Copyrights- protection of.
2011 Industry Sponsored Research Workshop INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY Michael Jaremchuk Associate Director CVIP Phone: FAX:
By Richard A. Mann & Barry S. Roberts
Technology-Business-Legal Some Critical Intersections Getting Started Legally IP Protection Licensing Mark J. Sever, Jr., Esquire Deborah A. Hays, Esquire.
Preparing a Provisional Patent Application Hay Yeung Cheung, Ph.D. Myers Wolin, LLC March 16, 2013 Trenton Computer Festival 1.
Intellectual Property Intellectual Property. Intellectual Property Intellectual effort, not by physical labor Intangible property Lawsuits involve infringement.
Knowledge Transfer | Accelerating Innovation KT Training – 9 September 2014 Introduction to Intellectual Property Rights D. Mazur – 9 September 2014.
An Overview of Intellectual Property Law, Policy, and Controversy Michael J. Madison University of Pittsburgh School of Law February 16, 2006.
Zheng Liu January 18, 2015 Intellectual Property Law For Startups.
Copyright Laws & Regulations Created by The University of North Texas in partnership with the Texas Education Agency.
Class Seven: Intellectual Property Patents, Trademarks and Copyrights.
Copyright Laws & Regulations. Copyright © Texas Education Agency, All rights reserved. 22 A.Title 17 of U. S. Code 1. Protection provided by law.
Intellectual Property Laws and Fair Use Guidelines for Educational Multimedia.
The Basics of Intellectual Property Law Understanding IP by A. David Spevack, Office of Naval Research.
Prentice Hall © PowerPoint Slides to accompany The Legal Environment of Business and Online Commerce 4E, by Henry R. Cheeseman Chapter 8 Intellectual.
LIBS100 Intellectual Property Copyright and Fair Use July 25, 2005.
W ELCOME Topic: Intellectual Property. D EFINITION Intellectual property includes ideas, discoveries, writings, works of art, software, collections and.
Intellectual Property Law Introduction Victor H. Bouganim WCL, American University.
Ignite Technology Transfer Office INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS Lily O’Brien IP & Commercialization Contracts Manager Ignite Technology Transfer Office.
Copyright Donna Min Shiroma School Library Services Advanced Technology Research Branch Office of Curriculum, Instruction and Student Support © September.
An Overview of Intellectual Property by John Slaughter September 26, 2009 © John Slaughter All Rights Reserved.
Slide Set Eleven: Intellectual Property Patents, Trademarks and Copyrights 1.
Copyright By: Team 2. What Is Copyright?  Copyright is a form of protection provided by the laws, to the authors of “original works of authorship,” including.
Intellectual property (IP) refers to creations of the mind: inventions, literary and artistic works, music, movies, symbols, names, images, and designs.
Patent Process and Patent Search 6a Foundations of Technology Standard 3: Students will develop an understanding of the relationships among technologies.
Intellectual property (IP) - What is it?. Intellectual property (IP) Refers to creations of the mind, such as inventions; literary and artistic works;
Patents 101 March 28, 2006 And now, for something new, useful and not obvious.
An introduction to Intellectual property protection TG © Copyright by Stevens Institute of Technology.
Intellectual Property Basics for Business Owners David M. Knasel, Esq. Dominion Business Law PLC Tysons Corner | Leesburg, VA
Copyright Laws & Regulations
Technology Transfer Office
ENTERTAINMENT LAW INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY OVERVIEW
Patents Amy Bilton Knowledge Transfer Officer.
Patents 101 March 28, 2006 And now, for something new, useful and not obvious.
Intro to Intellectual Property 3.0
Essentials of the legal environment today, 5e
Intellectual Property:
CS 115: COMPUTING FOR The Socio-Techno Web
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AND CYBER PIRACY
Chapter 9 Internet Law and Intellectual Property
Overview of IP Protection Mechanisms in the United States
Intellectual Property Patents, Trademarks and Copyrights
Patents, Trademarks and Copyrights
Trademark, Patent, or Copyright?
Presentation transcript:

Knowledge, ownership (and technology) IT, Globalization and Culture · 1

09:00-11:00 Lecture on ownership and property 11:00-11:15 Online evaluation (see your ) 11:15-12:00 Campaign follow-up 12:30-14:00 Peer response on essay 5 14:00-16:00 Guest lecture on virtual teams (Carsten Østerlund, Syracuse Program · 2

What are the key terms? -Ownership -Property (including IPR) -Possession -Commons -‘Identity’ (social, cultural, personal) How are these important culturally, globally and in terms of specific technologies? The key terms · 3

The origins of ‘the possessive individual’ John Locke – the water in the stream versus the water in the pot What makes something ‘property’? -Labor -Adding value -Entitlement to one’s ‘own products’ · 4

Post-industrial society and the service/knowledge economy (e.g. Bell, Harvey, Giddens, Beck, Bauman, Castells etc.) E.g. leads to … -Manufacturing replaced by services -Centrality of science in industry -New elites and forms of stratification From modernity to postmodernity? · 5

Sharing versus keeping (Harrison, Barth) The Melanesian cult -Secret/with-holding -The more it is shared the less valuable it is -Knowledge as a limited/scarce resource -Knowledge defining for identity/value The Balinese priest -Mission/expansion -The more who know it, the more valuable it is -Knowledge is infinite good - can be given without loosing it -Knowledge detached from identity/value?? · 6

Forms of property – e.g. canoe prows Property as what one owns (as in possession) Property as skill (ability, quality) Distinguishes between transfer of usufruct rights and ownership Distinguishes between the intellectual property and the material product Requires mechanisms of protection (against piracy) · 7

Copyright is a form of protection provided to the authors of "original works of authorship" including literary, dramatic, musical, artistic, and certain other intellectual works, both published and unpublished. The 1976 Copyright Act generally gives the owner of copyright the exclusive right to reproduce the copyrighted work, to prepare derivative works, to distribute copies or phonorecords of the copyrighted work, to perform the copyrighted work publicly, or to display the copyrighted work publicly. The copyright protects the form of expression rather than the subject matter of the writing. For example, a description of a machine could be copyrighted, but this would only prevent others from copying the description; it would not prevent others from writing a description of their own or from making and using the machine. Copyrights are registered by the Copyright Office of the Library of Congress. Copyright · 8

A patent for an invention is the grant of a property right to the inventor, issued by the Patent and Trademark Office. The term of a new patent is 20 years from the date on which the application for the patent was filed in the United States or, in special cases, from the date an earlier related application was filed, subject to the payment of maintenance fees. US patent grants are effective only within the US, US territories, and US possessions. The right conferred by the patent grant is, in the language of the statute and of the grant itself, "the right to exclude others from making, using, offering for sale, or selling" the invention in the United States or "importing" the invention into the United States. What is granted is not the right to make, use, offer for sale, sell or import, but the right to exclude others from making, using, offering for sale, selling or importing the invention. Patent · 9

A trademark is a word, name, symbol or device which is used in trade with goods to indicate the source of the goods and to distinguish them from the goods of others. A servicemark is the same as a trademark except that it identifies and distinguishes the source of a service rather than a product. The terms "trademark" and "mark" are commonly used to refer to both trademarks and servicemarks. Trademark rights may be used to prevent others from using a confusingly similar mark, but not to prevent others from making the same goods or from selling the same goods or services under a clearly different mark. Trademarks which are used in interstate or foreign commerce may be registered with the Patent and Trademark Office. The registration procedure for trademarks and general information concerning trademarks is described in a separate pamphlet entitled "Basic Facts about Trademarks". Trademark · 10

Copyright Patent Trademark Why the difference? · 11

Harrison: different forms exist in parallel … · 12

Fights over Intellectual Property Rights ACTA – protection of ownership versus privacy and freedom of expression Incentive to produce ideas versus permission to disseminate and share their products? What about ‘cultural property’? What about ‘democracy’? What about human lives? · 13

-Non-commercial economy -Economy of status (‘symbolic capital’ – Bourdieu 1986) -‘Gift-economy’ (Mauss 1990) -Gift is an extension of the self of the donor … -You extend your name and fame via your work (cf. Miller on Facebook) -Relies on mutual trust, lack of ‘accounting’ (of time, money, other quantities) -Possession by one is not dispossession of the other But what about free, open source software? · 14

I.e. value is that which has future potential? Strathern: what does it take to make something property? … must be produced in specific (new) form -Application of technology -Prior labor (from author’s writing, to parent’s child) -Which form is it? (breaking down in infinity, more and more becomes object to ownership …e.g. the body versus bodily processes or building blocks) Potential property (Strathern) · 15

‘Neither property nor people’ Only potential to become children … they lack intrinsic value to either party on their own Who is the mother in case of conflict between ‘genetic consanguinity’ and ‘giving birth’? -mother by ‘intent’ or ‘thought’, -by being ‘the cause’ of the child, -the child is an extension of the creator’s self? -Problem: this does treat child as property (but a child cannot be sold or given free to the public) To have rights in persons as property (Strathern) · 16

What property relations are at stake? Ideal is free knowledge (for all) From elite to mass university Commercialization of science products and ideas (Payment of tuition, taking of patents on research, sponsorship from external foundations … should unis produce patents or free knowledge?) The university sector – free or commercial? · 17

How is ownership (of tangible or intangible goods) managed or controlled in different ways? -Distribution and sharing versus keeping secret -What are the available forms for ownership, and what owners/authors impact on each? -‘Keeping’ while ‘giving’ (Weiner 1992) -New commons become subject to ownership Concluding statements · 18

Barth, F On your reading list. Bourdieu, P The Forms of Capital. In Richardson (ed.) Handbook of Theory and Research for the Sociology of Education. New York, pp Mauss, M (1925). The Gift. Oxford. Rosa, H. (2013). Social Acceleration. New York. Weiner, A Inalienable Possessions. Berkeley. (on law see Further references · 19