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C-IP2 2023 Summer Progress Report (March-May 2023)

Headshot of Joshua KreshGreetings from C-IP2 Interim Executive Director Joshua A. Kresh

I am happy to provide our first progress report since I took over on May 25th as Interim Executive Director following Professor Seán O’Connor’s return to full-time research and teaching. With this Summer 2023 Progress Report, I am pleased to provide you with updates on what we and our friends and affiliates have been working on from March through May 2023.

May was also personally exciting for my family with the birth of our first child, Aviva Lea Kresh.

In the past few months, C-IP2 hosted a virtual conference on Culture & IP: Analogs to Intellectual Property in Different Cultures. We also hosted a virtual High Tech Roundtable on IP Licensing & Policy, along with a virtual follow-on to our 2022 BioPharma Roundtable.

Additionally, I am delighted to announce that Judge Susan G. Braden, who has served as our Jurist in Residence, joined our Advisory Board.

Please keep an eye on the website and our email communications for upcoming events, including our 2023 Annual Fall Conference.

In the meantime, to all who are celebrating in and outside of the United States, we wish you a safe and happy Independence Day!


C-IP2 Hosted & Co-Hosted Events

Follow-Up Meeting for December 2022 BioPharma Roundtable
On March 22, C-IP2 held a virtual meeting, led by Senior Fellow for Life Sciences & Scholar Professor Emily Michiko Morris, as a follow-up to our December 2022 BioPharma Roundtable to discuss potential areas of academic research.

Co-Sponsored Conference
C-IP2 co-sponsored the Race + IP ’23 Conference, which was hosted April 13-15 in person and online ­­by the University of Pittsburgh School of Law.

High Tech Roundtable on IP Licensing & Policy
On April 18, C-IP2 held a small virtual roundtable, led by Senior Fellow for Innovation Policy & Senior Scholar Dean Kristen Osenga, to identify major areas of interest in high tech licensing and IP and to pinpoint topics of discussion and potential areas for academic research.

Virtual Conference
On April 27-28, C-IP2 hosted a virtual conference on Culture & IP: Analogs to Intellectual Property in Different Cultures. Cultures influence the development of Intellectual Property systems, and Intellectual Property systems influence how cultures develop. This conference focused on that interplay through the lens of analogs to Intellectual Property in various cultures, bringing together scholars from around the globe to discuss how Intellectual Property systems and their analogs co-exist, influence, and inform each other. You can watch the recordings of the conference on C-IP2’s YouTube channel.

Clinic Event
On April 18, Scalia Law’s Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic, led by Professor Sandra Aistars, and Washington Area Lawyers for the Arts (WALA) co-hosted “My Work, Out in the World! Copyright Implications in Public Performances,” an online event in which Student Advocates from the clinic held a discussion on Copyright Law and Public Performance with producers from George Mason University’s Green Machine.


News and Speaking Engagements

Professor O’Connor Returns to Faculty: After successfully steering Scalia Law’s Center for Intellectual Property x Innovation Policy (C-IP2) through a rebranding and expansion that resulted in a Top 20 ranking for the Law School’s IP Program, Professor Seán O’Connor is returning to full time research and teaching. O’Connor will continue on as C-IP2’s Faculty Advisor, while Managing Director Joshua Kresh will assume the role of Interim Executive Director. Read the full announcement.

In March, C-IP2 Jurist in Residence Chief Judge Susan G. Braden (Ret.) joined C-IP2‘s Advisory Board.

2022-2023 Edison Fellow Molly Torsen Stech‘s Fellowship paper, Co-Authorship Between Photographers and Portrait Subjects, has been published in the Vanderbilt Journal of Entertainment and Technology.

2023-2024 Edison Fellow Dr. Nicola Searle presented on the panel “Playing games and knowing the IP score: content and more in the Metaverse” at the March Seventh Session of the WIPO Conversation on Intellectual Property and the Metaverse (more information on the event). A recording of the event is available online.

2023-2024 Edison Fellow Dr. Nicola Searle (Goldsmiths, University of London), who is a Visiting Fellow at the Centre for Innovation Management Research (CIMR) of Birkbeck, University of London, was featured in an April 12 CIMR video on “her key areas of research and contribution of knowledge.”

On April 25, 2021-2022 Edison Fellow Dr. Jason Lee Guthrie (Clayton State University) published a post on C-IP2‘s blog entitled “For You and Me or Private Property?: Evaluating the Copyright Claim in Woody Guthrie’s ‘This Land Is Your Land‘” on his Fellowship research.

In May, C-IP2 Board Member the Hon. Paul R. Michel (Ret.) and C-IP2 Senior Scholar Professor John F. Duffy submitted an amicus brief in support of the petitioners in CareDx, Inc. et al. v. Natera, et al. IPWatchdog also covered the brief in the May 31 article “SCOTUS Requests Response in CareDx Eligibility Petition Following Michel/ Duffy Brief.”

 

Sandra Aistars (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Copyright Research and Policy & Senior Scholar; Founding Director, Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic; Clinical Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

    • On March 3, spoke on the Warhol v. Goldsmith case at the IP & Social Justice CLE and Microsoft Tech Law Summit
    • Was featured in the C-IP2 March 28 blog post “Publishers prevail in lawsuit against Internet Archive”
    • This spring, accepted a publication offer from Vanderbilt Journal of Entertainment and Technology Law for her forthcoming 2022-2023 Edison Fellowship paper, Copyright’s Lost Art of Substantial Similarity
    • Spoke at the Fordham Intellectual Property Institute’s 30th Annual IP Conference, held April 13-14
    • On April 18, Scalia Law’s Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic, led by Professor Aistars, and Washington Area Lawyers for the Arts (WALA) co-hosted the online event “My Work, Out in the World! Copyright Implications in Public Performances.” Student Advocates from the clinic discussed Copyright Law and Public Performance with producers from George Mason University’s Green Machine.
    • Led planning for and participated in C-IP2‘s April 27-28 virtual conference Culture & IP: Analogs to Intellectual Property in Different Cultures
    • In May, spoke on a copyright panel at the AIPLA 2023 Spring Meeting in Seattle, WA
    • In May, participated in a recording for Kaplan’s AccelPro™ IP Law podcast
    • Article Visualizing Copyright Law: Lessons from Conceptual Artists was posted to SSRN in May and has been published in Akron Law Journal as part of the IP Scholars Symposium Professor Aistars participated in during winter 2023 [SSRN / Akron Law Review]

Jonathan Barnett (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Torrey H. Webb Professor of Law, USC Gould School of Law)

    • On April 17, spoke on a virtual Council for Innovation Promotion (C4IP) panel entitled “Does Section 1498 Really Allow the Government to Ignore Patent Protections?”
    • Spoke on the May 31 ITIF virtual panel on “The Importance of the Innovation Ecosystem”

Chief Judge Susan G. Braden (Court of Federal Claims (Ret.); C-IP2 Jurist in Residence)

    • In March, joined C-IP2‘s Advisory Board
    • Co-authored the March 2 Amicus Curiae of Law Professors, Scholars, and Former Government Officials Brief with Professor Adam Mossoff in Arbutus BioPharma Corp. v. Moderna, In. et al, C.A. No. 22-252 (D. Del. ) opposing the Department of Justice’s “Statement of Interest” and supporting Moderna’s Motion to Dismiss on 29 U.S.C. Section 1498 (a) grounds, with which the District Court agreed on March 10, 2023. See Arbutus BioPharma Corp. and Genevant Sciences GMBHModerna, Inc and Modernatx, Inc., Case No, 2:22-cv 0052 (D. Del. March 10, 2023) (reaffirming Nov. 2, 2022, decision).
    • On March 3, was mentioned in Law360 article “Ex-Judges Worried About Where COVID Vax IP Row Will Go” and Bloomberg Law article “Venue Could Be Worth Billions In Covid Vaccine Royalty Clash”
    • On March 8, was mentioned in Law360 article “Moderna Tries to Kick Ex-Judge Out Of COVID Vax IP Row”
    • On March 10, was mentioned Law360 article “Judge Not Convinced by DOJ’s ‘Say-So’ In Vax IP Row”
    • Co-authored March 20 IPWatchdog article “U.S. Taxpayers Should Not Be Paying For Private Patent Infringement” with Professor Adam Mossoff
    • Was interviewed for March 22 Fox News article “Biden’s DOJ is quietly trying to orchestrate taxpayer-funded bailout of Moderna” on Arbutus Biopharma Corp v. Moderna Inc.
    • On March 22, appeared on Mike Emanuel’s “Reporter Lives Segment” of Fox News on the DOJ’s Statement of Interest in the Moderna case (also ran on FNC, FBN, and affiliates across the United States)
    • On March 30, the Administrative Conference of the United States issued the report “Patent Small Claims: Report to the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office,” initiated by Judge Braden, who also was a consultative Group Member and Contributor
    • On April 17, was presenter for the Council for Innovation Promotion (C4IP) webinar “Does Section 1498 Really Allow The Government To Ignore Patent Protections?”
    • Co-authored April 18 IPWatchdog article “Support ‘The Innovation Restoration Act of 2023′” with Matt Nuccio, Executive Board Member of the United Inventors Association (UIA)
    • On April 29, submitted Comment regarding the U.S. International Trade Commission Investigation No. 332-596: “COVID-19 Diagnostics and Therapeutics: Supply, Demand, and TRIPS Agreement Flexibilities”
    • Was mentioned in May 9 Bloomberg Law article “They’ve Got Next: Government Contracts Fresh Face Elizabeth Jochum”
    • On May 11, participated in meetings with Senate and House IP Subcommittee staff about patent preliminary injunction legislation as part of a delegation from the United Inventors Association
    • On May 18-19, participated in a private Patent Advisory Committee meeting at the USPTO regarding the public hearing on the USPTO Proposed Fee Schedule
    • On May 26, participated in a meeting with the former Director of AUTM regarding a potential field hearing on patent preliminary injunction legislation

Daniel R. Cahoy (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Robert G. and Caroline Schwartz Professor, The Pennsylvania State University’s Smeal College of Business; Research Director, Center for the Business of Sustainability)

    • Was quoted in May 12 UConn Today article “Business Law Professor Robert Bird Honored for Impactful, Enduring Contributions to the Discipline”

Terrica Carrington (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; VP, Legal Policy and Copyright Counsel, Copyright Alliance)

    • On March 21, spoke about the Copyright Claims Board during the panel “More Tools in Your Tool Belt: Protecting Copyright in 2023″ at the USC Gould School of Law Intellectual Property Institute
    • Spoke on a panel about the Copyright Claims Board (CCB) on April 13 at the 30th Annual IP Conference at Fordham Law School
    • Helped to plan and organize C-IP2‘s April 27-28 virtual conference on Culture & IP: Analogs to Intellectual Property in Different Cultures

Theo Cheng (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; Arbitrator and Mediator, ADR Office of Theo Cheng LLC; Adjunct Professor, New York Law School)

    • On March 9, moderated a panel entitled “Early Stages: Arbitration Initiation and the Preliminary Conference,” which was presented as part of the 2023 ABA Arbitration Training Instituteheld in New York City
    • On March 14, presented a webinar on “Professional Liability Insurance for ADR Professionals” before the ABA Dispute Resolution Section’s Practice Management Committee
    • On March 24, was a co-panelist on an program entitled “Effective Use of Technology: Case Management,” which was presented as part of the 2023 AAA-ICDR Panel Conference held in Rancho Mirage, CA
    • On March 28 and 30, was the trainer on two Zoom-based programs sponsored by the New York State Courts’ Office of Alternative Dispute Resolution entitled “NYS Unified Court System Anti-Bias Training,” which approximately fifty New York attorneys’ fees disputes arbitrators attended
    • On March 30, the New York State Bar Association Entertainment, Arts & Sports Law Journal published Mr. Cheng’s column entitled “A Reminder About Ethics in Negotiation”
    • On April 13, gave a presentation entitled “ADR Ethics Through Movies and Television” before the Justice Marie L. Garibaldi American Inn of Court for ADR. The program involved showing various clips from movies and television shows to help illustrate and stimulate discussion regarding certain ethical codes, canons, and principles.
    • On May 16, spoke on a program hosted by the New York City Bar Association entitled “Adding Mediating to Your Career: How to Get Started in 2023,” which is now available on demand here
    • On May 23, was the trainer on a Zoom-based program sponsored by the New York State Dispute Resolution Association entitled “Anti-Bias Training for ADR Practitioners,” which was attended by over 150 arbitrators and mediators 

Eric Claeys (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Scholarly Initiatives & Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

    • In April, participated in a discussion of his book Natural Property Rights (forthcoming, Cambridge University Press) that was hosted by The Cato Institute. A recording of the discussion is available online.
    • The ideas in Professor Claeys’s forthcoming book, Natural Property Rights, are explored in C-IP2 Scholar Professor Lolita Darden‘s recent article Balancing the Inequities in Applying Natural Property Rights to Rights in Real or Intellectual Property (Texas A&M Journal of Property Law)

Lolita Darden (C-IP2 Scholar; Visiting Associate Clinical Professor and Director, Intellectual Property and Technology Clinic, The George Washington University Law School)

Charles Delmotte (C-IP2 Scholar; Assistant Professor of Law, Michigan State University College of Law)

    • 2019-2020 Edison Fellowship article Toward a Blockchain-Driven Tax System has been accepted for publication by the Virginia Tax Review, Volume 43, Number 01, Summer 2023 

Gregory Dolin (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Associate Professor of Law, University of Baltimore School of Law)

    • Was interviewed for March 22 Fox News article “Biden’s DOJ is quietly trying to orchestrate taxpayer-funded bailout of Moderna” on Arbutus Biopharma Corp v. Moderna Inc.
    • Was quoted in March 27 Yahoo Finance story “In NCLA Amicus Win, en Banc Fifth Circuit Rules Against Biden’s Federal Employee Vaccine Mandate”
    • On April 21, was mentioned in Law360 article “Fed. Circ. Judge Says Colleagues Can’t Run Investigation,” Bloomberg Law article “Judge Newman Seeks to Move Fitness Complaint From Fed. Cir. (1),” and Reuters article “Probe of federal appeals judge tests aging US courts”
    • On May 11, was mentioned in Law360 article “Judge Newman Sues Fed. Circ. To Halt Probe Of Her Fitness” and Reuters article “US judge’s lawsuit to block probe leads courts to ‘uncharted waters'”

John F. Duffy (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Samuel H. McCoy II Professor of Law and Paul G. Mahoney Research Professor of Law, University of Virginia School of Law)

    • In May, with C-IP2 Board Member the Hon. Paul R. Michel (Ret.), submitted an amicus brief in support of the petitioners in CareDx, Inc. et al. v. Natera, et al.
    • Was mentioned in a May 31 IPWatchdog article “SCOTUS Requests Response in CareDx Eligibility Petition Following Michel/ Duffy Brief”

Tabrez Ebrahim (C-IP2 Scholar; Associate Professor, California Western School of Law)

    • Helped organize C-IP2‘s April 27-28 virtual conference on Culture & IP: Analogs to Intellectual Property in Different Cultures and spoke one the panel “The Future of IP and Religion”

Jon M. Garon (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law and Director of the Intellectual Property, Cybersecurity, and Technology Law program, Nova Southeastern University Shepard Broad College of Law)

    • Was quoted in February 28 Law.com article “Litigants Can Recover Copyright Damages Over 3 Years, 11th Circuit Rules in Case Splitting Appeals Courts”
    • In March, published a working draft article on ChatGPT entitled A Practical Introduction to Generative AI, Synthetic Media, and the Messages Found in the Latest Medium
    • In March, presented on “Ethical, Legal, Academic, and Practical Considerations for ChatGPT, Dall-E and Similar Generative AI for Today’s and Tomorrow’s Classroom” at the Nova Southeastern University Learning and Educational Center
    • On March 30, participated on the panel “It’s a Small Metaverse” at the University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School
    • Was a guest speaker on the March 30 Secure Insights podcast episode “From Small Breaches to Big Risks: The Urgent Need for Cybersecurity in Healthcare!”
    • In late April, presented “Today, Tomorrow, or Never: Ethical, Legal, and Business Considerations for ChatGPT, Bard, Dall-E and Similar Generative AI” for the American Bar Association’s Business Law Section Cyberspace Law Committee at the Business Law Section Hybrid Spring Meeting 2023 (materials at SSRN)

David Grossman (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; Senior Director of Technology Transfer & Industry Collaboration, Office of Technology Transfer, George Mason University)

    • Was featured and quoted in the June 2 George Mason University news article “Innovation Awards celebrate Mason researchers” on the May 9 Mason Innovation Awards ceremony

Christopher Holman (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Life Sciences & Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law)

    • On April 14, gave a presentation on “Amgen v. Sanofi and the Viability of Chemical Genus Claims” at the Institute for Intellectual Property & Information Law (IPIL) Advisory Council Dinner and Intellectual Property Student Organization (IPSO) Lunch Program, University of Houston Law Center, Houston, TX
    • Was mentioned in May 26 Patently-O post “The Silent Echo: Supreme Court’s Non-Engagement with the Federal Circuit in Amgen v. Sanofi” 

Camilla A. Hrdy (C-IP2 Scholar; Professor of Intellectual Property Law, University of Akron School of Law)

    • On March 27, participated in the 25th Annual Symposium on Intellectual Property Law and Policy hosted by the Center for Intellectual Property Law & Technology at the University of Akron School of Law
    • Published an April 25 guest post on Patently-O entitled “Hrdy & Seaman: Are NDAs unenforceable when they protect more than trade secrets?”

Justin (Gus) Hurwitz (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Senior Fellow and Academic Director, Center for Technology, Innovation, and Competition, University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School)

Hon. Prof. F. Scott Kieff (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Fred C. Stevenson Research Professor, The George Washington University Law School)

    • On March 23, was quoted in NewsBusters article “EXCLUSIVE: Experts Agree TikTok Is Serious National Security Threat”
    • On April 11, spoke at ITC Masters™ 2023 for a session on “Patent Abuse and the ITC: Separating Fact from Fiction”
    • Was mentioned in April 24 GW Today post “GW Law Installs Three Endowed Professors of Intellectual Property and Technology Law” as beingcelebrated as the Stevenson Bernard Professor of Law

Joshua Kresh (C-IP2 Interim Executive Director)

    • In May, took on the role of Interim Executive Director for C-IP2 following Professor Seán O’Connor‘s transition to the role of Faculty Advisor for the Center

Dale Lazar (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; Director, Patent Program, Innovation Law Clinic)

    • In March, presented a lecture entitled “Drafting Claims (and the Specification) That Will Be Infringed” for the 18th Annual Advanced Patent Law Institute sponsored by the University of Texas and George Mason University
    • Continued to teach the Innovation Law Clinic at George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School for the Spring 2023 semester

Dr. John Liddicoat (C-IP2 Scholar; Senior Research Associate and Affiliated Lecturer, Faculty of Law, University of Cambridge)

Irina D. Manta (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, Hofstra University School of Law)

    • Co-hosted April 17 Strangers on the Internet podcast episode “Special: Exclusive Interview with VulgaDrawings Cartoonist Lily O’Farrell” with Michelle Lang. A brief write-up of the episode by Prof. Manta was published April 18 on Reason’s The Volokh Conspiracy.

Hina Mehta (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; Director, University Commercialization Program Director, University Commercialization Program at Virginia Innovation Partnership Corporation (VIPC))

    • On April 20, attended the “Technology for Good” conference at the 11th Tom Tom Festival in Charlottesville, Virginia

Emily Michiko Morris (C-IP2 Senior for Life Sciences and Scholar; C-IP2 2021-2022 Edison Fellow; David L. Brennan Endowed Chair, Associate Professor, and Associate Director of the Center for Intellectual Property Law & Technology, University of Akron School of Law)

    • Planned and participated in March 22 C-IP2 virtual follow-up meeting with a number of the December 2022 BioPharma Roundtable participants to review key takeaways and confirm next steps for the Center to take in the biopharmaceutical space

Lateef Mtima (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, Howard University School of Law; Founder and Director, Institute for Intellectual Property and Social Justice (IIPSJ))

    • Moderated and participated on panels during the March 2-3 IP & Social Justice CLE and Microsoft Tech Law Summit
    • On March 9, gave talk on “From Safe Harbors to Circumventing Technology Blockades: Navigating the Digital Millennium Copyright Act” at the Practising Law Institute in New York City
    • Was interviewed in March 27 Michaelson Institute for Intellectual Property blog post “Inventor Fails to Patent BIPOC Emojis: What Happened? An IP Expert Explains” regarding unsuccessful attempts to patent emoticons with diverse skin tones
    • On April 19, spoke on the Communications Decency Act at the AEI Section 230 Spring Summit
    • In April, spoke at the Race + IP ’23 conference
    • Helped to plan and spoke at C-IP2‘s April 27-28 virtual conference on Culture & IP: Analogs to Intellectual Property in Different Cultures

Loren Mulraine (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, Director of Music and Entertainment Law Studies, Belmont University – College of Law)

    • Spoke at C-IP2‘s April 27-28 virtual conference on Culture & IP: Analogs to Intellectual Property in Different Cultures
    • Was featured in May 30 Spencer Fane LLP post “Loren Mulraine Joins Intellectual Property Panel at Virtual C-IP2 Conference”

Seán M. O’Connor (C-IP2 Faculty Advisor; Faculty Advisor, Innovation Law Clinic; Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

    • Was quoted in a March 9 Bloomberg piece on the fair use case between a Black Eyed Peas song and a unicorn meme
    • Attended the Fifth IP & Innovation Researchers of Asia Conference (IPIRA 2023), which was hosted in Singapore in a hybrid format from March 1-3. Professor O’Connor moderated a session on digital copyright, presented in a plenary session entitled “Intellectual Property as Engine for Innovation: How to Implement a Balanced Approach?,” also stepped in to serve as moderator for a session on “IP & Competition,” and served on the Conference’s scientific committee (IPIRA 2023 full program).
    • After successfully steering Scalia Law’s Center for Intellectual Property x Innovation Policy (C-IP2) through a rebranding and expansion that resulted in a Top 20 ranking for the Law School’s IP Program, Prof. O’Connor is returning to full time research and teaching and will continue on as C-IP2’s Faculty Advisor

Kristen Jakobsen Osenga (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Innovation Policy & Senior Scholar; Associate Dean of Academic Affairs, Austin E. Owen Research Scholar and Professor of Law, University of Richmond School of Law)

    • In March, spoke on efficient infringement at the Best Practices in Intellectual Property (BPIP) conference in Tel Aviv, Israel
    • In March, presented on efficient infringement at the Best Practices in Intellectual Property conference
    • Planned and participated in April 18 C-IP2 High Tech Roundtable on IP Licensing & Policy to identify major areas of interest in high tech IP licensing and policy and to pinpoint topics of discussion and next steps for the Center in this space
    • Was interviewed on her role as Associate Dean for Academic Affairs for April 27 University of Richmond School of Law post “Reflecting on a new adventure”
    • In April, presented at a debate for the AIPLA Standards & Open Source Committee meeting on the dispute about the Avanci Business Review Letter (Avanci BRL)
    • Spoke on the May 31 ITIF virtual panel on “The Importance of the Innovation Ecosystem”
    • In May, filed a statement at the S. International Trade Commission (USITC) regarding the COVID-19 potential expansion of the TRIPS waiver. (The statement is posted on the USITC website but requires an EDIS account to view.)
    • In May, participated in a Hudson Institute roundtable on “The Role of Remedies: Patent Injunctions & the Innovation Economy”
    • Participated in a May 31 ITIF roundtable on “The Importance of the Innovation Ecosystem”

Yogesh Pai (C-IP2 Scholar; Assistant Professor, National Law University Delhi (NLUD); Co-Director, Centre for Innovation, Intellectual Property and Competition at NLUD)

    • In March, chaired a session on Intellectual Property Management during the Fifth IP & Innovation Researchers of Asia (IPIRA) conference in Singapore

Michael Risch (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Vice Dean and Professor of Law, Villanova University Charles Widger School of Law)

    • Gave a media interview for March 16 Delaware Valley Journal article “Bucks County Sues Social Media Companies over Harm to Kids”
    • Article Procedural Posture and Social Choice was published in Minnesota Law Review
    • On April 14, spoke at a symposium on “IP Protection and AI” hosted at Rutgers Law School and sponsored by the Rutgers Business Law Review
    • Was quoted in April 6 Delaware Valley Journal article “Is the Manhattan DA’s Case Against Trump Well-Founded or a Political Sham?”
    • Professor Risch coaches a robotics team that won second place Inspire and first place Innovate rewards at the Pennsylvania FTC Robotics Championship in March and qualified for the FIRST Tech Challenge World Championship in April, where the team won the Control Award
    • On May 13, was a Commentator at the 2023 Lastowka Cyber Law Colloquium at Washington & Lee Law
    • Was interviewed for May 14 KCBS Radio: On Demand segment “What regulations are being considered as AI becomes more accessible”

Alexandra Jane Roberts (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Trademarks; Professor of Law and Media, Northeastern University School of Law)

    • Was quoted about “review hijacking” on Amazon in the February 28 Law.com article “FTC Bags First Settlement in Probe of ‘Review Hijacking’ in E-Commerce”
    • Was quoted on college athletes’ name, image, and likeness deals in the Wall Street Journal in March 4 article “More Big Brands Brave the Rocky Terrain of Endorsement Deals With College Athletes”
    • Was quoted on a class action lawsuit over “boneless wings” in the Wall Street Journal in March 19 article “A Boneless-Wing Lawsuit Ruffles Feathers of Chicken Devotees”
    • Was quoted on the FTC’s order requesting information about advertising from various social media platforms in the Washington Post March 21 article “New FTC Order Pressures Tech Platforms Over Fraudulent Ads”
    • Was quoted on two MLB/Red Sox applications to register “Boston” as a trademark in Sportico March 22 article “Red Sox Seek ‘Boston’ Trademark to Control City Name in Sports Sales,” the Boston Herald March 24 article “Red Sox are trying to trademark ‘Boston’ for clothes, entertainment services: ‘These are absurd filings,'” and the Boston Globe March 24 article “MLB dropping ‘Boston’ trademark application it had filed on behalf of Red Sox”
    • In March, received the INTA Ladas Award for her forthcoming paper A Poetics of Trademark Law and presented the same project at Boston University School of Law’s Intellectual Property Workshop
    • On April 13, hosted a discussion about VIP v. Jack Daniels at Northeastern University School of Law with Professor Rebecca Tushnet entitled “Bad Spaniels: trademark parody and fair use doctrines.” A recording of the event is available online.
    • In April, was quoted in the Washington Post, The Verge, Ars Technica, Firstpost, Vox, Wired, Bloomberg Law, and interviewed on podcast Moderated Content about potential litigation over Twitter assigning blue checks to some accounts that did not enroll in Twitter Blue in April
    • In May, was quoted in Bloomberg on the OMG Girlz case and cultural appropriation in the courtroom, in Sportico and Yahoo Sports on a trademark dispute over “chaos” for lacrosse, in Well+Good about false advertising claims against “fitfluencer” Brittany Davis, and again in Sportico and Yahoo Sports on the Washington Commanders’ trademark applications

Zvi S. Rosen (C-IP2 Scholar; Assistant Professor of Law, Southern Illinois University School of Law)

Mark F. Schultz (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company Chair in Intellectual Property Law, University of Akron School of Law; Director, Center for Intellectual Property Law and Technology)

Amy Semet (C-IP2 Scholar; Associate Professor, University at Buffalo School of Law)

    • Presented her article on “An Empirical Examination of Venue in Patent Cases” on April 14 at PatCon at Northwestern Law

Dr. Stephanie M. Semler (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; Adjunct Professor, George Mason University, Antonin Scalia Law School; Supervising Attorney, Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic)

    • Continued to support the Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic at George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School for the Spring 2023 semester in her role as a Supervising Attorney

Brenda Simon (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; ProFlowers Professor of Internet Studies and Professor of Law, California Western School of Law)

Eric M. Solovy (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; Vice President and Legal Counsel, Qualcomm)

    • In March, joined Qualcomm as Vice President and Legal Counsel

Saurabh Vishnubhakat (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, Yeshiva University Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law)

    • Presented his article on “Secret Design Litigation” on April 14 at PatCon at Northwestern Law

Dr. Bhamati Viswanathan (C-IP2 Scholar; Faculty Fellow, New England Law | Boston)

    • Helped to plan and moderated a panel for C-IP2‘s April 27-28 virtual conference on Culture & IP: Analogs to Intellectual Property in Different Cultures

Scholarship & Other Writings

Sandra Aistars, Visualizing Copyright Law: Lessons from Conceptual Artists (May 18, 2023). Akron Law Review, Vol. 56, pp. 101–133 (2023), George Mason Legal Studies Research Paper No. LS 23-04 [SSRN / Akron Law Review]

Jonathan Barnett, “The Antitrust Assault On the Startup Economy In the U.S.,” RealClearMarkets (May 12, 2023)

Jonathan Barnett, Antitrust Mercantilism: The Strategic Devaluation of Intellectual Property Rights in Wireless Markets (April 20, 2023). Berkeley Technology Law Journal, Forthcoming, USC CLASS Research Paper No. CLASS23-2

Hon. Susan G. Braden & Adam Mossoff, “U.S. Taxpayers Should Not Be Paying for Private Patent Infringement,” IPWatchdog (March 20, 2023)

Hon. Susan G. Braden and Matt Nuccio, “Support the ‘Innovation Restoration Act of 2023′,” IPWatchdog (April 26, 2023)

C-IP2 Staff, “C-IP2 Statement on Interactions between Courts and the FDA,” C-IP2 Blog (April 20, 2023)

C-IP2 Staff, “Publishers prevail in lawsuit against Internet Archive,” C-IP2 Blog (March 28, 2023)

C-IP2 Staff, “Trump Interview Lawsuit Exposes Uncertainty in a Corner of Copyright Law,” C-IP2 Blog (April 20, 2023)

Lolita Darden, Balancing the Inequities in Applying Natural Property Rights to Rights in Real or Intellectual Property, 9 Tex. A&M J. Prop. L. 493 (2023)

Charles Delmotte, Toward a Blockchain-Driven Tax System, 43 VA. TAX. REV 1 (forthcoming 2023)

Jon M. Garon, A Practical Introduction to Generative AI, Synthetic Media, and the Messages Found in the Latest Medium (March 14, 2023)

Patrick Russell Goold and David A. Simon, On Copyright Utilitarianism (April 3, 2023). 99 Indiana Law Journal __ (forthcoming 2024)

Jason Lee Guthrie, For You and Me or Private Property?: Evaluating the Copyright Claim in Woody Guthrie’s “This Land Is Your Land” (April 25, 2023)

Ashleigh Hamidzadeh, Johnathan Liddicoat, and Kathleen Liddell, Should Europe Adopt a Policy Like the US MODERN Labeling Act?, European Health & Pharmaceutical Law Review, Volume 7, Issue 1 (2023) 36-38

Christopher M. Holman, A 2023 Review of Legislation Aimed at Increasing Generic and Biosimilar Competition, 42 Biotechnology Law Report 68 (2023)

Chris Holman, Amgen Scores Partial Victory in Efforts to Maintain OTEZLA Exclusivity, Patently-O (April 21, 2023)

Chris Holman, “Multiple dependent claims, blaze marks, and ipsis verbis support,” Patently-O (March 9, 2023)

Chris Holman, Overlapping Ranges in Claims and Prior Art Result in Invalidation of Patent on Transdermal Patch for Parkinson’s Disease, Patently-O (April 15, 2023)

Chris Holman, Petitioner’s Failure to Argue that Prior Art was Analogous to Challenged Patent Results in Reversal of IPR Decision, Patently-O (May 11, 2023)

Chris Holman, Some Thoughts on Amgen v. Sanofi, Patently-O (May 23, 2023)

Camilla Alexandra Hrdy and Daniel Harris Brean, The Patent Law Origins of Science Fiction (December 1, 2022)

Camilla A. Hrdy, Hrdy & Seaman: Are NDAs unenforceable when they protect more than trade secrets?, Patently-O (April 25, 2023)

John Liddicoat, Editorial [as guest editor for this edition], 7 European Health & Pharmaceutical Law Review 1 (2023) 1-4

Geoffrey Manne and Gus Hurwitz, “Day of Reckoning Looms for Lina Khan’s FTC,” RealClearMarkets (April 26, 2023)

Irina Manta, “New Lawsuit Against Florida Public School Library Book Bans,” The Volokh Conspiracy, Reason (May 17, 2023)

Irina Manta, “Strangers on the Internet” Podcast Episode 25: Exclusive Interview with Writer Aimee Lutkin, The Volokh Conspiracy (March 15, 2023)

Irina Manta, Strangers on the Internet Podcast Episode 28: “Exclusive Interview with VulgaDrawings Artist Lily O’Farrell,” The Volokh Conspiracy, Reason (April 18, 2023)

Kristen Jakobsen Osenga, “OpenSky: ending another round of IPR abuse whack-a-mole,” IAM (March 11, 2023)

Jack Ring, “Professors Erika Lietzan and Kristina Acri Argue That Current Data Do Not Support Evergreening Allegations,” C-IP2 Blog (May 2, 2023)

Michael Risch, Procedural Posture and Social Choice, (March 11, 2022). Minnesota Law Review, Vol. 107, p.1621 (SSRN | Minnesota Law Review)

Zvi Rosen, “Why a State-Based Overhaul of US Copyright Law is a Bad Idea,” Bloomberg Law (March 14, 2023)

Alexandra Jane Roberts, A Poetics of Trademark Law (March 31, 2022). Berkeley Technology Law Journal, Vol. 38, No. 1, 2023

Molly Torsen Stech, Co-Authorship Between Photographers and Portrait Subjects, 25 Vanderbilt Journal of Entertainment and Technology Law 53 (2023)

Lisa A. Tucker and Michael Risch, Precedent Unbound: The Supreme Court’s Summary Elimination of Liberal Lower Court Rulings (March 19, 2023). Florida Law Review, Vol. 76, (2024 Forthcoming)


Categories
Communications

C-IP2 2023 Spring Progress Report (December 2022-February 2023)

Greetings from C-IP2 Faculty Director Seán O’Connor

With this Spring 2023 Progress Report, we’re pleased to provide you with updates on what C-IP2 and our friends and affiliates have been working on from December 2022 through February 2023, from academic roundtables and other events to publications and various engagements.

Before the new year, C-IP2 co-hosted an academic roundtable with the Sunwater Institute on The Future of Property: Autonomy, Prosperity, and Conflict Mitigation and hosted another academic roundtable virtually on Intellectual Property and Biopharmaceutical Policy. 2023 then started off with a webinar on Challenges & Opportunities with Intellectual Property & Technology Innovation in Muslim-Majority Countries, co-organized with C-IP2 Scholar Tabrez Ebrahim, and the final meeting of our 2022-2023 Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship.

Of particular note, I am delighted to welcome Professor Kristen Osenga as our new Senior Fellow for Innovation Policy. Professor Osenga has been with C-IP2 and its predecessor organization since its earliest days, and most recently as a Senior Scholar. As Senior Fellow she will guide our projects in the high technology space.

Please also check out C-IP2‘s website and keep an eye on our email communications for information on upcoming events, such as our virtual conference on Culture & IP: Analogs to Intellectual Property in Different Cultures on April 27-28 and the annual WIPO-U.S. Summer School on Intellectual Property, which C-IP2 will host online from June 5-16.


C-IP2 Hosted & Co-Hosted Events

Roundtable
C-IP2 & the Sunwater Institute co-hosted a roundtable on The Future of Property: Autonomy, Prosperity, and Conflict Mitigation on December 9, led by Matthew Chervenak, Dr. Ari Harutyunyan, Professor Eric Claeys, and Joshua Kresh. Discussion sessions included “The Future of Property in Land, Air and Space,” “The Future of Intellectual Property (IP) Rights,” and “How Academic Arguments about Property Policy Pan Out in Real-Life Debates in Courts and Legislatures.”

Virtual Roundtable
C-IP2 hosted a virtual roundtable on Intellectual Property and Biopharmaceutical Policy on December 15, organized by Joshua Kresh and Professor Emily Michiko Morris. Discussion topics included “I-MAK,” “USPTO FDA Interactions,” and “USPTO request for comments, patent prosecution update,” as well as some discussion regarding future research in these areas.

2023-2024 Thomas Edison Innovation Law & Policy Fellowship
On December 16, C-IP2 announced the 2023-2024 Thomas Edison Innovation Law & Policy Fellowship. We welcome our Fellows for this cycle: Professor Melissa Eckhause, Michael Goodyear, David Hannon, Professor Aldona Kapačinskaitė, Joshua Kresh, David Moore, Fidelice Opany, Dr. Nicola Searle, and Professor David Simon. We are also pleased to welcome Professors John F. Duffy, Christopher Holman, Erika Lietzan, Michael Risch, and Mark F. Schultz as Distinguished Commentators.

Webinar
On January 12, C-IP2 hosted a live webinar on “Challenges & Opportunities with Intellectual Property & Technology Innovation in Muslim-Majority Countries,” which was organized and moderated by Lewis & Clark Law School and C-IP2 Scholar Tabrez Ebrahim and featured Saad Hasan (Principal, Sturgeon Capital), Kevin Tamm (Senior Intellectual Property Counsel, SI Group), and Jeffrey Whittle (Global Head of Womble Bond Dickinson’s Energy and Natural Resources Industry Sector) as panelists. As experts and leaders involved with intellectual property (IP) and technology innovation in Muslim-majority countries, they took part in a discussion about challenges and opportunities in countries with varying degrees of religious laws and developing interests in economic development. This webinar included perspectives from an international law firm, a legal department of the government of the Emirate of Dubai, a technology investment fund, and a chemicals manufacturer. The panelists spoke about their IP-related experiences and technology innovation perspectives from different vantage points in various Muslim-majority countries. A recording of the webinar is available on C-IP2‘s YouTube channel.

2022-2023 Thomas Edison Innovation Law & Policy Fellowship
On January 19-20, C-IP2 hosted the third and final meeting of the 2022-2023 Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship in Scottsdale, Arizona. The Edison Fellows presented substantially revised drafts of their research papers and received feedback from Distinguished Commentators and other Fellows before their planned submission to journals in early 2023.


News and Speaking Engagements

We are excited to announce Professor Kristen Osenga as C-IP2‘s new Senior Fellow for Innovation Policy! Professor Osenga is also a C-IP2 Senior Scholar, as well as Associate Dean of Academic Affairs and the Austin E. Owen Research Scholar and Professor of Law at the University of Richmond School of Law, where she teaches and writes in the areas of intellectual property, patent law, law and language, and legislation and regulation. We are thrilled to be working more closely with Professor Osenga and drawing on her expertise in all areas where high tech and innovation policy meet intellectual property.

This December, C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence Eric Solovy published a new policy brief with C-IP2 entitled The TRIPS Waiver for COVID-19 Vaccines, and Its Potential Expansion: Assessing the Impact on Global IP Protection and Public Health.

In October 2022, 2023-2024 Edison Fellow Dr. Nicola Searle testified before Parliament’s Communications and Digital Select Committee on current technology and intellectual property issues—specifically, UK government interventions into AI datamining, technology, and copyright—with her testimony “indirectly informed by previous work funded by [C-IP2],” as Dr. Searle states. In January 2023, the Select Committee produced a report that covered the session and cited Dr. Searle (see especially the direct quotation on p. 16). Goldsmiths, University of London published a January 17 press release on the hearing, and a recording is also available online. In addition, Dr. Searle published a December 14, 2022, article describing the experience and offering practical presentation advice for other academics.

December saw the release of Dr. Ryan Abbott’s Research Handbook on Intellectual Property and Artificial Intelligence, which includes contributions from thought leaders including C-IP2 Faculty Director Professor Seán M. O’Connor and C-IP2 Senior Scholar Professor Daryl Lim. The Handbook was also featured as part C-IP2’s 2021 Annual Fall Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Intellectual Property.

Incoming C-IP2 2023-2024 Edison Fellow Professor Melissa Eckhause‘s paper Fighting Image Piracy or Copyright Trolling? An Empirical Study of Photography Copyright Infringement Lawsuits (86 Albany L.R., forthcoming) was cited in a December 15, 2022, petition for writ of certiorari to the Supreme Court in Victor Elias Photography, LLC v. Ice Portal, Inc., A Division of Shiji (US), Inc.

In January, the Baroni Center for Government Contracting at George Mason University Business School released its latest report completed in response to the FY 2020 NDAA requirement for an independent assessment of Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and defense laboratories’ contracting and intellectual property management policies and their effects on the commercialization of and innovation in dual-use technology. The study was conducted in partnership with C-IP2, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School, and more.

In February, along with C-IP2 Senior Scholar Mark F. Schultz and Managing Director Joshua Kresh, Senior Fellow for Life Sciences and Scholar Emily Michiko Morris submitted a response to the USPTO’s Request for Comments on USPTO Initiatives to Ensure the Robustness and Reliability of Patent Rights (PTO-P-2022-0025). Professor Morris discussed “Thickets,” Continuations, and Obviousness-Type Patenting and Terminal Disclaimers. For each area she laid out the potential concerns, explained what the data currently show, and described the questions that should be asked and data that would need to be gathered to show if any of the three areas is an actual problem in BioPharma patents. Further, she suggested caution, pointing out that changing a system, which at least seems to be working, without evidence and a clear plan can cause substantial harm, and before any such changes are made, it must be ascertained whether or not there is anything that needs to be fixed.

In February, C-IP2 affiliates Professor Emily Michiko Morris, Dean Kristen Osenga, Senior Scholar Mark F. Schultz, Senior Scholar Ted Sichelman, and Managing Director Joshua Kresh signed onto an amicus brief in favor of Novartis for Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation, v. HEC Pharm Co., Ltd. Professor Morris, C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Life Sciences, was heavily involved in drafting the brief.

In March, C-IP2 Jurist in Residence Judge Susan G. Braden (Ret.), Senior Scholar Dan Cahoy, Senior Scholar Adam MacLeod, Advisory Board Member Judge Paul Michel, Professor Emily Michiko Morris, and Dean Kristen Osenga signed on as amici curiae to a letter to the Honorable Mitchell S. Goldberg about U.S.C. § 1498(a).

2022-2023 Edison Fellow Yao Zhou‘s Fellowship paper, Dynamic Governance of Microbiome Innovation, has been submitted to SSRN (linked above) and is in the peer-review process with the Journal of Law and the Biosciences.

* * *

Sandra Aistars (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Copyright Research and Policy & Senior Scholar; Founding Director, Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic; Clinical Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

    • In December, presented a manuscript at the 2022 Akron IP Scholars Forum. The article, Visualizing Copyright Law: Lessons from Conceptual Artists, will be posted on SSRN shortly and will appear in the Akron Law Review.
    • On January 19-20, participated as an Edison Fellow at the final meeting of the 2022-2023 Fellowship in Scottsdale, Arizona. Professor Aistars participated in the winter journal submission cycle and has publication offers for her article Copyright’s Lost Art of Substantial Similarity. She will be finalizing publication arrangements and posting to SSRN soon; an update with a full citation will follow.

Jonathan Barnett (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Torrey H. Webb Professor of Law, USC Gould School of Law)

    • Was mentioned in IP Watchdog’s December 5 post “This Week in Washington IP: Marking Up the American Music Fairness Act, Licensing Patents in the Internet of Things, and Exploring Chinse Patent Licensing and Enforcement Policies”
    • Participated in the December 9 CSIS event “The China Innovation Challenge: A Conversation with Jonathan Barnett,” for which he was interviewed by Andrei Iancu, former director of the USPTO. A video of highlights from the interview is also available for viewing.
    • Was quoted in the January 31 India Education Diary article “University Of Southern California’s MET Program Offers Real-Life Exposure To The Transactional Elements Of Entertainment Law”

Chief Judge Susan G. Braden (Court of Federal Claims (Ret.); C-IP2 Jurist in Residence)

    • On December 9, participated in an academic roundtable on The Future of Property: Autonomy, Prosperity, and Conflict Mitigation, which was co-hosted by C-IP2 and the Sunwater Institute
    • On Dec. 9, attended the Bayh-Dole Coalition Planning Session
    • With Joshua Kresh, published an article entitled Section 1498(A) is Not a Rx to Reduce Drug Prices for Food and Drug Law Institute (FDLI)
    • On December 11, attended the U.S. Administrative Conference Annual Meeting
    • On December 13, participated in USPTO International Session
    • On December 15, attended and participated in the C-IP2 virtual academic roundtable on Intellectual Property and Biopharmaceutical Policy
    • On January 6, was named by the President of the American Bar Association to the seven-person Task Force on Law, Society, and the Judiciary along with Senator Kay Bailey Hutchinson (Ret.) (TX-R). “We’re thrilled to announce that Judge Susan G. Braden (Ret.) was named to the American Bar Association‘s #PresidentialTaskForce on Law, Society, and the Judiciary along with former Senator #KayBaileyHutchison. The Task Force’s mission is “to evaluate the Nation’s state of the Judiciary” and “identify and recommend steps to educate the Nation on what courts do and why judicial independence is critical to the rights and institutions of government.”” [LinkedIn link & quote from FedArb, Inc.]
    • On January 16, served as a panelist for the 2023 Institute of Advanced Patent Studies’ Naples Roundtable, Phoenix Issue II, “Proposals to Ensure that All Litigants Obtain Just, Speedy, and Inexpensive Determinations,” with CAFC Circuit Judge Kathleen O’Malley (Ret.) and USD NJ Judge Faith Hochberg (Ret.)
    • On January 17, participated in the Administrative Conference of the U. S. Consultative Session on the Congressional Small Patent Claims Study
    • Signed on as an amicus curiae to a March letter to the Honorable Mitchell S. Goldberg about U.S.C. § 1498(a)

Daniel R. Cahoy (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Robert G. and Caroline Schwartz Professor, The Pennsylvania State University’s Smeal College of Business; Research Director, Center for the Business of Sustainability)

Terrica Carrington (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; VP, Legal Policy and Copyright Counsel, Copyright Alliance)

    • On February 1, spoke on a panel about the Copyright Claims Board. According to the Copyright Alliance’s February newsletter, “the Copyright Alliance—in partnership with 15 Volunteer Lawyers for the Arts (VLA) organizations across the U.S.—hosted a webinar on the Copyright Claims Board (CCB), titled The Copyright Claims Board—What We Know About the CCB So Far. Panelists took an in-depth look at how things are working with the CCB seven months after its launch by the U.S. Copyright Office. Speakers included Terrica [Carrington]; Maya Burchette, Attorney-Advisor for the CCB; and Thomas Maddrey, Chief Legal Officer & Head of National Content and Education for the American Society of Media Photographers (ASMP).” A recording on the panel is now available for viewing online.

Theo Cheng (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; Arbitrator and Mediator, ADR Office of Theo Cheng LLC; Adjunct Professor, New York Law School)

    • On December 1, served on the faculty of the ABA Dispute Resolution Section’s 19thAnnual Advanced Mediation and Advocacy Skills Institute on the topic of using analytical tools to assist with managing impasse during a mediation
    • On January 4, presented before the Arbitration Committee of the ABA Dispute Resolution Section on “Considerations for Drafting an Enforceable Reasoned Award”
    • On January 7, served on the faculty for the Civil Mediation Training Course sponsored by the New Jersey Institute for Continuing Legal Education on the topic of “Remote Mediations Using Zoom”
    • On January 10, was a panelist on a program sponsored by the Domestic Arbitration Committee of the New York State Bar Association Dispute Resolution Section entitled “How Do you Start and Maintain an Arbitration Practice – Learn from Successful Arbitrators and Experts”
    • On February 2, presented before the ADR Practice Group of the law firm of Ruskin Moscou Faltischek, P.C. on “Marketing Your ADR Practice”
    • On February 17, was a speaker at the ABA Labor & Employment Law Section’s Federal Labor Standards Legislation Committee Midwinter Meeting in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico on “Ethics for Employment Attorneys”

Eric Claeys (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Scholarly Initiatives & Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

    • On December 9, participated in an academic roundtable on The Future of Property: Autonomy, Prosperity, and Conflict Mitigation, which was co-hosted by C-IP2 and the Sunwater Institute
    • On January 19-20, participated at the final meeting of the 2022-2023 Edison Fellowship in Scottsdale, Arizona
    • On February 28, spoke on LEC’s panelJohnson v. M’Intosh: Reflections on the 200th Anniversary of a Foundational Case on Property Law and Indigenous Rights in the United States”

Lolita Darden (C-IP2 Scholar; Visiting Associate Clinical Professor and Director, Intellectual Property and Technology Clinic, The George Washington University Law School)

    • On December 9, was mentioned in a USPTO article as being named as a new member of the Patent Public Advisory Council (“PPAC”). Prof. Darden is also joined by new members Henry Hadad (Bristol Myers Squibb) and Olivia Tsai (Cruise). Darden says, “I look forward to doing great things to continue to improve our patent system for all.”
    • On January 3, mentioned in WilmerHale’s “PTAB/USPTO Update – January 2023” article as becoming a new member of the USPTO’s Patent Public Advisory Committee (PPAC)

John F. Duffy (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Samuel H. McCoy II Professor of Law and Paul G. Mahoney Research Professor of Law, University of Virginia School of Law)

    • On December 9, participated in an academic roundtable on The Future of Property: Autonomy, Prosperity, and Conflict Mitigation, which was co-hosted by C-IP2 and the Sunwater Institute
    • On January 20, participated as a Distinguished Commentator at the final meeting of the 2022-2023 Edison Fellowship on Scottsdale, Arizona

Gregory Dolin (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Associate Professor of Law, University of Baltimore School of Law)

    • Was cited in January 26 Law360 article “RFK Jr.-Repped Doc Wins Halt Of COVID Misinformation Law” by Craig Clough
    • Was quoted in January 26 Reuters article “California law aiming to curb COVID misinformation blocked by judge” by Brendan Pierson (cross-posted on January 27 by Kalkine Media)
    • Was mentioned and cited in January 26 Northern California Record article “Judge blocks state from using new law to go after doctors who may disagree with ‘scientific consensus’ on Covid” by Jonathan Bilyk
    • Was quoted in January 26 Daily Wire article “District Judge Blocks California’s COVID ‘Misinformation’ Law” by Dillon Burroughs

Tabrez Ebrahim (C-IP2 Scholar; Associate Professor, California Western School of Law)

    • In January, presented on Islamic Intellectual Property for the Junior IP Scholars Association (JIPSA) at the UCLA School of Law
    • On January 4, presented on Legal Ethics & Professional Responsibility on Digital Platforms at a session on “New Voices in Internet and Computer Law” at the AALS 2023 Annual Meeting in San Diego, CA
    • On January 6, presented on Hacking the Board at “Business Associations Works-in-Progress Roundtable” at the AALS 2023 Annual Meeting in San Diego, CA
    • Coordinated and moderated the January 12 webinar “Challenges & Opportunities with Intellectual Property & Technology Innovation in Muslim-Majority Countries,” hosted by C-IP2
    • On February 13, presented on “Islamic Intellectual Property” at the Muslim Educational Trust (MET) Educational and Cultural Center in Tigard, Oregon

Joseph Fishman (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, Vanderbilt University Law School)

    • Was quoted in December 6 Bloomberg Law article “TikTok Music Lawsuits Fire Warning Shots to Brands, Influencers”

Jon M. Garon (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law and Director of the Intellectual Property, Cybersecurity, and Technology Law program, Nova Southeastern University Shepard Broad College of Law)

    • Was mentioned in Columbia Law School’s December 1 post “From Voting Rights to Farming’s Future: The Year in Alumni Books”
    • In December, presented “The Most Dangerous Game: Inferential Surveillance of Patients and the Implications of Constitutional Limits on Health Information Regulation” at the Center for Intellectual Property Law & Technology‘s Annual IP Scholars Forum at the University of Akron School of Law
    • In December, was appointed as Chairperson Academic Advisory Board for the Copyright Alliance
    • As of December, is Chairperson Elect and Executive Board Member for the Association of American Law Schools (AALS), Section of Technology, Law and Legal Education
    • In February, presented on “Emerging Technology and the Media – Ethical and Legal Dilemmas” for the American Bar Association, Business Law Section Cyberspace Law Committee, Cyberspace Law Institute
    • In February, presented Teaching and Learning in the Metaverse: Using Online Platforms, Games, NFTs and Blockchain in Education, Association of American Law Schools
    • In February, presented Developing Self-assessing Learners: Techniques for Flipping First Year Courses to Build Equity, Engagement, Awareness, and Understanding, Association of American Law Schools
    • In February, was interviewed by the Social Sciences in China Press. A summary of the interview (Chinese) was published by the China Social Science Network on March 1

David Grossman (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; Senior Director of Technology Transfer & Industry Collaboration, Office of Technology Transfer, George Mason University)

    • In December, attended the Bahrain Innovation & Technology Transfer Center Workshop

Dr. Bowman Heiden (C-IP2 Scholar; Co-Director, Center for Intellectual Property (CIP), University of Gothenburg, Visiting Professor, University of California, Berkeley)

    • On December 5, participated in the virtual event “Licensing and the Internet of Things” hosted by the Hudson Institute
    • On February 16, participated in 4iP Council’s webinar and Q&A on “Patent Holdout and Small(er) Technology Firms” 

Christopher Holman (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Life Sciences & Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law)

    • On December 9, participated in an academic roundtable on The Future of Property: Autonomy, Prosperity, and Conflict Mitigation, which was co-hosted by C-IP2 and the Sunwater Institute 

Camilla A. Hrdy (C-IP2 Scholar; Professor of Intellectual Property Law, University of Akron School of Law)

Justin (Gus) Hurwitz (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, The Menard Director of the Nebraska Governance and Technology Center and the Co-Director of the Space, Cyber, and Telecommunications Law Program, University of Nebraska-Lincoln College of Law)

Joshua Kresh (C-IP2 Managing Director)

    • Co-organized and participated in C-IP2‘s December 15 virtual academic roundtable on Intellectual Property and Biopharmaceutical Policy
    • On December 9, participated in an academic roundtable on The Future of Property: Autonomy, Prosperity, and Conflict Mitigation, which was co-hosted by C-IP2 and the Sunwater Institute
    • With Judge Susan G. Braden, published an article entitled Section 1498(A) is Not a Rx to Reduce Drug Prices for Food and Drug Law Institute (FDLI)
    • On January 19-20, participated at the final meeting of the 2022-2023 Edison Fellowship in Scottsdale, Arizona
    • In February, along with C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Life Sciences and Scholar Emily Michiko Morris and Senior Scholar Mark Schultz, submitted a response to the USPTO’s Request for Comments on USPTO Initiatives to Ensure the Robustness and Reliability of Patent Rights (PTO-P-2022-0025)
    • In February, signed onto an amicus brief in favor of Novartis for Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation, v. HEC Pharm Co., Ltd.

Dale Lazar (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; Director, Patent Program, Innovation Law Clinic)

    • Co-taught the Innovation Law Clinic at Antonin Scalia Law School as part of the Fall 2022 and Spring 2023 semesters

Dr. John Liddicoat (C-IP2 Scholar; Senior Research Associate and Affiliated Lecturer, Faculty of Law, University of Cambridge)

Erika Lietzan (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; William H. Pittman Professor of Law & Timothy J. Heinsz Professor of Law, University of Missouri School of Law)

Daryl Lim (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; H. Laddie Montague Jr. Chair in Law; Associate Dean for Research and Innovation; Founding Director, Intellectual Property Law and Innovation Initiative; and co-hire, Institute for Computational and Data Sciences, Penn State University)

Adam MacLeod (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, Faulkner University, Thomas Goode Jones School of Law; Research Fellow, Center for Religion, Culture, and Democracy)

    • Signed on as an amicus curiae to a March letter to the Honorable Mitchell S. Goldberg about U.S.C. § 1498(a)

Hina Mehta (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; Director, Office of Technology Transfer, George Mason University)

Emily Michiko Morris (C-IP2 Senior for Life Sciences and Scholar; C-IP2 2021-2022 Edison Fellow; David L. Brennan Endowed Chair, Associate Professor, and Associate Director of the Center for Intellectual Property Law & Technology, University of Akron School of Law)

    • Co-organized and participated in C-IP2‘s December 15 virtual academic roundtable on Intellectual Property and Biopharmaceutical Policy
    • In February, along with C-IP2 Senior Scholar Mark F. Schultz and Managing Director Joshua Kresh, submitted a response to the USPTO’s Request for Comments on USPTO Initiatives to Ensure the Robustness and Reliability of Patent Rights (PTO-P-2022-0025), discussing “Thickets,” Continuations, and Obviousness-Type Patenting and Terminal Disclaimers. For each area, Professor Morris laid out the potential concerns, explained what the data currently show, and described the questions that should be asked and data that would need to be gathered to show if any of the three areas is an actual problem in BioPharma patents. She cautioned that changing a system, which at least seems to be working, without evidence and a clear plan can cause substantial harm, and before any such changes are made, it must be ascertained whether there is anything that needs to be fixed.
    • On February 23, was mentioned in IPWatchdog postAmici Urge Justices to Grant Novartis’ Petition on CAFC’s Approach to Reconstituting Panels”
    • In February, signed onto an amicus brief in favor of Novartis for Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation, v. HEC Pharm Co., Ltd. Professor Morris was also heavily involved in drafting the brief.
    • Signed on as an amicus curiae to a March letter to the Honorable Mitchell S. Goldberg about U.S.C. § 1498(a)

Loren Mulraine (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, Director of Music and Entertainment Law Studies, Belmont University – College of Law)

    • Was mentioned by law firm Spencer Fane in a December 2 news piece on his participation in the California Copyright Conference’s October 19 Annual Music Legal Update Panel
    • In January, was a featured speaker on Copyright for Radio Broadcasters at the Adventist Radio Convention held in Greensboro, North Carolina
    • In February, spoke on a CLE panel at the Copyright Society (CSUSA) 2023 Midwinter Meeting in Rancho Mirage, California, entitled “The Great Debate: North v. South” and featured four attorneys, two from the United States and two from Canada debating some of the differences between the two countries’ copyright laws

Seán M. O’Connor (C-IP2 Faculty Director; Faculty Advisor, Innovation Law Clinic; Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

Kristen Jakobsen Osenga (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Innovation Policy & Senior Scholar; Associate Dean of Academic Affairs, Austin E. Owen Research Scholar and Professor of Law, University of Richmond School of Law)

    • On December 9, participated in an academic roundtable on The Future of Property: Autonomy, Prosperity, and Conflict Mitigation, which was co-hosted by C-IP2 and the Sunwater Institute
    • On January 15-17, participated in The Naples Roundtable in Naples, Florida, and moderated the session “Patent Eligibility- After More Than a Decade since Bilski v. Kappos, Where and How Do We Find the Talisman for Fixing the ‘Validity Goulash’?”
    • On February 23, was mentioned in IPWatchdog postAmiciUrge Justices to Grant Novartis’ Petition on CAFC’s Approach to Reconstituting Panels”
    • On February 23-24, participated in the Berkeley–NYU Symposium on the Impact of the Patent System on Markets for Technology, presenting “Hit the Road Jack: The Auto Industry as the Next Vehicle for Predatory Infringement”
    • In February, filed a statement with Professor Adam Mossoff of Scalia Law and the Hudson Institute on public interest and specifically the public’s interest in reliable and effective patent rights (Law360 article “ITC Gets An Earful On Impact of Possible Apple Watch Ban” discusses responses received by the ITC)
    • In February, signed onto an amicus brief in favor of Novartis for Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation, v. HEC Pharm Co., Ltd.

Michael Risch (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Vice Dean and Professor of Law, Villanova University Charles Widger School of Law)

    • On January 19-20, participated as a Distinguished Commentator at the final meeting of the 2022-2023 Edison Fellowship in Scottsdale, Arizona

Alexandra Jane Roberts (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Trademarks; Professor of Law and Media, Northeastern University School of Law)

    • Was quoted in a December 2 article in News @ Northwestern entitled “How Far Can British Street Artist Banksy Take His Anonymity?” by Jessica Taylor Price
    • Participated in a December 5 panel discussion entitled “Chokepoint Capitalism: A Conversation” in which, along with fellow Northeastern University colleagues, Professor Roberts interviewed Cory Doctorow, co-author of the book Chokepoint Capitalism: How Big Tech and Big Content Captured Creative Labor Markets and How We’ll Win Them Back
    • In January, co-hosted and participated in the International Trademark Association (INTA) Scholarship Symposium
    • On January 18, was quoted in Sportico article “Under Armour Scores Trademark Win Against Women’s Wear Brand” by Michael McCann [read on Sportico or Yahoo]
    • On January 23, was quoted in Bloomberg Law article “Adidas’ Recent Trial Loss Unlikely to Deter Brand Enforcement” by Isaiah Poritz
    • In early February, presented “Multi-Level Lies” at the Suffolk Law IP Center’s 20th Annual Works in Progress in Intellectual Property Scholars Colloquium (WIPIP)
    • Was quoted in the February 15 Northeastern Global News article “It’s Just Another Marketing Scheme. ‘De-influencers’ Tell You What To Buy by Telling You What Not To Buy”
    • Was quoted in the February 24 Daily Beast article “How a Dubious Parasite Cleanse Keeps Taking Over TikTok”

Keith Robinson (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, Wake Forest University School of Law)

    • Was interviewed as an Artificial Intelligence expert for a February 7 Pace article “Who Legally Owns Art Created with Artificial Intelligence?” by Neil Marion

Zvi S. Rosen (C-IP2 Scholar; Assistant Professor of Law, Southern Illinois University School of Law)

    • In December, was featured on Nebraska’s Governance and Technology Center’s Tech Refactored Podcast Show for an episode on “Copyright Law and Computer Software,” hosted by Professor Justin (Gus) Hurwitz
    • In early February, presented “Who Framed Mickey Mouse” at the Suffolk Law IP Center’s 20th Annual Works in Progress in Intellectual Property Scholars Colloquium (WIPIP)

Mark F. Schultz (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company Chair in Intellectual Property Law, University of Akron School of Law; Director, Center for Intellectual Property Law and Technology)

    • On January 19-20, participated as a Distinguished Commentator at the final meeting of the 2022-2023 Edison Fellowship in Scottsdale, Arizona
    • In February, along with C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Life Sciences and Scholar Emily Michiko Morris and Managing Director Joshua Kresh, submitted a response to the USPTO’s Request for Comments on USPTO Initiatives to Ensure the Robustness and Reliability of Patent Rights (PTO-P-2022-0025)
    • In February, signed onto an amicus brief in favor of Novartis for Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation, v. HEC Pharm Co., Ltd.

Ted Sichelman (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, University of San Diego School of Law; Director, Center for Intellectual Property Law & Markets; Founder & Director, Center for Computation, Mathematics, and the Law; Founder & Director, Technology Entrepreneurship and Intellectual Property Clinic)

    • Was quoted in a January 5 NBC News piece by Eli M. Rosenberg on how the “FTC says proposed ban of noncompete clauses would strengthen workers’ hand.” As cited in the article, Professor Sichelman expressed his opposition to the FTC’s proposal to ban noncompetes, although he is not opposed to a ban solely for low-wage workers 
    • In February, signed onto an amicus brief in favor of Novartis for Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation, v. HEC Pharm Co., Ltd.

Eric M. Solovy (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; Partner, Sidley Austin LLP)

    • In December, published a policy brief with C-IP2 entitled The TRIPS Waiver for COVID-19 Vaccines, and Its Potential Expansion: Assessing the Impact on Global IP Protection and Public Health

Dr. Bhamati Viswanathan (C-IP2 Scholar; Faculty Fellow, New England Law | Boston)


Scholarship & Other Writings

Jonathan Barnett, Fragile Giants: Reassessing Market Power in Platform Ecosystems, Competition Policy International (January 18, 2023)

Jonathan M. Barnett, “Pop goes the antitrust bubble,” The Hill (December 10, 2022)

Susan G. Braden and Joshua Kresh, Section 1498(A) is Not a Rx to Reduce Drug Prices, 77 Food and Drug Law Journal 3 (December 2022)

Daniel R. Cahoy, “The Techno-Optimist Case for Addressing Sustainability and its Grounding in Capitalist (Market) Incentives” (January 4, 2023)

Charles Delmotte, Different Economic Models of Innovation and Their Relation to the Law, in Artificial Intelligence and the Law 23 (Jan De Bruyne & Cedric Vanleenhove eds., 2023)

Gregory Dolin, “Next COVID-19 battle will be wages in court,” The Washington Times (January 25, 2023)

Jon M. Garon, Legal Considerations for Offering Metaverse-Based Education (January 12, 2023)

Jon M. Garon, Legal Implications of a Ubiquitous Metaverse and a Web3 Future, 106 Marq. L. Rev. 163 (2022).

Jon M. Garon, When AI Goes to War: Corporate Accountability for Virtual Mass Disinformation, Algorithmic Atrocities, and Synthetic Propaganda (March 26, 2022). Northern Kentucky Law Review, Vol. 49, No. 2, 2022 (49 N. Ky. L. Rev. 181 (2022))

Chris Holman, “Federal Circuit Gives Stare Decisis Effect to a Judgment of Claim Validity,” Patently-O (February 23, 2023)

Chris Holman, Genentech v. Sandoz: Patents claiming methods of managing side effects found invalid or not infringed, Patently-O (December 24, 2022)

Camilla A. Hrdy and Daniel H. Brean, “Guest Post by Prof. Hrdy & Dan Brean: The Patent Law Origins of Science Fiction,” Patently-O (January 20, 2023)

Camilla Alexandra Hrdy and Daniel Harris Brean, The Patent Law Origins of Science Fiction (December 1, 2022)

Camilla Alexandra Hrdy and Christopher B. Seaman, Beyond Trade Secrecy: Confidentiality Agreements That Act Like Noncompetes (March 11, 2023). Yale Law Journal, Vol. 133

David Kappos and Jonathan Barnett, Enhanced Damages Necessary In No-Injunction Patent System, Law360 (February 2, 2023)

Johnathon Liddicoat, “New insights into the amount of R&D for new uses of generic drugs” (2022) Generics and Biosimilar Initiative (Online)

Daryl Lim, Trademark Confusion Simplified: A New Framework for Multifactor Tests, Berkeley Technology Law Journal (Jan. 2023)

Daryl Lim, “Computational Trademark Infringement and Adjudication,” in Research Handbook on Intellectual Property and Artificial Intelligence, ed. Ryan Abbott (Massachusetts: Edward Elgar Publishing, Inc., 2022), from p. 290

Irina Manta, “‘Strangers on the Internet’ Podcast Ep. 18: Exclusive Interview with Bestselling Author Nancy Jo Sales,” The Volokh Conspiracy (January 2, 2023)

Irina Manta, “‘Strangers on the Internet’ Podcast Ep. 20: AI Dating Advice,” The Volokh Conspiracy (January 16, 2023)

Irina Manta, “Do Hospitals That Drop Mask Requirements Risk Liability?“, The Volokh Conspiracy (February 20, 2023)

Seán M. O’Connor, “AI Replication of Musical Styles Points the Way to An Exclusive Rights Regime,” in Research Handbook on Intellectual Property and Artificial Intelligence, ed. Ryan Abbott (Massachusetts: Edward Elgar Publishing, Inc., 2022), from p. 65

Kristen Osenga, Are ‘patent thickets’ to blame for high drug prices? Gulf Breeze News (December 15, 2022)

Kristen Osenga, ‘Patent thickets’ to blame for high drug prices? The Daily Star (Dec 16, 2022

Alexandra J. Roberts, Getting a Handle on Handles, Communications of the Association for Computing Machinery, ed. James Grimmelmann (Jan. 2023)

Eric M. Solovy, The TRIPS Waiver for COVID-19 Vaccines, and Its Potential Expansion: Assessing the Impact on Global IP Protection and Public, (Ctr. For Intell. Prop. x Innov. Pol. Dec. 2022)

 


 

Categories
Communications

C-IP2 2022 Winter Progress Report (September-November 2022)

Greetings from C-IP2 Faculty Director Seán O’Connor

With warmest wishes for the holiday season, we present our last report of 2022. This has been the year in which many of our programs were held in person again. We are grateful to our community for supporting the transition back to in-person events.

This Winter 2022 Progress Report covers Center and affiliate news and publications from September through November. Over that time, we hosted our 2022 Annual Fall Conference in person at the newly rebranded “Mason Square” (formerly the Arlington Campus), where we also held the second meeting of our 2022-2023 Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship. Additionally, C-IP2 co-hosted and helped to sponsor the inaugural National Vaccine Law Conference, and we are proud to highlight that our own Professor Sandra Aistars gave the 2022 Christopher A Meyer Memorial Lecture for The Copyright Society of the USA!

We’re grateful to all our Advisory Board, scholars, fellows, donors, and supporters for all their help with C-IP2’s efforts to further the scholarly discussion around IP and innovation.

We look forward to seeing you again in the New Year!


Holiday Cheer and Highlights of the Year

Holiday Greeting: We wish you the very best this holiday season and a Happy New Year for 2023!

 

Photo opportunities—one of the reasons we’re thrilled to be back to in-person events at last!
Here are a few of our favorites from 2022:

Seán O'Connor and Jon Knight rock out on the Pearl Street Warehouse stage under blue and yellow lights and in front the the Ukrainian flagOn May 5, C-IP2 Faculty Director  Seán O’Connor (right) performed vocals, guitar, and harmonica with Jon Knight (left) as an acoustic rock duo under the name Buzzard Point Caucus for Law Rocks Washington D.C. for Ukraine, a special charity event hosted in Washington, D.C. by annual charity event Law Rocks.

Professor Sean O'Connor and the Honorable John F. Witherspoon pose for a picture together at the 2022 Fall Conference receptionThe Hon. John F. Witherspoon (right), Professor and Director Emeritus of the Intellectual Property Program, honored C-IP2 with his presence and a few words at the reception for the 2022 Annual Fall Conference in September. The reception was held in recognition of Prof. Witherspoon’s service to George Mason’s law students and the IP program over the years. Here he poses for a picture with C-IP2 Faculty Director Seán O’Connor. / Photo credit: Dennis Le

Professor Orit Fischman-Afori, Joshua Kresh, Dr. Nicola Searle, and Professor Emily Michiko Morris pose for a picture at the Fall Conference receptionProfessor Orit Fischman-Afori, C-IP2 Managing Director Joshua Kresh, Dr. Nicola Searle, and Professor Emily Michiko Morris pose together for a photo at the Fall Conference reception. / Photo credit: Dennis Le

Sandra Aistars, Kevin Madigan, Victoria Sheckler, Seán O'Connor pose for a photo at the Fall Conference receptionSenior Fellow for Copyright Research Sandra Aistars; Kevin Madigan, Copyright Alliance VP, Legal Policy and Copyright Counsel and former center Deputy Director; Stephanie Semler, Supervising Attorney with the Mason Arts and Entertainment Advocacy Clinic and C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; and C-IP2 Faculty Director Seán O’Connor pose for a picture at the Fall Conference reception. / Photo credit: Dennis Le

Sandra Aistars opens her 2022 Meyer Memorial Lecture at the podium in front of her slide presentationSenior Fellow for Copyright Research Sandra Aistars gives the 2022 Christopher A. Meyer Memorial Lecture at the George Washington Law School on November 16. / Photo credit: Claudia B. Delgado


C-IP2 Hosted & Co-Hosted Events

Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship
On September 15-16, C-IP2 hosted the second meeting of the 2022-2023 Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship. This meeting was devoted to the Edison Fellows’ presenting their draft works in progress that they researched and drafted over the summer months of 2022. Each Edison Fellow received extensive feedback during presentation sessions devoted to each draft work in progress, including specific commentary from the Distinguished Commentators. 

Vaccine Law Conference
On September 15-16, C-IP2 co-hosted and helped to sponsor the inaugural National Vaccine Law Conference at Mason Square in Arlington, VA. C-IP2 Jurist in Residence Judge Susan G. Braden served on the conference board and spoke in a breakout session entitled “Vaccine Injury Compensation Inside the NVICP.” The conference was covered in a DCBar blog post and was advertised on the Scalia Law events website.

Annual Fall Conference
On September 22-23, C-IP2 held our 2022 Annual Fall Conference, IP on the Wane: Examining the Impacts as IP Rights Are Reduced, in person at Mason Square with the Global Antitrust Institute (GAI) and the National Security Institute (NSI) as this year’s co-hosts. The conference featured a Keynote Lunch with virtual remarks from Thom Tillis, Senator for North Carolina; seven panels of experts covering several types of IP, as well as antitrust and national security; and a Special Closing Reception in recognition of the Honorable John F. Witherspoon, who is a member of C-IP2’s Advisory Board, a Professor, and Director Emeritus of Scalia Law’s Intellectual Property Program, which he ran for many years. C-IP2 was also pleased to feature the Seventh Annual Law Rocks Washington DC—a musical fundraiser for capital-area nonprofits by bands of local legal professionals—on the official conference program. The conference was recorded, and the sessions can be viewed on the conference website and C-IP2’s YouTube channel. The conference was approved for 9.5 hours of VA CLE.


News and Speaking Engagements

Dmitry Karshtedt headshotC-IP2 joins the IP community in mourning the sudden loss of George Washington Law School Professor and C-IP2 Scholar Dmitry Karshtedt. Dmitry was a talented IP scholar and a great teacher and friend to many. Below are a few posts commemorating Dmitry and his life and work.

    • On October 31, was commemorated by Jason Rantanen in a Patently-O post, “Dmitry Karshtedt”
    • On October 31, was mentioned by Scott Graham in a Law360 post, “Dead in Mid-40s: Law Professor Mourned as ‘Brilliant Scholar,’ ‘Nicest Guy in the World”
    • On November 1, was eulogized by Irina Manta in Reason Magazine’s The Volokh Conspiracy in a post entitled “In Memoriam: Dmitry Karshtedt (1977-2022)”
    • On November 14, was remembered by Caitlin Kitson in a GW Hatchet post, “Law professor and intellectual property law scholar dies at 45”

Scholarship Program Announcement: The Scalia Law Alumni September Newsletter announced, “Professor and Director Emeritus John F. Witherspoon Establishes ‘The Witherspoon Scholars Program.’ The Program will provide funding for the next 15 years, primarily to students with financial need and those interested in intellectual property, including patent law. The first Witherspoon Scholars will be announced in fall 2023.”

Good alumni news for the IP Program: Two Scalia Law IP graduates, Dawn-Marie Bey and Lucy J. Wheatley, made the Virginia Lawyers Weekly list of “Virginia’s Go To Lawyers for Intellectual Property Law.”

In its first in-person extramural tournament since March 2020, Scalia Law’s Moot Court Board won first place at the Billings, Exum & Frye National Moot Court Competition at Elon University School of Law. The Team beat 35 other teams to take top honors in arguments before North Carolina state and federal judges. They will compete in the ABA National Appellate Advocacy Contest later this winter and next spring.

2021-2022 Edison Fellow Dr. John Liddicoat had his Fellowship paper, Repositioning Generic Drugs: Empirical Findings and Policy Implications, published in the International Review of Intellectual Property and Competition Law. The paper was co-authored with Kathleen Liddell, Jonathan Darrow, Mateo Aboy, Matthew Jordan, Cristina Crespo & Timo Minssen.

Dr. Lili Yang, recipient of a Leonardo da Vinci Fellowship Research Grant, was published along with co-author Professor Jyh-An Lee in the Duke Law and Technology Review with the paper Viagra Did Not Work, but Michael Jordan Still Made It: Trademark Policy Toward the Translation of Foreign Marks in China.

On November 9, C-IP2 was mentioned in Scalia Law’s Capital Notes email digest edition on “Research: Raising Questions, Finding Answers” for the forthcoming book 5G and Beyond: Intellectual Property and Competition Policy in the Internet of Things (Cambridge University Press), a volume co-edited by C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Innovation Policy & Senior Scholar Jonathan M. Barnett and Faculty Director Seán M. O’Connor and featuring chapters by expert contributors, a number of whom spoke at C-IP2’s December 2021 academic conference on Intellectual Property and Innovation Policy for 5G and the Internet of Things, which initiated the book project. 

Along with Professor Adam Mossoff, C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Innovation Policy and Senior Scholar Professor Jonathan Barnett wrote and signed a November 30 Letter to Assistant Attorney General Jonathan Kanter on SEPs and Patent Pools. The letter was signed by 28 former judges and government officials, legal academics, and economists, including C-IP2 Advisory Board Member the Hon. Paul Michel; Senior Scholars Professor Kristina M. L. Acri, Professor Justin (Gus) Hurwitz, and Dean Kristen Osenga; and Scholar Dr. Bowman Heiden.

Faculty Director Seán M. O’Connor penned the op-ed Is the era of tech bros and techno-libertarianism over? in The Hill.

* * *

We are honored and delighted to welcome to our team of C-IP2 affiliates the following academics and legal professionals whom we admire and with whom we look forward to working!

    • Senior Scholars: Professor Joseph Fishman, Dr. Kristina M. L. Acri née Lybecker, Professor Michael Mireles, Professor Michael Risch, Professor James Y. Stern
    • Practitioner in Residence: Dale Lazar

Dr. Kristina M. L. Acri, née Lybecker (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; John L. Knight Chair of Economics and Professor of Economics, Colorado College)

    • In October, joined C-IP2 as a Senior Scholar
    • Signed a November 30 letter (co-authored by Professors Jonathan Barnett and Adam Mossoff) to Assistant Attorney General Jonathan Kanter on SEPs and Patent Pools

Sandra Aistars (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Copyright Research and Policy & Senior Scholar; Founding Director, Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic; Clinical Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

    • Was cited in a September 7 article on how “Librarians and Lawmakers Want Greater Access to E-Books” by Caitlin Dewey (Stateline.org) for Governing: The Future of States and Localities
    • On September 23, moderated the panel “Copyright Under Pressure – What Phase Are We In?” at C-IP2’s Annual Fall Conference (a recording of the panel is available on YouTube, and a write-up on the panel can be found on C-IP2’s blog)
    • On October 25, joined the Copyright Society-sponsored virtual panel “Art Law: Warhol Foundation v. Goldsmith.” The other panelists were Professor Pamela Samuelson, Professor Jessica Litman, Jordana Rubel, and Professor Emily Behzadi, and the panel was moderated by musician and graduating RWU Lawstudent Jeffrey Prystowsky. This was the most attended CSUSA panel discussion to date, with over 620 pre-registrants. (A recording of the panel is available on YouTube.)
    • On October 28, spoke as a panelist for “Plenary Session 2: Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts v. Goldsmith Amici” at IIPSJ’s Mosaic IP Law and Policy Roundtable Conference
    • On November 15, Mason’s Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic, which is led by Professor Aistars, collaborated with Washington Area Lawyers for the Arts (WALA) for a Legal Workshop & Clinic: Copyright in the Metaverse
    • On November 16, gave the 2022 Christopher A. Meyer Memorial Lectureat The George Washington University Law School in Washington, D.C. A recording of the lecture is available on CSUSA’s website (login in to view; you can sign up for a free account here). Click here to learn more about this prestigious lecture series, and click here to read about Professor Aistars’s 2022 lecture.
    • Directed student participation in a November 3rd online education session for Own Your Dance, a non-profit organization for choreographers 

Jonathan Barnett (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Innovation Policy & Senior Scholar; Torrey H. Webb Professor of Law, USC Gould School of Law)

    • On September 16, presented on “Illusions of Dominance: Revisiting the Market Power Assumption in Platform Ecosystems” at the Market Structure Roundtable hosted by the International Center for Law & Economics
    • On September 23, moderated the panel “How Weak Patent Rights Distort Innovation Markets” at C-IP2’s Annual Fall Conference (a recording of the panel is available on YouTube)
    • With Professor Adam Mossoff, co-authored and signed a November 30 Letter to Assistant Attorney General Jonathan Kanter on SEPs and Patent Pools
    • Mentioned in IP Watchdog’s November 30 post “Patent Experts Urge Kanter to Reject Calls to Scrap Avanci Business Review Letter”

Chief Judge Susan G. Braden (Court of Federal Claims (Ret.); C-IP2 Jurist in Residence)

    • On September 9, attended the Federal Circuit Judicial Conference
    • On September 12-13, attended the IPWatchdog LIVE 2022 Conference in Dallas, Texas, and spoke on the September 13 panel “Injunctions and Relief in Patent Proceedings at the International Trade Commission”
    • On September 15-16, attended the Inaugural National Vaccine Law Conference and spoke on the September 15 panel “The Vaccine Court: Overview and Function”
    • On September 21, attended a Board Meeting for AI and software firm LegalSifter, Inc.
    • On September 22, attended a public meeting of USPTO Private Patent Advisory Committee
    • On October 13-14, attended and participated in ALI Advisor’s Meeting on Restatement of the Law, Copyright, in Philadelphia
    • On October 18, attended and participated in the USPTO Private Patent Advisory Committee Meeting re: 2022 Annual Report
    • On October 25-26, attended the IPWatchdog Conference on Life Science IP Developments and spoke as a panelist for “Can Price Fixing and Antitrust Liability Control Drug Prices?”
    • On October 27, took part in a FedArb planning Session on the EU Unitary Patent System
    • On October 27, spoke as a panelist on the Bayh-Dole Coalition webinar entitled “The Three-Pronged Attack on U.S. Innovation and Intellectual Property”
    • Joined the Advisory Council for the Bayh-Dole Coalition
    • The 2022 USPTO Private Patent Advisory Committee Annual Report was forwarded to President Biden on November 1. (Judge Braden was the author of the IT/AI Chapters. See https://patentsgazette.uspto.gov/week47/OG/2022PPACAnnualReport.pdf.)
    • On November 4, attended the U.S. District Court Event for former Chief Judges Thomas F. Hogan and Royce C. Lamberth
    • On November 9, attended Board of Directors Meeting for LegalSifter, Inc.
    • On November 15, attended the United Inventor Association Board of Directors Meeting
    • On November 16, attended the Supreme Court Historical Society Dinner at DACOR Bacon House
    • On November 21, participated in the Administrative Conference of the United States Meeting with Academic Advisors for the Small Patent Claims Court Study requested by Congress
    • Was quoted and recognized in IP Watchdog’s November 23 article “What IP Stakeholders are Giving Thanks for in 2022”
    • On November 27-28, attended Board of Directors Meeting for LegalSifter, Inc.

Daniel R. Cahoy (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Robert G. and Caroline Schwartz Professor, The Pennsylvania State University’s Smeal College of Business; Research Director, Center for the Business of Sustainability)

Terrica Carrington (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; VP, Legal Policy and Copyright Counsel, Copyright Alliance)

    • Has been selected to receive the 2022 Inspiration Award from the IPO Education Foundation (IPOEF) at the December 9, 2022, IPO Education Foundation Awards even in Washington, D.C. (PR Newswire | Copyright Alliance)
    • On September 22- 23, attended C-IP2’s Annual Fall Conference
    • Throughout October, gave presentations on the Copyright Claims Board, the Copyright Alliance Small Claims Opt-Out Protection (SCOOP) Program, and the Copyright Alliance Initiative to Promote Diversity in Copyright (IPDC program) for several organizations:
      • October 5 – Women in Film and Video
      • October 13 – as part of the USPTO’s program on “Building an E-Commerce Presence, Session 9: Protecting Your Business: IP and the Indian Arts and Crafts Act”
      • October 19 – National Volunteer Lawyers for the Arts Retreat
      • October 20 – The ABA Copyright Litigation Committee
    • Attended the Meyer Lecture at George Washington Law School on November 16

Theo Cheng (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; Arbitrator and Mediator, ADR Office of Theo Cheng LLC; Adjunct Professor, New York Law School)

    • On September 8, spoke on the panel “Diversity, Equity & Inclusion in FINRA Arbitrations” as part of the Practicing Law Institute’s 2022 Securities Arbitration Program in New York City
    • On September 17, spoke on the panel “Options for Preventing, Managing and Resolving Healthcare Disputes” as part of the ABA’s 2022 Physicians Legal Issues: Healthcare Delivery & Innovation Conference that was held in Chicago
    • On September 20, spoke on the panel “Getting to Maybe: The Intersection of ADR and Adult Learning” as part of the ADR Skills Program Series sponsored by New York Law School
    • On September 21, was a panelist on the ABA Litigation Section’s webinar “Roundtable 2: Everything You Wanted to Know About Arbitration (But Were Afraid To Ask) – Exchange of Information and Discovery Issues”
    • On September 28, was a panelist on the program “Conducting an Arbitration,” which was sponsored by the Columbian Lawyers Association of the First Department in New York
    • On September 30, conducted an arbitration training program for members of the New York Law School Dispute Resolution Team
    • On October 8, was a panelist on a segment entitled “Let’s Talk Settlement: The Ins and Outs of Resolving Your Case at the Negotiating Table,” which was part of the Asian American Bar Association of New York’s Fall Conference at Fordham University School of Law. More details here.
    • On October 11, visited Professor Elayne Greenberg’s class “Mediation: Representing Clients” at St. John’s University School of Law to discuss practice points and answer questions about mediation practice
    • On October 19, was a panelist on a segment entitled “Sustainable Solutions to DEI Challenges in ADR,” which was part of the Minority Corporate Counsel Association’s Pathways to Diversity Conference at the Marriott Marquis Hotel in New York City. More details here.
    • On October 19, was also a co-presenter on mediator’s proposals at the American Arbitration Association’s Midwest Arbitrators Roundtable
    • On October 20, was a panelist on a segment entitled “The Mediator’s Toolbox: Practical and Ethical Considerations on Breaking Impasse,” which was part of the New York State Bar Association Dispute Resolution Section’s Fall Meeting at the American Arbitration Association’s midtown offices in New York City. More details here.
    • On October 27, was a co-presenter on a segment entitled “The Culturally Competent Mediator: Standards, Microaggressions & Cultural Context,” which was part of the New Jersey Association of Professional Mediators’ “Improving Mediation Outcomes Through Cultural Competency” program that was presented to Maryland court personnel
    • In November 2022, his latest Resolution Alley column, entitled “Considering ADR for Trusts and Estates Disputes,” was published in the New York State Bar Association Entertainment, Arts & Sports Law Journal. Resolution Alley is a regular column Mr. Cheng writes that addresses the use of ADR in the entertainment, arts, and sports industries. (The piece can be read here on LinkedIn)
    • On November 1, was a guest lecturer in the Arts & Entertainment Law Clinic at the University of Detroit Mercy School of Law where he discussed alternative dispute resolution and, in particular, the out-of-court resolution of copyright disputes
    • On November 5, was a featured speaker at the 29th Annual Conference of the New Jersey Association of Professional Mediators. The title of his talk was “Becoming a Master Mediator: The Path to Excellence.”
    • On November 11, was a panelist on a program sponsored by the Silicon Valley Arbitration and Mediation Center entitled “Should Technology Cases Have Special Arbitration Rules?”
    • On November 13, was a panelist on a program sponsored by the American Arbitration Association as part of its Diverse Student ADR Summit entitled “Perspectives From the Trenches – Part 3: ADR Professionals.” 

Eric Claeys (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Scholarly Initiatives & Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

Lolita Darden (C-IP2 Scholar; Visiting Associate Clinical Professor and Director, Intellectual Property and Technology Clinic, The George Washington University Law School)

    • On October 28, spoke as a panelist for a discussion about Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts v. Goldsmith Amici and as a moderator for the panel “Traditions or Traps? Patent Inventor Access under Review” at IIPSJ’s Mosaic IP Law and Policy Roundtable Conference
    • On November 18, gave a presentation on Rectifying Missed Opportunities: Expanding the Diversity in Innovation Pledge to Law Firms and Law Schools at the 2022 Santa Clara University Law School Innovator Diversity Pilots Conference 

Gregory Dolin (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Associate Professor of Law, University of Baltimore School of Law)

    • On September 11, was mentioned in a Patently-O post by Professor Dennis Crouch entitled “Laser v. Dolin: Estoppel and the Billion Dollar Question of Whether an IPR Petition is filed “during” the IPR”
    • On September 22, spoke on the panel “How Well Does the Antitrust Approach Fit the Biopharmaceutical Space?” at C-IP2’s Annual Fall Conference (a recording of the panel is available on YouTube)

John F. Duffy (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Samuel H. McCoy II Professor of Law and Paul G. Mahoney Research Professor of Law, University of Virginia School of Law)

Tabrez Ebrahim (C-IP2 Scholar; Associate Professor, California Western School of Law)

Jon M. Garon (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law and Director of the Intellectual Property, Cybersecurity, and Technology Law program, Nova Southeastern University Shepard Broad College of Law)

David Grossman (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; Senior Director of Technology Transfer & Industry Collaboration, Office of Technology Transfer, George Mason University)

Joseph Fishman (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, Vanderbilt University Law School)

    • In November, joined C-IP2 as a Senior Scholar

Dr. Bowman Heiden (C-IP2 Scholar; Co-Director, Center for Intellectual Property (CIP), University of Gothenburg, Visiting Professor, University of California, Berkeley)

    • On September 27, participated in Sisvel’s webinar, “New Wi-Fi 6 Patent Pool & LIFT Royalty Payment Structure”
    • On September 30, spoke as a panelist on a LESI Patent & Technology Licensing Committee and 4iP Council webinar entitled “Connected Cars: New Challenges and Opportunities” (a recording of the panel is also available on YouTube)
    • In October, spoke at PatSnap’s Annual Innovation Conference, Frontier 2022
    • On October 14, was quoted by 4iP Council for #worldstandardsday

Christopher Holman (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Life Sciences & Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law)

    • Published a piece in Patently-O on November 11 entitled “After Granting Certiorari In Enablement Case, Supreme Court Declines Opportunity To Address Written Description”

Camilla A. Hrdy (C-IP2 Scholar; Professor of Intellectual Property Law, University of Akron School of Law)

Justin (Gus) Hurwitz (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, The Menard Director of the Nebraska Governance and Technology Center and the Co-Director of the Space, Cyber, and Telecommunications Law Program, University of Nebraska-Lincoln College of Law)

    • Featured as a guest speaker on Episode 421, “Congressional Session of the Living Dead,” of The Cyberlaw Podcast (a September 12 write-up of the episode by Stewart Baker is available at Reason)
    • Featured as a guest speaker on Episode 424, “Big Tech’s Chickens Coming Home to Roost,” of The Cyberlaw Podcast (an October 4 write-up of the episode by Stewart Baker is available at Reason and on the LawFare blog)
    • On October 14, spoke at a conference on The Administration of Antitrust: The FTC and the Rule of Law, hosted by the Boyden Gray Center and co-hosted by the Global Antitrust Institute
    • Featured in the November 23 podcast episode “The FTC’s Litigation: In Court and In-House,” hosted by Gray Matters
    • Signed a November 30 (co-authored by Professors Jonathan Barnett and Adam Mossoff) to Letter to Assistant Attorney General Jonathan Kanter on SEPs and Patent Pools

Hon. Prof. F. Scott Kieff (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Fred C. Stevenson Research Professor, The George Washington University Law School)

    • Was quoted in GW’s Hatchet November 14 article “Law professor and intellectual property law scholar dies at 45”
    • Was quoted in IP Watchdog’s November 17 article “Advice from the SEP Masters: Rely on the Data, Engage with Courts and Regulators, Be Wary of Calls for Special Tribunals” 

Joshua Kresh (C-IP2 Managing Director)

Dale Lazar (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; Director, Patent Program, Innovation Law Clinic)

    • Joined C-IP2 as a Practitioner in Residence
    • Works with clients and students as Director of the Patent Program for the Innovation Law Clinic of George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School
    • Participated in the planning committee for the 18th Annual Advanced Patent Law Institute co-hosted by The University of Texas School of Law and George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School

Dr. John Liddicoat (C-IP2 Scholar; Senior Research Associate and Affiliated Lecturer, Faculty of Law, University of Cambridge)

    • Co-organized and spoke on “Designing Empirical Studies in Law” at the European Policy on Intellectual Property (EPIP) PhD Workshop 2022, which was held September 14-16 (Faculty of Law, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK)
    • Co-organized and presented “Repositioning Generic Drugs: Empirical Findings and Policy Implications” and “Has the EU Incentive for Drug Repurposing been Effective? An Empirical Analysis” in the September 16 CeBIL Symposium 2022 on Intellectual Property & Drug Repurposing: New Frontiers(Newnham College, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK)
    • In October, was invited to a Roundtable hosted by ‘Repurposing of Medicines 4All’, a new European Platform for Medicines Repurposing, funded by the European Commission. The focus of the roundtable was on the Platform’s philosophy, vision, mission, and operational principles.
    • 2021-2022 Edison Fellowship paper, Repositioning Generic Drugs: Empirical Findings and Policy Implications, was published in the International Review of Intellectual Property and Competition Law

Erika Lietzan (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; William H. Pittman Professor of Law & Timothy J. Heinsz Professor of Law, University of Missouri School of Law)

    • Was a contributor in The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Health Law (eds. David Orentlicher and Tamara K. Hervey), published September 28
    • Was quoted in the Medical Xpress November 3 article “Are drug companies the villain? New study questions claims of ‘evergreening”

Daryl Lim (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; H. Laddie Montague Jr. Chair in Law; Associate Dean for Research and Innovation; Founding Director, Intellectual Property Law and Innovation Initiative; and co-hire, Institute for Computational and Data Sciences, Penn State University)

    • In October 22, was mentioned in Penn State Dickinson Law article “Professor Daryl Lim Publishes Article In Indiana University Mauer School of Law’s IP Theory Journal” (Professor Lim’s article is entitled Life after Google v. Oracle: Three Reflections on a Theme)
    • In November, moderated the panel “Cybersecurity and Data Security: What Every Lawyer Should Know,” hosted by Penn State Dickinson Law

Irina D. Manta (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, Hofstra University School of Law)

    • On October 19, took part in a virtual conversation about “Engendering Trust in Election Outcomes,” which was hosted by Elon University School of Law

Hina Mehta (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; Director, Office of Technology Transfer, George Mason University)

    • In 2022, was recognized by the AmeriCorps and the Office of the U.S. President with a Presidential Lifetime Achievement Award for volunteer service, signed by President Biden 

Michael Mireles (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law and Director, Intellectual Property Certificate Concentration, University of the Pacific McGeorge School of Law)

    • In September, joined C-IP2 as a Senior Scholar
    • On September 22- 23, attended C-IP2’s Annual Fall Conference

Emily Michiko Morris (C-IP2 Senior for Life Sciences and Scholar; C-IP2 2021-2022 Edison Fellow; David L. Brennan Endowed Chair, Associate Professor, and Associate Director of the Center for Intellectual Property Law & Technology, University of Akron School of Law)

    • On September 23, moderated the panel “How Well Does the Antitrust Approach Fit the Biopharmaceutical Space?” at C-IP2’s Annual Fall Conference (a recording of the panel is available on YouTube)
    • Was quoted in a September 27 in Bloomberg Law article “Gray Areas in Patent Review Denials Catch Agency Director’s Eye” by Kelcee Griffis
    • Wrote an October 14 letter to the U.S. Congress’s Senate Judiciary Committee and Subcommittee on Intellectual Property in favor of the Patent Eligibility Restoration Act of 2022

Lateef Mtima (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, Howard University School of Law; Founder and Director, Institute for Intellectual Property and Social Justice (IIPSJ))

Loren Mulraine (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, Director of Music and Entertainment Law Studies, Belmont University – College of Law)

    • On December 12, gave a presentation on film and television tax incentives at a CLE event for the Nashville Bar Association year end Entertainment and Sports CLE program 

Christopher M. Newman (C-IP2 Scholar; Associate Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

Seán M. O’Connor (C-IP2 Faculty Director; Faculty Director, Innovation Law Clinic; Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

    • Presided over C-IP2’s Annual Fall Conference on September 22-23 and gave remarks during the September 23 conference reception in recognition of the Honorable John F. Witherspoon
    • On October 13, moderated the panel on “Global Tech Trends: Africa, China, Europe, Latin America and Russia” at the Fifth Annual International IP Summit, which was hosted at Boston College Law by Ropes & Gray
    • On October 17, gave a lecture entitled “What Does it Mean to Own Virtual Things?: Non-Fungible Tokens (NFTs), Video Games, and the Metaverse” at Mason Korea as part of the Mason Korea Distinguished Lecture Series
    • On November 15, delivered a virtual lecture—entitled “Determining the Composition: Songwriting, Music Copyright and Technology”—to National Chengchi University (NCCU) in Taiwan as part of an academic course of Media and Entertainment Law in the Digital Age

Kristen Jakobsen Osenga (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Associate Dean of Academic Affairs, Austin E. Owen Research Scholar and Professor of Law, University of Richmond School of Law)

    • Signed a November 30 (co-authored by Professors Jonathan Barnett and Adam Mossoff) to Letter to Assistant Attorney General Jonathan Kanter on SEPs and Patent Pools

Yogesh Pai (C-IP2 Scholar; Assistant Professor, National Law University Delhi (NLUD); Co-Director, Centre for Innovation, Intellectual Property and Competition at NLUD)

    • On October 27, was mentioned in Livelaw News Networks’ post “IJIEL Blog: Call for Submissions On A Rolling Basis”

Michael Risch (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Vice Dean and Professor of Law, Villanova University Charles Widger School of Law)

    • Professor Risch’s 2011 George Mason Law Review article, A Surprisingly Useful Requirement, was cited in a September 9 Patently-O article on “Utility and Eligibility” by Professor Dennis Crouch
    • Served as a Distinguished Commentator during the second meeting of the 2022-2023 Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship on September 15-16
    • Was quoted in the October 11 Insurance Journal article “Uber Executive/s Conviction Puts Spotlight on Secrecy About Hacking” by Jack Gillum; the article was also syndicated by Bloomberg
    • In October, gave a presentation entitled “Worse than Human?” as part of the Villanova University Falvey Library Speaker Series

Alexandra Jane Roberts (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Trademarks; Professor of Law and Media, Northeastern University School of Law)

    • In September, served as a commentator for Professor Sarah Burstein’s paper “Uncreative Designs” as part of Northeastern University School of Law’s 2022-2023 Faculty Colloquia Series
    • Was quoted extensively in the September 13 Yahoo!/Sportico article entitled “Luka Dončić Embroiled in Unusual Trademark Dispute With His Mother” by Michael McCann
    • Participated as a commentator at the Suffolk Law IP Center’s Fourth Annual Intellectual Property & Innovation Conference at Suffolk University Law School on September 30-October 1
    • Was quoted in an October 4 Digiday article about Kim Kardashian and the SEC
    • Was quoted in the Daily Dot in an October 13 article by Grace Stanley entitled “Bethenny Frankel sends TikTok creator Meredith Lynch a cease and desist, sparking debate”
    • On October 20, have a presentation on “The Poetics of Trademark Law” as part of the University of New Hampshire Franklin Pierce School of Law’s IP Speaker Series
    • Presented “Multi-Level Lies” at UNH Law’s 2022 Annual Academic IP Roundtable on October 20-21
    • Was quoted in an October 20 Washington Post article by Ben Brasch entitled “Barilla customers sue because ‘Italy’s #1 Brand of Pasta’ is made in U.S.”
    • Was quoted by Grace Stanley in an October 5 Daily Dot article as well as in a post in its newsletter, Passionfruit, for a piece entitled “TikToker says her video was used in Refy Beauty ad without her permission, sparking debate”
    • Was quoted in The Fashion Law on Kanye West and morals clauses
    • Was quoted in VOA Learning English on how students should use Twitter
    • Was quoted in Law360 on the class action lawsuit against FTX and celebrity endorsers
    • Was quoted in ReutersABA Journal, and Bloomberg on potential litigation over blue-check impersonation on Twitter
    • Was referenced as a source in a Washington Post article about a false advertising lawsuit against Barilla for marketing itself as “Italy’s #1 Pasta Brand”
    • Gave a talk in the music department of Northeastern’s College of Arts, Media & Design

Keith Robinson (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, Wake Forest University School of Law)

Zvi S. Rosen (C-IP2 Scholar; Assistant Professor of Law, Southern Illinois University School of Law)

    • On October 12, presented his article Examining Copyright (forthcoming) as part of the George Washington University Law School Speaker Series
    • Also on October 12, hosted the webinar “Courthouse Steps Oral Argument: Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. V. Goldsmith

Mark F. Schultz (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company Chair in Intellectual Property Law, University of Akron School of Law; Director, Center for Intellectual Property Law and Technology)

Amy Semet (C-IP2 Scholar; Associate Professor, University at Buffalo School of Law)

    • Participated in the Suffolk Law IP Center’s Fourth Annual Intellectual Property & Innovation Conference at Suffolk University Law School on September 30-October 1

Dr. Stephanie M. Semler (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; Adjunct Professor, George Mason University, Antonin Scalia Law School; Supervising Attorney, Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic)

Ted Sichelman (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, University of San Diego School of Law; Director, Center for Intellectual Property Law & Markets; Founder & Director, Center for Computation, Mathematics, and the Law; Founder & Director, Technology Entrepreneurship and Intellectual Property Clinic)

Eric M. Solovy (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; Partner, Sidley Austin LLP)

    • On September 11, presented at the 2022 AIPPI World Congress in San Francisco, CA on the panel “Pharma I: IP and COVID-19 – Two Years Later”
    • In late October, represented the Sidley Emerging Enterprises Pro Bono Program at the International Trade Centre’s (ITC) SheTrades and UPS Women Exporters Programme: “Working together with Mexico’s Secretaría de Economía, UPS, Mercado Libre, and the ITC, we provided hands-on training to Mexican women-led small businesses on essential topics for accessing new markets. My presentation focused on the importance of IP rights, the USMCA, and overall export strategy.” – via LinkedIn

James Y. Stern (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, William & Mary Law School)

    • In October, joined C-IP2 as a Senior Scholar

Toshiko Takenaka (C-IP2 Scholar; Washington Research Foundation/W. Hunter Simpson Professor of Technology Law, University of Washington School of Law)

    • On November 3, spoke at IAM Live: AI IP Europe 2022
    • On November 7, participated in Université Toulouse 1 Capitole’s conference Rethinking the Impact of Artificial Intelligence on Patent Law

Saurabh Vishnubhakat (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, Yeshiva University Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law)

    • On October 19, joined a conversation with other new faculty at Cardozo Law as part of the Intellectual Property & Information Law Fall 2022 Speaker Series
    • In November, spoke at UNH Franklin Pierce School of Law’s 2022/2023 Intellectual Property (IP) Speaker Series
    • On November 9, moderated a fireside chat with Katherine E. Lewis (Partner and Director of Innovative Ventures, Meister Seelig & Fein LLP) at Cardozo Law as part of the Intellectual Property & Information Law Fall 2022 Speaker Series

Scholarship & Other Writings

Mary Catherine Amerine, The fragility of freelancing: The impact of copyright law on modern journalism, in The Subjects of Literary and Artistic Copyright (eds. Enrico Bonadio and Cristiana Sappa) (Edward Elgar 2022)

Jonathan M. Barnett, The case against the FTC, The Hill (October 3, 2022)

Jonathan M. Barnett, The End of Reason at the FTC, Truth on the Market (November 14, 2022)

Jonathan M. Barnett, How patents facilitate market entry and promote competition, IAM (06 July 2022)

Jonathan Barnett, Illusions of Dominance?: Revisiting the Market Power Assumption in Platform Ecosystems (October 26, 2022). USC CLASS Research Paper No. CLASS22-29, USC Law Legal Studies Paper No. 22-29

Jonathan M. Barnett, Taking Cost-Benefit Analysis Seriously in Consumer-Data Regulation, Truth on the Market (September 12, 2022)

Daniel R. Cahoy, Trademark’s Grip Over Sustainability (March 15, 2022). University of Colorado Law Review, Vol. 94, No. 4, Forthcoming

Theo Cheng, “Considering ADR for Trusts and Estates Disputes,” 33 New York State Bar Association Entertainment, Arts & Sports Law Journal 3: 12-14 (2022) [viewable here on LinkedIn]

Cala Coffman, C-IP2 2022 Fall Conference Panel Discusses Copyright Under Pressure, C-IP2 Blog (October 26, 2022)

Thomas D. Grant & F. S. Kieff, Appointing Arbitrators: Tenure, Public Confidence, and a Middle Road for ISDS Reform, 43 MICH. J. INT’L L. 171 (2022). Available at: https://repository.law.umich.edu/mjil/vol43/iss1/5

Steve Harris, Suzanne Harrison, and Bowman Heiden, How European countries compare on gender diversity in inventorship, IAM (September 15, 2022)

Chris Holman, “After Granting Certiorari In Enablement Case, Supreme Court Declines Opportunity To Address Written Description,” Patently-O (November 11, 2022)

Camilla Hrdy, Gersen & Hempill: What’s in a Bottle?, Written Description (October 21, 2022)

Camilla Hrdy, Morten Follow-Up: What Do Federal Agencies’ Enabling Statues Say About Their Power to Disclose Trade Secrets?, Written Description (September 6, 2022)

Camilla Hrdy, The Value in Secrecy, Fordham Law Review (November 1, 2022)

Camilla Alexandra Hrdy and Daniel Harris Brean, The Patent Law Origins of Science Fiction (December 1, 2022)

Gus Hurwitz, FTC Could Soon Face High Court Reprimand, Real Clear Policy (October 11, 2022)

Jyh-An Lee and Lili Yang, Viagra Did Not Work, but Michael Jordan Still Made It: Trademark Policy Toward the Translation of Foreign Marks in China (September 6, 2022). Duke Law & Technology Review, Vol. 20, No. 1, 2022, The Chinese University of Hong Kong Faculty of Law Research Paper No. 2022-36

Johnathon Liddicoat, Kathleen Liddell, Jonathan Darrow, et al. Repositioning Generic Drugs: Empirical Findings and Policy Implications, IIC (2022)

Erika Lietzan and Kristina M.L. Acri née Lybecker and Evan Weidner, The Case of the Missing Device Patents, or: Why Device Patents Matter (September 19, 2022). Fordham Intellectual Property, Media & Entertainment Law Journal, Vol. 33, Forthcoming, University of Missouri School of Law Legal Studies Research Paper, Forthcoming

Erika Lietzan and Kristina M.L. Acri née Lybecker, Solutions Still Searching for a Problem: A Call for Relevant Data to Support “Evergreening” Allegations (September 26, 2022). Fordham Intellectual Property, Media & Entertainment Law Journal, Vol. 33

Daryl Lim (2022) “Life After Google v. Oracle: Three Reflections on a Theme,” IP Theory: Vol. 12: Iss. 1, Article 3.

Irina Manta, In Memoriam: Dmitry Karshtedt (1977-2022), The Volokh Conspiracy (November 1, 2022)

Loren E. Mulraine, Unintended Repercussions: Copyright Termination and the Punitive Effect of 17 U.S.C. §203(a)(3) on the Rights of Creators, 22 UIC Rev. Intell. Prop. L. 23 (2022)

Seán M. O’Connor, Is the era of tech bros and techno-libertarianism over?, The Hill (November 14, 2022)

Kristen Osenga, Column: Are “patent thickets” to blame for high drug prices?, Richmond Times Dispatch (November 30, 2022)

Michael Risch, From Patents to Secrets (September 29, 2022). Research Handbook On Empirical Studies In Intellectual Property Law (Edward Elgar Publishing, Estelle Derclaye ed. Forthcoming 2022)

Zvi Rosen, What’s at Stake in Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. V. Goldsmith, FedSoc Blog (October 4, 2022)

Saurabh Vishnubhakat and Dave Fagundes, The Coming Copyright Judge Crisis (September 12, 2022). New York University Law Review Online, Vol. 98, Forthcoming

Mark Schultz and Philip Stevens, Five reasons the TRIPS waiver should not be expanded to covid therapeutics, Geneva Network (October 5, 2022)


 

Categories
Uncategorized

C-IP2 2022 Fall Progress Report (June-August 2022)

Sean O'ConnorGreetings from C-IP2 Faculty Director Seán O’Connor

As our fall season of programming is underway, we are pleased to report on summer (June-August) programming and scholarship at C-IP2. Here are some highlights:

    • Fifth annual exclusive WIPO-U.S. Summer School on Intellectual Property virtually hosted about fifty students from around the world, taught by renowned experts from the academy and industry
    • Fourteen new Senior Scholars and Scholars (several of whom are former CPIP/C-IP2 Edison Fellows)
    • Professor Alexandra Roberts of Northeastern University joins in our new position of Senior Fellow for Trademarks
    • Three amicus briefs in major IP cases drafted and filed by C-IP2 staff and affiliates

We also organized the 2022-2023 Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship and C-IP2’s 2022 Annual Fall Conference during this period—both of which were successfully held in person and will be included in next quarter’s Progress Report. Finally, please note that our 2023-2024 Thomas Edison Innovation Law & Policy Fellowship Call for Applications was posted last week; details can be viewed here.


C-IP2 Hosted & Co-Hosted Events

Academic Program
From June 6-17, C-IP2 hosted the prestigious WIPO-U.S. Summer School on Intellectual Property for the fifth year. The virtual Summer School included 50 students representing 19 countries including Azerbaijan, Brazil, Canada, China, Columbia, Ethiopia, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Japan, Nigeria, Peru, Philippines, Republic of Korea, Romania, South Africa, the United States of America, Ukraine, and Vietnam. Among the instructors this year were C-IP2 directors Sean O’Connor and Joshua Kresh; C-IP2 Senior Fellows Sandra Aistars, Jonathan Barnett, and Emily Michiko Morris; and several C-IP2 Affiliates: David Grossman, Steve Jamar, Lateef Mtima, Kristen Osenga, Eric Priest, and Mark Schultz. The Summer School was also taught by retired judges: the Honorable Judge Paul Michel (Ret.), U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, and the Chief Judge Susan Braden (Ret.), and by speakers from such government organizations as the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and the U.S. Copyright Office.


News and Speaking Engagements

The Institute for Digital Innovation (IDIA)—which has partnered with the Innovation Law Clinic, founded by C-IP2 Faculty Director Seán O’Connor—was mentioned in a June 14 Free Lance Star article by Michael Martz (Richmond Times-Dispatch).

This summer, we were honored and delighted to welcome to our team of C-IP2 affiliates a number of academics we admire and with whom we look forward to working!

    • Senior Fellow for Trademarks: Professor Alexandra Jane Roberts
    • Senior Scholars: Professor Daniel Cahoy, Professor Justin (Gus) Hurwitz, Professor Steven Jamar, Professor Adam MacLeod, Professor Lateef Mtima, Professor Michael Risch, Professor Keith Robinson, Professor Brenda Simon, and Professor Saurabh Vishnubhakat
    • Scholars: Professor Lolita Darden, Dr. Charles Delmotte, Professor Gerardo Con Díaz, Professor Laura Ford, Professor Zvi Rosen

C-IP2 was mentioned on Newswire’s article “National Vaccine Law Conference to Discuss & Debate Legal Aspects of Vaccines & Immunization in Virginia September 15-16″ as a co-host and partner of the conference.

C-IP2 Scholar Lolita Darden & Senior Scholar Lateef Mtima served as Additional Counsel for the following amicus brief: The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc., v. Lynn Goldsmith and Lynn Goldsmith, Ltd., Brief of Amici Curiae Institute for Intellectual Property and Social Justice and Intellectual-Property Professors in Support of Respondent (U.S. August 15, 2022). The brief was also signed by Faculty Director Sean O’Connor, Senior Scholar Steven Jamar, and Edison Distinguished Commentator Justin Hughes.

C-IP2 Managing Director Joshua Kresh and Senior Fellow for Life Sciences and Scholar Emily Michiko Morris organized and signed following brief: Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation v. Accord Healthcare Inc., etc.Brief of Amici Curiae Intellectual Property Law Professors in Support of Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation’s Petition for Panel and En Banc Rehearing (U.S. August 4, 2022). The brief was also signed by Senior Scholars Kristen Osenga, Mark Schultz, and Ted Sichelman.

C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Copyright Research and Policy and Senior Scholar Sandra Aistars organized and signed the following brief: Hachette Book Group, Inc., HarperCollins Publishers LLC, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., and Penguin Random House LLC, Brief of Amici Curiae Professors and Scholars of Copyright Law in Support of Plaintiffs and in Opposition to Internet Archive (U.S. August 5, 2022). The brief was also signed by Faculty Director Sean O’Connor; Managing Director Joshua Kresh; Senior Fellow for Innovation Policy & Senior Scholar Jonathan Barnett; Senior Scholars Jon Garon, Eric Priest, and Mark Schultz; and Scholars Christopher Newman and Zvi Rosen.

C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Life Sciences Emily Michiko Morris has provided an analysis of Senator Tillis’s Patent Eligibility Restoration Act of 2022 bill, an important amendment to § 101 that would create valuable certainty in an area that has been murky for more than a decade.

Sandra Aistars (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Copyright Research and Policy & Senior Scholar; Founding Director, Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic; Clinical Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

    • On June 13, taught “Fundamentals of Copyright” and moderated the panel “Copyright in the Creative Industries” during the virtual WIPO-U.S. Summer School on Intellectual Property, hosted by C-IP2
    • On June 14, spoke with Suzanne Wilson, General Counsel and Associate Register of Copyrights at the U.S. Copyright Office, in a Fireside Chat as part of the WIPO-U.S. Summer School on IP
    • On June 21, participated in a virtual Copyright Claims Board Roundtable event
    • Organized and signed Brief of Amici Curiae Professors and Scholars of Copyright Law in Support of Plaintiffs and in Opposition to Internet Archive (U.S. August 5, 2022)

Jonathan Barnett (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Innovation Policy & Senior Scholar; Torrey H. Webb Professor of Law, USC Gould School of Law)

    • On June 6, taught “Overview and Economics of Intellectual Property” at the virtual WIPO-U.S. Summer School on Intellectual Property, hosted by C-IP2
    • On June 15, spoke on the virtual panel “The U.S. Innovation System in a Changing World,” which was co-hosted by C-IP2 and the Smithsonian’s Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation
    • On June 22, spoke on “How Patents Drive Innovation and Growth: Insights from the Route 128 Tech Ecosystem” at a virtual Legislative Committee event hosted by the Boston Patent Law Association
    • On June 27, spoke on “Regulatory Rents: An Agency-Cost Analysis of the FTC Rulemaking Initiative” at a symposium on the Rulemaking Authority of the Federal Trade Commission in Washington, D.C.
    • Signed Brief of Amici Curiae Professors and Scholars of Copyright Law in Support of Plaintiffs and in Opposition to Internet Archive (U.S. August 5, 2022)
    • On August 15, appeared on Information Technology and Innovation Foundation’s podcast Innovation Files in the episode “What Happens to the Economy When Patent Protections Are Weakened, With Jonathan Barnett”
    • On August 18, was mentioned in a CBR (Comic Book Resources) article “Warner Bros. Discovery’s Batgirl Cancellation Raises Antitrust Concerns, Warns Law Professor”

Chief Judge Susan G. Braden (Court of Federal Claims (Ret.); C-IP2 Jurist in Residence)

    • On June 3, attended USPTO Public Patent Advisory Committee (PPAC) Meeting with Undersecretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property and Director USPTO
    • On June 7, co-taught “Enforcing Rights: U.S. Patent Litigation” with Joshua Kresh at the virtual WIPO-U.S. Summer School on Intellectual Property, hosted by C-IP2
    • On June 9, attended United Inventors Association Board of Director Meeting
    • On June 13, attended USPTO PPAC Meeting with Chief Policy Officer and Director for International Affairs and Director of Government Affairs and Oversight and attended PPAC Executive Meeting on Patent Quality
    • On June 14, attended Public Session of USPTO PPAC and Meeting with USPTO’s Chief Information Officer
    • On June 15-18, attended Federal Circuit Bar Association Meeting in Sea Island, Georgia
    • On June 29, attended inaugural AI & Emerging Technology Partnership Meeting
    • On July 28, met with the USPTO CIO regarding the agenda for the August 9 public USPTO PPAC Meeting
    • On July 26, taught Civil Trial Litigation and Management (Including Patent Infringement Cases) to Community Court of Justice (ECOWAS), International Law Institute, Georgetown
    • On July 31, hosted a dinner party for the Ambassador to the United States from Niger to discuss IP law and enforcement in Niger
    • On August 1, attended a PPAC Executive Meeting
    • On August 4, ABA IP Section Council Dinner, Chicago
    • On August 5, PPAC Finance Subcommittee Meeting
    • On August 8, attended a PPAC Executive Meeting
    • On August 9, attended a PPAC Public Meeting (Presenter IT/AI Subcommittee)

Daniel R. Cahoy (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Robert G. and Caroline Schwartz Professor, The Pennsylvania State University’s Smeal College of Business; Research Director, Center for the Business of Sustainability)

    • In August, joined C-IP2 as a Senior Scholar

Terrica Carrington (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; VP, Legal Policy and Copyright Counsel, Copyright Alliance)

    • On June 16, participated in a discussion hosted by the Recording Academy/GRAMMY Advocacy, entitled “What You Need To Know About The Copyright Claims Board”
    • On June 30, spoke on a panel hosted by the Hudson Institute, entitled “What the Copyright Claims Board Means for Creators” (a recording of the panel is available here)
    • On July 12, spoke on a panel hosted by the Authors Guild on the “Copyright Claims Board: What Authors & Agents Should Know” (recording available here)

Theo Cheng (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; Arbitrator and Mediator, ADR Office of Theo Cheng LLC; Adjunct Professor, New York Law School)

    • On June 1-3, served on the faculty of the 15th Annual ABA Arbitration Training Institute at Loyola University Chicago School of Law
    • In June, was invited by the College of Commercial Arbitratorsto join the College as a Fellow: “Established in 2001, the CCA is the world’s most prestigious ADR professional organization, defining and promoting the highest standards of arbitrator ethics, standards of conduct, and best practices. The CCA is an invitation-only organization that provides a meaningful contribution to the profession, the public, the legal sector, and to the businesses that implement commercial arbitration as a means of dispute resolution. The Fellows of the CCA are the elite within the profession. They have the professional training, judgment, and years of experience to undertake the most complex and difficult commercial arbitration assignments.”
    • Between June 1-3, 2022, served on the faculty of the ABA’s Arbitration Practice Development Program & 15th Annual Arbitration Training Institute, which was held at Loyola University Chicago School of Law. Specifically, Mr. Cheng spoke on programs relating to developing an arbitration practice, initiating arbitration proceedings, conducting preliminary hearings, and arbitration award-writing and post-award issues. Agenda at this link.
    • On June 23, 2022, spoke at the meeting of the Regional CCA Fellows Meeting on the topic of “Managing Virtual Hearing Exhibits”
    • On June 29, 2022, was a speaker on a panel hosted by Consolidated Edison entitled “Negotiating a Settlement in Mediation”
    • In July, Mr. Cheng’s latest column in his Resolution Alleyseries was published in the New York State Bar Association’s Entertainment, Arts & Sports Law Journal entitled, “‘The Slap’ and Emotions in Conflicts and Disputes.”
    • On July 13, 2022, gave a presentation to the ABA Dispute Resolution Section’s Mediation Committee entitled “A Refreshed Way to Deliver the Mediator’s Proposal”
    • On July 13, 2022, also participated in two panel programs that were a part of the New York State Bar Association’s Comprehensive Commercial Arbitration Training For Arbitrators And Counsel. The first panel addressed “Arbitration Ethics,” and the second panel addressed “Perspectives on Practice Development in the Arbitration World.” Program details at this link.
    • On July 19, 2022, was a co-speaker on a program presented to the New York State Office of the Attorney General entitled “Using Alternative Dispute Resolution to Address Intellectual Property Rights in the Employment Context”
    • On July 27, 2022, was a panelist on a program sponsored by the ABA Dispute Resolution Section’s ADR Practice Management, Business and Skills Development Committee entitled “Captivating Conversations that Connect and Convert: Best Practices for Marketing Your ADR Practice Online.” More details at this link.
    • On August 2, 2022, gave a presentation to the Asian Pacific American Lawyers Association of New Jersey on “The Roles and Responsibilities of a Nonprofit Board and its Members”
    • On August 26, 2022, gave an orientation to arbitration presentation to the New York Law School Dispute Resolution Team, and will be giving a longer training session to the team on September 30th

Eric Claeys (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Scholarly Initiatives & Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

    • On August 29, was mentioned on the American Law Institute’s website as being a speaker at the upcoming 19th Annual Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference on September 29-30

Lolita Darden (C-IP2 Scholar; Visiting Associate Clinical Professor; Director of Intellectual Property and Technology Clinic, The George Washington University Law School)

Dr. Charles Delmotte (C-IP2 Scholar; Assistant Professor, Michigan State University College of Law; Affiliate Fellow, New York University School of Law Classical Liberal Institute)

    • In July, joined C-IP2 as a Scholar
    • In August, was interviewed for the Detroit Legal News article “NYU tax scholar joins faculty at Michigan State law school”

Gerardo Con Diaz (C-IP2 Scholar; Associate Professor, Science and Technology Studies, UC Davis College of Letters and Science

    • In July, joined C-IP2 as a Scholar

Tabrez Ebrahim (C-IP2 Scholar; Associate Professor of Law, Lewis & Clark Law School)

    • Participated as a discussant at the University of Houston Law Center’s Institute for Intellectual Property & Information Law’s National Conference
    • Co-organized a June 17 Symposium on Data in Cyber-Physical Systems, for the Center for Legal & Court Technology at William & Mary
    • On July 22, participated in a workshop for Digital Platforms as Enabling Access & Delivery of Legal Services during the virtual First Annual Olivas Writing Institute
    • On July 31, presented on Quantum Standards Development Organizations and their Patent Policies during a panel on “Intellectual Property and Web3” as part of the 2022 Southeastern Association of Law Schools (SEALS) Conference in Miramar Beach, Florida
    • In August, spoke on “Quantum Standards Development Organizations and their Patent Policies” at the 19th Annual IP Scholars Conference (IPSC), Stanford Law School, and at the Junior IP Scholars Association (JIPSA), Univ. of California, Berkeley School of Law

Laura Ford (C-IP2 Scholar; Associate Professor of Law, Faulkner University’s Thomas Goode Jones School of Law)

    • In July, joined C-IP2 as a Scholar

Jon M. Garon (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law and Director of the Intellectual Property, Cybersecurity, and Technology Law program, Nova Southeastern University Shepard Broad College of Law)

    • Participated in the University of New Hampshire Franklin Pierce Law School, Intellectual Property Summer Institute, creating and teaching a new course entitled “Regulatory and Contractual Aspects of Web3 and the Metaverse”
    • In July, offered an all-day intellectual property training program for Blue Ridge University entitled Understanding Intellectual Property for the Emerging Business
    • In July and August, presented and moderated a series of panels at the Southeastern Association of Law Schools, including the following:
      • Intellectual Property, NFTs, and Collective Creation
      • Rethinking the Scholarship Submission Process and the Role for Law School Scholarship
      • Workshop on Advancement: Effective Development and Management of Advisory Boards
      • Workshop on Online Education: Online & Hybrid Learning Pedagogy Best Practices and Standards Development
      • Workshop on Online Education: The Changing Online Landscape
      • Constitutional Law Workshop: Is the U.S. Democratic System in Trouble?
      • Workshop on Online Education: Lessons from the Research on Online Legal Education
      • Is Section 230 Unconstitutional? Should it be modified?
    • Signed Brief of Amici Curiae Professors and Scholars of Copyright Law in Support of Plaintiffs and in Opposition to Internet Archive (U.S. August 5, 2022)

David Grossman (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; Senior Director of Technology Transfer & Industry Collaboration, Office of Technology Transfer, George Mason University)

    • On June 9, taught a Simulation Exercise on “Transfer of Technology and Licensing” at the virtual WIPO-U.S. Summer School on Intellectual Property, hosted by C-IP2

Dr. Bowman Heiden (C-IP2 Scholar; Co-Director, Center for Intellectual Property (CIP), University of Gothenburg, Visiting Professor, University of California, Berkeley)

Christopher Holman (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Life Sciences & Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law)

    • On July 29, was mentioned in a Patently-O blog post, “The Sound of Silence and the Inherency Doctrine for Written Description”
    • On August 9, was mentioned in the Patently-O post, “Novartis En Banc and Amicus Support”
    • On August 25, was mentioned in the Patently-O post, “Decisions by the Court as an Institution; or by the Judge as a Human?”

Camilla A. Hrdy (C-IP2 Scholar; Professor of Intellectual Property Law, University of Akron School of Law)

    • Congratulations to Camilla Hrdy, who—as of August 2022—is now Professor of Intellectual Property Law at the University of Akron School of Law!

Justin (Gus) Hurwitz (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, The Menard Director of the Nebraska Governance and Technology Center and the Co-Director of the Space, Cyber, and Telecommunications Law Program, University of Nebraska-Lincoln College of Law)

    • Joined C-IP2 as a Senior Scholar in July 2022

Steven D. Jamar (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Associate Director, Institute for Intellectual Property and Social Justice (IIPSJ); Professor Emeritus, Howard University School of Law)

Hon. Prof. F. Scott Kieff (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Fred C. Stevenson Research Professor, The George Washington University Law School)

    • In June 23, was mentioned in a Harvard Law School Forum on Corporate Governance post “Proposal on Climate-Related Disclosures for Investors”
    • On July 19, was mentioned in the Blog of the European Journal of International Law’s post “ISDS reform and air guitar: A response to Grant and Kieff”
    • On July 31, was mentioned in the Blog of the European Journal of International Law’s post “Two Weeks in Review, 18 July – 31 July”

Joshua Kresh (C-IP2 Managing Director)

Dr. John Liddicoat (C-IP2 Scholar; Senior Research Associate and Affiliated Lecturer, Faculty of Law, University of Cambridge)

    • On June 10, gave a presentation entitled ‘Repositioning Generic Drugs: Empirical Realities’ at the Munich Summer Institute (Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities, Munich, Germany)
    • On June 20, gave a presentation entitled ‘Our repurposing story’ at the CeBIL Retreat at the University of Copenhagen in Denmark
    • With colleagues, was cited and quoted in the USPTO’s Report to Congress entitled “Patent eligible subject matter: Public views on the current jurisprudence in the United States”

Erika Lietzan (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; William H. Pittman Professor of Law & Timothy J. Heinsz Professor of Law, University of Missouri School of Law)

    • On June 15, spoke on the panel “Top Cases in Food and Drug Law” at the Food and Drug Law Institute’s 2022 Annual Conference in Washington, D.C.
    • In August 2022, released the fifth edition of the book Food and Drug Law with co-authors Peter Barton Hutt, Richard A. Merrill, Lewis A. Grossman, Nathan Cortez, and Patricia J. Zettler.

Daryl Lim (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; H. Laddie Montague Jr. Chair in Law; Associate Dean for Research and Innovation; Founding Director, Intellectual Property Law and Innovation Initiative; and co-hire, Institute for Computational and Data Sciences, Penn State Dickinson Law)

    • Congratulations to Professor Lim, who has accepted a new position at The Pennsylvania State University’s Dickinson Law School!
    • Spoke at the Artificial Intelligence and Intellectual Property Rights Conference, which was hosted in Switzerland from June 9-11 by the Swiss Federal Institute of Intellectual Property (IPI) and the University of Zurich Center for Intellectual Property and Competition Law (CIPCO)
    • Spoke on “IP and Tech: Is Past Prologue?” and served as a panelist for “Future Policy at the United States Patent and Trademark Office – Transformation or Status Quo” at the 37th marcus evans IP Law Summit, which was held from June 26-28 in Chicago, Illinois
    • Spoke on “Semiconductor M&A and IP Protection under the Epidemic” at the 2022 Jiwei Semiconductor Summit, which was held from July 15-16 in Xiamen, China 

Adam MacLeod (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, Faulkner University, Thomas Goode Jones School of Law; Research Fellow, Center for Religion, Culture, and Democracy)

    • Joined C-IP2 as a Senior Scholar in July 2022

Emily Michiko Morris (C-IP2 Senior for Life Sciences and Scholar; C-IP2 2021-2022 Edison Fellow; David L. Brennan Endowed Chair, Associate Professor, and Associate Director of the Center for Intellectual Property Law & Technology, University of Akron School of Law)

Lateef Mtima (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, Howard University School of Law; Founder and Director, Institute for Intellectual Property and Social Justice (IIPSJ))

Christopher M. Newman (C-IP2 Scholar; Associate Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

Seán M. O’Connor (C-IP2 Faculty Director; Faculty Advisor, Innovation Law Clinic; Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

Kristen Jakobsen Osenga (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Austin E. Owen Research Scholar and Professor of Law, University of Richmond School of Law)

Eric Priest (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Associate Professor, University of Oregon School of Law)

Michael Risch (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Vice Dean and Professor of Law, Villanova University Charles Widger School of Law)

    • Joined C-IP2 as a Senior Scholar in July 2022
    • On August 11, spoke on “Growth of Trade Secrets in Patent Cases” at the IP Scholars Conference at Stanford Law School

Alexandra Jane Roberts (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Trademarks; Professor of Law and Media, School of Law and Department of Music, College of Arts, Media and Design (CAMD), Northeastern University)

    • Joined C-IP2 as Senior Fellow for Trademarks in August 2022
    • Was quoted in the August 3 Protocol article “What’s in a name? If the name is Meta, a lawsuit.” by Issie Lapowsky
    • Was quoted in the August 24 Fast Company article “Is that shirt a Gucci . . . or a Cuggl?” by Elizabeth Segran
    • Was quoted in the August 30 Bloomberg Law article “Trump’s ‘Truth Social’ Trademark Loss More Detour Than Roadblock” by Riddhi Setty

W. Keith Robinson (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, Wake Forest University School of Law)

    • Joined C-IP2 as a Senior Scholar in July 2022
    • Organized and moderated a July 31 panel on IP and Web 3 at the 2022 SEALS conference
    • On August 5, was quoted in the Raleigh News & Observer paper on a patent infringement case

Zvi S. Rosen (C-IP2 Scholar; Assistant Professor of Law, Southern Illinois University School of Law)

Mark F. Schultz (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company Chair in Intellectual Property Law, University of Akron School of Law; Director, Center for Intellectual Property Law and Technology)

Amy Semet (C-IP2 Scholar; Associate Professor, University at Buffalo School of Law)

    • In July, presented an article on immigration at the Global Meeting on Law and Society in Lisbon, Portugal
    • The week of August 8, presented own Edison Fellowship article at the Junior IP Scholars Conference at Berkeley Law, and presented an article on an empirical examination of patent law and venue at the 2022 Intellectual Property Scholars Conference at Stanford Law
    • Is participating on the consultative group to the Administrative Conference of the United States (ACUS) for the project they are undertaking on the U.S. Patent Small Claims Court

Ted Sichelman (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, University of San Diego School of Law; Director, Center for Intellectual Property Law & Markets; Founder & Director, Center for Computation, Mathematics, and the Law; Founder & Director, Technology Entrepreneurship and Intellectual Property Clinic)

Brenda Simon (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, California Western School of Law)

    • Joined C-IP2 as a Senior Scholar in July 2022
    • In August, was appointed the “ProFlowers Professor of Internet Studies” at California Western School of Law

Saurabh Vishnubhakat (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law and Director, Intellectual Property and Innovation Law Program, Yeshiva University Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law)

    • Joined C-IP2 as a Senior Scholar in July 2022

Scholarship & Other Writings

Jonathan M. Barnett, Antitrust populism would shift US from free market to managed economy, The Hill (June 15, 2022)

Jonathan Barnett, Antitrust Populism Would Shift Us From Market to Managed, Real Clear Markets (June 16, 2022)

Jonathan Barnett, Market Drops Show Tech Antitrust Reform Isn’t Needed, Law360 (August 5, 2022)

Jonathan M. Barnett, How patents facilitate market entry and promote competition, IAM (July 6, 2022)

Jonathan Barnett, Intellectual Property and Transactional Choice: Rethinking the IP/Antitrust Dichotomy, CPI Antitrust Chronicle (July 2022)

Jonathan Barnett, “Regulatory Rents: An Agency-Cost Analysis of the FTC Rulemaking Initiative,” in Rulemaking Authority of the Federal Trade Commission (ed. Daniel Crane, Concurrences 2022)

Jonathan Barnett and David J. Teece, Is the West Giving Away the Game?, Network Law Review (July 21, 2022)

Gustav Brismark and Bowman Heiden, Licensing 2.0: How to Incentivise around the Prisoner’s Dilemma in SEP Licensing (July 22, 2022) [published by IAM on July 20, 2022 (link)]

Charles Delmotte and Daniel Nientiedt (2022). “Classical Liberalism: Market-Supporting Institutions and Public Goods Funded by Limited Taxation.” In Political Philosophy and Taxation, R.F. van Brederode (ed). Springer, Singapore.

Bowman Heiden and Caroline Pamp, Textiles For The Extreme (EPO tech transfer case study published in Les Nouvelles, June 2022)

Bowman Heiden and Thomas Bereuter, Licensing-Based Business Models (article in Les Nouvelles, June 2022)

Bowman Heiden and Lew Zaretzki, Why it’s time to create transparency around 5G SEPs, IAM (29 June 2022)

Chris Holman, Federal Circuit Flips “Negative Claim Limitation” Decision after Change in Panel Composition, Patently-O (June 23, 2022)

Kristen Osenga, Our National Security Depends on SEP Policy, LeadershIP (June 14, 2022)

Yogesh Pai and Prashant Reddy T, The TRIPs waiver and India: A misadventure and a compromise in Geneva by the government, Scroll.in (June 29, 2022)

Philip Stevens and Mark Schultz, Building a Predictable, Stable Patent System in Brazil, Geneva Network (June 20, 2022)

Prashant Reddy T. and Yogesh Pai, Crime and copyright infringement, The Hindu (June 8, 2022)

Thomas D. Grant and F. Scott Kieff, Chinese courts are deciding key patent cases — the US and its allies should be wary, The Hill (July 28, 2022)

Chris Holman, CareDx v. Natera: Some Further Thoughts on the Patent Eligibility of Molecular Diagnostics, Patently-O (July 20, 2022)

Peter Barton Hutt, Richard A. Merrill, Lewis A. Grossman, Nathan Cortez, Erika Fisher Lietzan, and Patricia J. Zettler, Food and Drug Law, 5th ed. (Foundation Press 2022)

F. Scott Kieff and Thomas Grant, UK Rulings Give Chinese Courts Wide Powers in IP Disputes, Law360 (August 12, 2022)

Adam MacLeod, Vested Patents and Equal Justice (July 21, 2022). Catholic University Law Review, Forthcoming

Irina Manta, Announcing “Strangers on the Internet” Podcast, The Volokh Conspiracy (August 3, 2022)

Irina Manta and Cassandra Burke Robertson, Constitutional Citizenship in the U.S. Territories, LawFare (July 27, 2022)

Emily Michiko Morris, A Response to ‘Another Legislative Attempt to Revive Gene Patenting,’ Harvard Law Petrie-Flom Center (August 26, 2022)

Kristen Osenga, Friendly Fire: How the Biden Administration’s Innovation Policy Is Undermining U.S. National Security (July 13, 2022). CPI Antitrust Chronicle (July 2022) (SSRN | CPI)

Jack Ring, FTC Chair and Commissioners Weigh in on SEP Litigation at the ITC, C-IP2 Blog (August 24, 2022)

Jack Ring, Philips and Thales’ Standard Essential Patent Fight at the Federal Circuit, District Court, and ITC, C-IP2 Blog (August 18, 2022)

Alexandra J. Roberts, A Poetics of Trademark Law (March 31, 2022). Berkeley Technology Law Journal, Vol. 38, No. 1, 2023

Brenda M. Simon, Preserving the Fruits of Labor: Impediments to University Inventor Mobility (May 17, 2021). Tennessee Law Review, Forthcoming

Brenda M. Simon, Using Artificial Intelligence in the Law Review Submissions Process (May 19, 2022). UC Davis Law Review, Forthcoming

Tuan Tran, From Great Ideas to Global Impact – A Talk with Andrew Byrnes, C-IP2 Blog (July 28, 2022)

Shine (Sean) Tu and Paul R. Gugliuzza and Amy Semet, Overqualified and Underrepresented: Gender Inequality in Pharmaceutical Patent Law (November 3, 2021). Brigham Young University Law Review, Vol. 48, forthcoming, Temple University Legal Studies Research Paper No. 2021-44, WVU College of Law Research Paper No. 2022-001


 

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C-IP2 2022 Summer Progress Report (March-May 2022)

Sean O'ConnorGreetings from C-IP2 Faculty Director Sean O’Connor

As we embark upon the Independence Day holiday weekend and contemplate the profound changes in our nation, we are gratified to report that C-IP2 has stayed the course and continues to deliver on our mission with a rich offering of programs from March through May of this year. We launched the eighth iteration of the Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship in March and welcomed our 2022-2023 cohort of Fellows in the Digital Innovation Pilot Space at Mason Square (formerly Arlington Campus). April was marked by a fireside chat between GRAMMY Award-winning composer Maria Schneider and C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Copyright Research and Policy and Senior Scholar Sandra Aistars; a World IP Day webinar co-hosted with ITIF, Geneva Network, the Hudson Institute, Property Rights Alliance, and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce; and an academic roundtable, Ensuring Diversity and Inclusivity in Copyright, held in person in California. In May, C-IP2 also hosted a talk by technology executive, attorney, and investor Andrew Byrnes and completed preparations for the virtual 2022 WIPO-U.S. Summer School on Intellectual Property, which ran for the first two weeks in June and will feature in our next report.

Taken together, all of our programs and publications show why we are now a Top 20 IP Program in US News. We’re looking forward to many more excellent events and scholarship within the coming months! In the meantime, I wish you a great summer and the best of health.


Celebrating One Year as C-IP2!

C-IP2 logo

This July 1, our center celebrates a year since our name change from “CPIP” to the Center for Intellectual Property x Innovation Policy (C-IP2, also: C-IP2)!

We’re still adjusting to saying “the Center for Intellectual Property by Innovation Policy” and “sip-squared”—but it’s catching on!

Most importantly, though, we’re excited to see how the name change has and continues to facilitate our center’s mission to “produc[e] research, education, and service at the intersection of IP and innovation policy to better understand and shape the means of innovation as a positive force for good.” We are excited that the name change has already broadened our reach and impact and allowed us to invite a number of scholars, speakers, and commentators whom we were eager to collaborate with but with whom we had not worked previously. This widening of our circle of collaborators was both the right thing to do on its own and likely contributed to our new Top 20 status in the latest U.S. News IP specialty rankings.


C-IP2 Hosted & Co-Hosted Events

Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship
On March 24-25, C-IP2 hosted the first in person meeting of the 2022-2023 Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship. The Edison Fellowship, now in its eighth iteration, is a year-long non-resident fellowship program that brings together a group of scholars to develop research papers on intellectual property law and policy. The 2022-2023 Distinguished Commentators include Professors John Duffy, Justin Hughes, Zorina Khan, Michael Risch, and Mark Schultz, and this year’s Fellows include Prof. Sandra Aistars, Mary Catherine Amerine, Jeffrey Depp, Melissa Eckhause, Dr. Ani Harutyanyan, William Matcham, Dr. Jonathan Putnam, Kirk Sigmon, Carolina Torres-Sarmiento, and Yao Zhou. The program is led by Prof. Eric Claeys, Prof. Sean O’Connor, and Joshua Kresh. This year’s paper topics include fair use and remastering copyrighted material, cross-country analysis of intellectual property rights, standards and green technology, public-private collaboration and IP rights, copyright and public art, image licensing in the digital age, antitrust and SEPs, and a critique of the Andy Warhol Foundation decision.

Fireside Chat
On April 14, C-IP2 and George Mason University’s Arts Management Program co-hosted a fireside chat, Beyond the Notes with Maria Schneider – A Conversation about Respecting Artist Rights, with GRAMMY Award-winning composer Maria Schneider and Prof. Sandra Aistars as part of Ms. Schneider’s activities as an Artist-in-Residence with Mason’s Center for the Arts. You can read about the event on C-IP2’s blog.

Webinar
On April 26, C-IP2 co-hosted a World IP Day webinar with Information Technology & Innovation Foundation (ITIF), Geneva Network, Hudson Institute, Property Rights Alliance, and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce entitled IP Stories: Innovating for a Better Future in which a panel of young professionals across a variety of IP-intensive sectors spoke about IP in their industries. A recording of the panel is available here. (The event was also mentioned on the website Songpreneurs.)

Academic Roundtable
On April 28-29, C-IP2 hosted an academic copyright roundtable in Oceanside, California, that focused on Ensuring Diversity and Inclusivity in Copyright. The event was led by Prof. Sandra Aistars, who was joined by a group of academics and industry professionals to examine historical critiques of access to the copyright system, to think proactively about how to address such critiques in a way that will ensure a robust copyright regime, and to discuss how to improve access to IP protections for all rights holders.

Visiting Speaker Event
On May 4, C-IP2 hosted an in-person talk with technology executive, attorney, and investor Andrew Byrnes entitled “From Great Ideas to Global Impact: A Talk with Andrew Byrne.” Mr. Byrnes discussed the path from developing innovative ideas to achieving broad impact, including key legal issues and business imperatives. Leveraging experiences from his decades-long career in the private and public sectors working alongside innovators and entrepreneurs, Byrnes offered insights on leadership, building high-functioning teams, engaging policymakers, and other critical stakeholders, and navigating existing and emerging regulatory regimes and challenges. (Event also mentioned in the Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship’s Summer Semester 2022 Newsletter)


News and Speaking Engagements

We are pleased to welcome and announce the academics who have joined C-IP2 over the course of March through May 2022 as Scholars: Dr. Bowman Heiden and Professor Toshiko Takenaka.

Dr. Bowman Heiden, along with co-authors Drs. Rudd Peters and Igor Nikolic, posted their book chapter “Designing SEP Licensing Negotiation Groups to Reduce Patent Holdout in 5G/IoT Markets,” which is part of the upcoming book project 5G and Beyond: Intellectual Property and Competition Policy in the Internet of Things, co-edited by Professors Jonathan Barnett and Sean O’Connor.

The virtual 7th Annual Advanced Patent Law Institute was co-hosted by George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School and the University of Texas School of Law on March 15-17, 2022. Included among the planning committee and speakers were C-IP2 Advisory Board Members the Hon. Paul Michel and Mr. David J. Kappos; Senior Scholar Prof, John F. Duffy; and Scholar Prof. Dmitry Karshtedt.

Several C-IP2 affiliates—including the Hon. Paul Michel (ret.), Prof. Chris Holman, Prof. Erika Lietzan, and Prof. Kristen Osenga—signed a March 17 letter to U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services the Honorable Xavier Becerra regarding the Bayh-Dole Act.

IP at Scalia Law – In the new U.S. News Rankings, Antonin Scalia Law School’s Intellectual Property subject area is now ranked as a Top 20 IP program.

Mason Gold – C-IP2 congratulates George Mason University on its 50th birthday, which the university celebrated on Thursday, April 7!

Changes to Mason in Arlington, Virginia, home of Antonin Scalia Law School – On April 6, the groundbreaking ceremony was held for Fuse at Mason Square (formerly the Arlington Campus). Read more about Mason’s future plans in Arlington at Virginia Business and ARLnow.

  

Sandra Aistars (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Copyright Research and Policy & Senior Scholar; Founding Director, Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic; Clinical Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

    • From March 24-25, participated as a Fellow during the initial meeting of the 2022-2023 Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship
    • On March 30, participated as a panelist for the webinar “My AI Wrote This; Can I Get a Copyright?,” which was hosted by ACT | The App Association (to learn more and to view a recording of the panel, please click here)
    • From March 31-April 1, served as a paper commentator for the Law & Economics Center’s Research Roundtable, The Data-Competition Interface
    • Organized and hosted an online discussion with Dr. Ryan Abbott, Attorney of Record for the claimant seeking to register A Recent Entrance to Paradise, the visual artwork of an AI, unassisted by a human, for copyright protection with the United States Copyright Office, examining the legal and policy implications of the Office’s refusal to register on March 17, 2022. A recording of the event can be found here, and please also see this C-IP2 blog post by Prof. Aistars about the event.
    • Organized and supervised clinic student participation in a virtual April 12 event entitled Protest and Political Art: What Does the Law Allow? Co-hosted by the Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic and Washington Area Lawyers for the Arts (WALA), the event featured photographer and documentarian Michele McMahon and included an audience Q&A. The students presented legal information concerning copyright, right of publicity, privacy, and other related issues implicated by covering protest marches and licensing images for commercial use.
    • Organized and participated in the April 14 fireside chat with GRAMMY Award-winning composer Maria Schneider
    • On April 22, spoke on a panel at the Fordham 29th Annual IP Conference
    • Organized and participated in a roundtable on Ensuring Diversity and Inclusivity in Copyright, which C-IP2 hosted in California from April 28-29
    • On May 9, attended the Association of American Publishers (AAP) 2022 Annual General Meeting

Jonathan Barnett (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Innovation Policy & Senior Scholar; Torrey H. Webb Professor of Law, USC Gould School of Law)

    • Was co-lead author with Prof. Adam Mossoff for regulatory submission Response to Call for Views on Standard-Essential Patents and Innovation, which was submitted to United Kingdom Intellectual Property Office on March 1
    • On April 5, spoke on the panel “Competition and Intellectual Property: How to Create a Diverse Innovation Ecosystem?” at LeadershIP 2022 in Washington, D.C.
    • Was quoted in an April 7 IPWatchdog article by Eileen McDermott entitled “O’Malley, Kappos, Michel and Other Experts Debate How Anti-IP Narratives are Threatening U.S. National Security”
    • On April 21, spoke at EUI Florence School of Regulation Standard Essential Patents: The Evolving Framework conference
    • On May 9, with Prof. Adam Mossoff, submitted a comment to the EU Commission regarding SEPs. The signees included by C-IP2 Faculty Director Sean O’Connor; C-IP2 Board of Advisors members Bowman Heiden, the Honorable Andrei Iancu, the Honorable David Kappos, the Honorable Judge Paul Michel, and the Honorable Judge Randall Rader; C-IP2 Senior Scholar Kristen Osenga; and Scalia Law professors the Honorable Joshua Wright and John Yun. (Click here to read the comments; click here to read the related May 17 IPWatchdog post by Steve Brachmann.)

Chief Judge Susan G. Braden (Court of Federal Claims (Ret.); C-IP2 Jurist in Residence)

    • From March 9-10, participated in the USPTO Patent Advisory Committee Public Meeting
    • Participated in the Leahy Institute of Advanced Patent Studies, the 77th Annual Conference by the Naples Roundtable, which was held online from March 16-18
    • On April 5, attended the ABA-IPL Section Leadership Dinner
    • On April 26, attended the AI Committee Meeting, Administrative Conference of the United States

Terrica Carrington (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; VP, Legal Policy and Copyright Counsel, Copyright Alliance)

Theo Cheng (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; Arbitrator and Mediator, ADR Office of Theo Cheng LLC; Adjunct Professor, New York Law School)

    • In March 2022, latest Resolution Alley column, entitled “Handling Seemingly Irreconcilable Expert Opinions,” was published in the New York State Bar Association Entertainment, Arts & Sports Law Journal (Resolution Alley is a regular column Mr. Cheng writes that addresses the use of ADR in the entertainment, arts, and sports industries)
    • On March 2, gave a presentation to the Allegheny County Bar Association ADR Committee on “Key Issues and Considerations for Conducting Remote Mediations”
    • On March 9, gave a presentation to the American Arbitration Association’s West Coast Roundtable entitled “Do You Know When and How an Arbitrator Can Issue a Third-Party Discovery Subpoena?”
    • On March 14, was a panelist on a program entitled “ADR Ethics and Inclusion – How We Can Do Better,” which was sponsored by the New York State Bar Association Commercial and Federal Litigation Section
    • On March 28, gave a guest lecture in Joan Stearns Johnsen’s Mediation Advocacy class at the University of Florida Levin College of Law
    • On March 28, served as a facilitator for a Commercial and Employment Law Practice Group (for mediators) sponsored by the Association of Conflict Resolution of Greater New York
    • On April 18 and April 28, 2022, trained a group of mediators on “Remote Mediation Using Zoom” and “Ethics Issues and Standards of Conduct” for the New Jersey Institute for Continuing Legal Education
    • On April 19, 2022, gave a guest lecture in Norman Feit’s Commercial Litigation Drafting and Mediation class at Fordham University School of Law
    • On May 3, gave a presentation to the ABA Section of Dispute Resolution’s Early Dispute Resolution Committee on “A New Way to Deliver the Mediator’s Proposal”
    • On May 18, participated in a panel presentation given at the New Jersey State Bar Association’s Annual Meeting in Atlantic City entitled “Practical Tips to Enhance the Mediation Process” (click here for more information)
    • On May 19, spoke on a panel hosted by the International Institute for Conflict Prevention and Resolution entitled “When to Consider Mediation and How to Identify Opportunities for Settlement” (click here for more information)
    • On May 24, spoke on a virtual program hosted by the New York City Bar Association entitled “Adding Mediating to Your Career: How to Get Started in 2022”

Eric Claeys (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Scholarly Initiatives & Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

    • From March 24-25, participated in the initial meeting of the 2022-2023 Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship

John F. Duffy (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Samuel H. McCoy II Professor of Law and Paul G. Mahoney Research Professor of Law, University of Virginia School of Law)

    • Served as a speaker and on the planning committee for the 7th Annual Advanced Patent Law Institute, which was co-hosted virtually by George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School and the University of Texas School of Law on March 15-17
    • From March 24-25, served as a Distinguished Commentator during the initial meeting of the 2022-2023 Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship

Tabrez Ebrahim (C-IP2 Scholar; Associate Professor, California Western School of Law)

    • On April 22, spoke on a panel on “Technology, Regulation, and Economic Development” at the State Level Issues in Technology, Regulation, and Economic Development conference, which was hosted by the Nebraska Governance and Technology Center
    • In May, became a Visiting Scholar at University of Texas at Austin McCombs School of Business 

Jon M. Garon (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law and Director of the Intellectual Property, Cybersecurity, and Technology Law program, Nova Southeastern University Shepard Broad College of Law)

    • In March, served as a panelist for the Dean’s Roundtable, Master of Jurisprudence Consortium Conference, University of Arizona
    • On March 25, presented “AI Goes to War: From Alexa to Terminator – How to Assure Corporate Accountability for Algorithmic and Autonomous Machine Atrocities in Cyberwarfare” at the Law Review Symposium on Artificial Intelligence and the Law at the Northern Kentucky University Salmon P. Chase College of Law
    • On April 26, presented on “Cyberfog: The use of AI, Bots, and Synthetic Media in International Conflicts and Terrorism” at the 62nd CICA International Conference on Security, Threads for Peace and Security: Asia vs West, at Universidad Nebrija, Madrid Spain
    • Was mentioned in an April 29 MENAFN article entitled “UNH Franklin Pierce School Of Law Hosts Intellectual Property Summer Institute (IPSI)”

Dr. Bowman Heiden (C-IP2 Scholar; Co-Director, Center for Intellectual Property (CIP), University of Gothenburg, Visiting Professor, University of California, Berkeley)

    • Joined C-IP2 as a Scholar in March 2022
    • On April 21, spoke at EUI Florence School of Regulation Standard Essential Patents: The Evolving Framework conference

Christopher Holman (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Life Sciences & Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law)

    • Signed a March 17 letter to U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services the Honorable Xavier Becerra regarding the Bayh-Dole Act
    • Was featured in the April 6 Patently-O post “Welcome Prof. Chris Holman”

Camilla A. Hrdy (C-IP2 Scholar; Research Professor in Intellectual Property Law, University of Akron School of Law)

    • Was mentioned in a March 4 IPWatchdog post entitled “Referencing Science Fiction: An Ode to (Slightly) Livening Up Patents” by Trenton Morton, as well as in a March 4 article in The Shepherd of the Hills Gazette entitled “An Ode To (Slightly) Livening Up Patents” by Sammy Edwards

Dmitry Karshtedt (C-IP2 Scholar; Associate Professor of Law, The George Washington University Law School)

    • From March 11-28, taught a U.S. patent law course for associates and technical advisors at Licks Attorneys, a law firm in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
    • Served as a speaker and on the planning committee for the 7th Annual Advanced Patent Law Institute, which was co-hosted virtually by George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School and the University of Texas School of Law on March 15-17, 2022; on March 15, participated in the written description panel at the Institute
    • On March 18, presented in-progress paper on Adversarial Patents and Pharmaceutical Examination at Universidad do Estado do Rio De Janeiro
    • Mentioned in a March 18 article on Bloomberg Law by Samantha Handler entitled “Biogen’s Rehearing Denial Lays New Hurdles for Pharma Patents”
    • On March 29, spoke on comparative patent law issues at Universidad del Salvador in Buenos Aires
    • On April 12, organized and participated in a panel of Court of Federal Claims judges at the Giles Rich Inn of Court meeting in Washington, D.C.
    • On April 29, spoke on a panel at Stanford Law School during the Use Your Discretion: Changing Standards PTAB conference

Hon. Prof. F. Scott Kieff (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Fred C. Stevenson Research Professor, The George Washington University Law School)

    • Participated in an April 8 Federalist Society teleforum on Securing Innovation: How Patent Law Shapes U.S. National and Economic Security 

Joshua Kresh (C-IP2 Managing Director)

    • Participated in the March 24-25 initial meeting of the 2022-2023 Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship
    • On April 4, attended LeadershIP 2022 in Washington, D.C.
    • Participated in a roundtable on Ensuring Diversity and Inclusivity in Copyright, which C-IP2 hosted in California from April 28-29
    • On May 5, joined PhRMA in attending the National Inventors Hall of Fame annual induction event
    • On May 17-19, coordinated a session at the AIPLA Spring Meeting in New Orleans, LA

Dr. John Liddicoat (C-IP2 Scholar; Senior Research Associate and Affiliated Lecturer, Faculty of Law, University of Cambridge)

    • On April 7, gave a presentation on “Repositioning generic drugs: empirical realities” at the Innovation Policy Colloquium organized by Professors Rochelle Dreyfuss and Katherine Strandburg at New York University School of Law
    • On April 8, gave a presentation on “A future for generic drug repurposing” at The evolution of the public health and biomedical innovation, organized by the Cambridge University Science and Policy Exchange (CUSPE)
    • On April 25, gave a presentation on “Repositioning for rare diseases: Too much, too little or just right?” at a webinar organized by the Nordic Intellectual Property Law Review
    • On April 28, hosted a talk by Rochelle Dreyfuss on “ISDS and Intellectual Property in 2020 – Protecting Public Health in the Age of Pandemics” at a CIPIL Evening Seminar, organized by the Centre for Intellectual Property and Information Law, University of Cambridge (for a recording of Prof. Dreyfuss’s talk, please click here) 

Erika Lietzan (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; William H. Pittman Professor of Law & Timothy J. Heinsz Professor of Law, University of Missouri School of Law)

    • Signed a March 17 letter to U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services the Honorable Xavier Becerra regarding the Bayh-Dole Act
    • Participated in an April 15 Hudson Institute virtual panel on “Drug Patents and Evidence-Based Policymaking in Patent Law”

Daryl Lim (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law and the Director of the Center for Intellectual Property (IP), Information & Privacy Law, University of Illinois Chicago School of Law)

    • Served as moderator for “Beyond Geopolitics – Contending with US-China Intellectual Property Relations for Fair Gains” at the 36th Marcus Evans IP Law Summit on March 27-29, 2022, in New Orleans, Louisiana
    • Served a moderator and co-convener with George Washington University Law School for Music Copyright Infringement: Global Perspectives Virtual Conference on March 18, 2022
    • Participated as a discussant at a virtual roundtable on “Blockchain + Antitrust: The Decentralization Formula” hosted by the Classical Liberal Institute at the NYU School of Law on March 11, 2022
    • On March 10, participated virtually as a panelist on “Digital Health Data, Privacy, and Antitrust” for a symposium co-hosted by the DePaul University College of Law Mary and Michael Jaharis Health Law Institute and Center for Intellectual Property Law & Information Technology

Emily Michiko Morris (C-IP2 Senior for Life Sciences and Scholar; C-IP2 2021-2022 Edison Fellow; David L. Brennan Endowed Chair, Associate Professor, and Associate Director of the Center for Intellectual Property Law & Technology, University of Akron School of Law)

    • Participated in a roundtable on Ensuring Diversity and Inclusivity in Copyright, which C-IP2 hosted in California from April 28-29

Loren Mulraine (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, Director of Music and Entertainment Law Studies, Belmont University – College of Law)

    • Participated in a roundtable on Ensuring Diversity and Inclusivity in Copyright, which C-IP2 hosted in California from April 28-29

Christopher M. Newman (C-IP2 Scholar; Associate Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

    • On May 6, participated in a roundtable on “Challenges and Opportunities in the Creative Industries: The Good, the Bad, & the Ugly” hosted by Hudson Institute
    • On May 18, the American Law Institute adopted Prof, Newman’s restatement draft (click here for more details; click here to watch Prof. Newman discussing his project in 2020)

Sean M. O’Connor (C-IP2 Faculty Director; Faculty Director, Innovation Law Clinic; Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

    • On March 11, delivered a lecture on NFTs at the DX ARTS program at the University of Washington
    • From March 24-25, participated in the initial meeting of the 2022-2023 Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship
    • On April 1, spoke at a University of Oregon symposium regarding his new book project, The Means of Innovation: Creation, Control, and a New Method+ology, summarizing arguments that innovation can be better understood when classed into three categories of art, science, and law, each used in an older, broader sense. In turn, these contain nested sets of methods ranging in degrees of abstraction from concepts or dispositions down to specific algorithmic methods.
    • On April 7, taught a session on “Government Policy over Public Funds in Supporting Innovations” as part of the WIPO-WTO Advanced Course on Topical IP Policy Issues, which ran from March 28-April 8
    • Cited in an April 13 post on Patently-O on “The Corporation as an Inventive Artificial Intelligence” by Dennis Crouch
    • On April 21, presented “In the Court of TikTok: Are Fan Mashups That Call Out Copying Changing Music Writing Credits?”, a project with Mary Catherine Amerine (Shearman & Sterling, and current Edison Fellow) during a panel at the Emily C. & John E. Hansen Intellectual Property Institute’s 29th Annual IP Conference
    • Participated in a roundtable on Ensuring Diversity and Inclusivity in Copyright, which C-IP2 hosted in California from April 28-29
    • In May, participated with Lateef Mtima (Howard University School of Law; IIPSJ) and Lita Rosario, Esq. (WYZ Girl Entertainment Consulting) in a virtual panel on IP and social justice hosted by the Practicing Law Institute
    • On May 5, performed vocal, guitar, and harmonica with Jon Knight as an acoustic rock duo under the name Buzzard Point Caucus for Law Rocks Washington D.C. for Ukraine, a special charity event hosted in Washington, D.C. by annual charity event Law Rocks
    • In May, served as a speaker and group moderator for the WIPO Advanced Training Course on Intellectual Property (IP), Technology Transfer and Licensing for Caribbean Countries, organized by the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO). Moderated sessions were on the themes “From Public Research to Private Initiative (Private Public Partnership),” “Cooperation between Intellectual Property Offices (IPOs) and Technology Transfer Offices (TTOs),” “How to create and Fund Technology Clusters,” and “Understanding and Drafting University IP Policies covering Faculty, Staff, and students.”

Kristen Jakobsen Osenga (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Austin E. Owen Research Scholar and Professor of Law, University of Richmond School of Law)

    • Signed a March 17 letter to U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services the Honorable Xavier Becerra regarding the Bayh-Dole Act
    • Signed an amicus brief in the case Epic Games, Inc. v. Apple Inc.
    • On April 6, spoke on a panel on “Agency Approaches to the Antitrust-Intellectual Property Interface Under the Biden Administration” at the 2022 ABA-IPL Section Annual Meeting
    • On April 6, was cited by in a MLex article by Khushita Vasant: “[Jennifer] Dixton was responding to comments by Kristen Osenga of the University of Richmond that a new draft policy statement concerning SEPs to promote good-faith licensing negotiations is tilted in favor of patent users as it prohibited patentholders from seeking injunctions. The draft also addresses the scope of remedies available to patentholders that have agreed to license their SEPs on fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory, or Frand, terms”
    • On April 20, gave the 2022 Gene and Katy Simonds Lectureship in Democracy lecture entitled “The Intersection of Antitrust and IP: Stay in your lane!” at Southern Illinois University School of Law
    • On April 20, spoke on a virtual panel, Understanding Draft Standard-Patent Policy, which was hosted by the Hudson Institute
    • Participated in the UNH Franklin Pierce School of Law’s April 24-26 Spring Summit, “Exploring Intersections,” on FRAND and SEP issues, and joined on the World IP Day panel on IP and innovation (click here to view a recording of the panel)

Eric Priest (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Associate Professor, University of Oregon School of Law)

Mark F. Schultz (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company Chair in Intellectual Property Law, University of Akron School of Law; Director, Center for Intellectual Property Law and Technology)

    • On March 2, spoke on a webinar hosted by Geneva Network on “The role of intellectual property rights in preparing for future pandemics”
    • From March 24-25, served as a Distinguished Commentator during the initial meeting of the 2022-2023 Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship
    • Organized and spoke at the March 28 University of Akron School of Law’s 24th Annual Symposium on Intellectual Property Law and Policy
    • Participated in a roundtable on Ensuring Diversity and Inclusivity in Copyright, which C-IP2 hosted in California from April 28-29

Amy Semet (C-IP2 Scholar; Associate Professor, University at Buffalo School of Law)

    • On April 1, presented her 2021-2022 Edison Fellowship article, An Empirical Look at the Patent Trial and Appeal Board, at the annual PATCON seminar at Boston College Law School
    • Presented a new article on “An Empirical Analysis of Patent Law and Venue” at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law’s May 19-20 Seventh Annual Civil Procedure workshop for all civil procedure professors
    • Was quoted in the May 25 Bloomberg Law article “Patent Small Claims Pitch, Long Dormant, Revived by Agency” by Riddhi Setty

Stephanie M. Semler (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; Adjunct Professor, George Mason University, Antonin Scalia Law School; Associate Attorney, Venable LLP; Supervising Attorney, Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic)

Toshiko Takenaka (C-IP2 Scholar; Washington Research Foundation/W. Hunter Simpson Professor of Technology Law, University of Washington School of Law)

    • Joined C-IP2 as a Scholar in April 2022

Scholarship & Other Writings

Mateo Aboy, Kathleen Liddell, Matthew Jordan, Cristina Crespo, and Johnathon Liddicoat, European patent protection for medical uses of known products and drug repurposing (2022) 40 Nature Biotechnology 465

Sandra Aistars, Paradise Rejected: A Conversation about AI and Authorship with Dr. Ryan Abbott, C-IP2 Blog (March 23, 2022)*
*Includes an April 6, 2022, response to Dr. Ryan Abbot by David Newhoff, “In Opposition to Copyright Protection for AI Works”

Jonathan M. Barnett, The Economic Case Against Licensing Negotiating Groups in the Internet of Things, Journal of Antitrust Enforcement (2022)

Jonathan M. Barnett, The “License as Tax” Fallacy, 28 Michigan Technology Law Review 197 (2022)

Jonathan M. Barnett, The Market Challenge to Populist Antitrust, Truth on the Market (May 17, 2022)

Jonathan Barnett, Regulatory Rents: An Agency-Cost Analysis of the FTC Rulemaking Initiative (March 28, 2022). Forthcoming in FTC’s Rulemaking Authority (Concurrences 2022)

Jon M. Garon, Legal Implications of a Ubiquitous Metaverse and a Web3 Future (January 3, 2022)

Jon M. Garon, Parenting for the Digital Generation – The Parent’s Guide to Digital Education and the Online Environment (Rowman & Littlefield 2022)

Jon M. Garon, Towards a Conceptual Framework of Entertainment Law for the Twenty-First Century, 102 J. Pat. & Trademark Off. Soc’y 203 (2022)

Thomas Grant & Scott Kieff, Attorneys Can Promote Trade, Security Amid Global Conflict, Law360 (April 13, 2022)

Chris Holman, The Definiteness Implications of Using “Examples” to Define Claim Terms, Patently-O (April 7, 2022)

Chris Holman, Induced Infringement and the Section 286 Statute of Limitations, Patently-O (April 10, 2022)

Scott Kieff and Thomas Grant, The ITC’s Crucial Role in Countering Russia’s Aggression, Law360 (March 18, 2022)

Scott Kieff & Thomas D. Grant, It’s time for America’s trade umpire to cry foul against Russia’s aggression, The Hill (March 19, 2022)

Daryl Lim, AI, Equality, and the IP Gap, Southern Methodist University Law Review (Forthcoming 2022)

Daryl Lim, Antitrust’s AI Revolution, Tennessee Law Review (Forthcoming 2022)

Daryl Lim, Confusion, Simplified, Berkeley Technology Law Journal (Forthcoming 2022)

Daryl Lim, Trademark Confusion Revealed: An Empirical Analysis, 71 American University Law Review 1285 (2022)

Jennifer Mascott and John Fitzgerald Duffy, Executive Decisions After Arthrex (March 10, 2022). Supreme Court Review, Forthcoming, George Mason Legal Studies Research Paper No. LS 22-10

Xuan-Thao Nguyen, Danielle M. Conway, Lateef Mtima, Willajeanne F. McLean, and Emily Michiko Morris, Transnational Intellectual Property Law (West Acad. Publ’g 2d ed. 2022)

Kristen Jakobsen Osenga (2022) “Efficient” Infringement and Other Lies, Seton Hall Law Review: Vol. 52: Issue 4, Article 4

Kristen Osenga, Protecting Our Nation’s Back Doors: Improving Patent Policy for National Security, Hudson Institute (May 16, 2022)

Kristen Osenga, Two Lies and the Truth About the 2021 Draft SEP Licensing Policy, RealClear Policy (May 18, 2022)

Sean A. Pager & Eric Priest, The Chinese Copyright Dream, 49 Pepperdine Law Review 733 (2022)

Yogesh Pai and Prashant Reddy T, View: The vaccine patent waiver wavers, The Economic Times (March 20, 2022)

Ruud Peters, Igor Nikolic, and Bowman Heiden, “Designing SEP Licensing Negotiation Groups to Reduce Patent Holdout in 5G/IoT Markets” (March 1, 2022). Forthcoming in 5G and Beyond: Intellectual Property and Competition Policy in the Internet of Things (eds. Jonathan M. Barnett and Sean M. O’Connor, Cambridge University Press 2022)

Eric Priest, An Entrepreneurship Theory of Copyright, 36 Berkeley Technology Law Journal 737 (2022)

Molly Stech, Co-Authorship Between Photographers and Portrait Subjects (Jan 1, 2022). Vanderbilt Journal of Entertainment & Technology Law, Vol. 25, 2022

Molly Stech, Photography, Portrait Subjects, and Copyright Law, C-IP2 Blog (March 14, 2022)

Sabren H. Wahdan, Recap of the Supreme Court’s Unicolors, Inc. v. H&M Hennes & Mauritz, L.P., C-IP2 Blog (March 15, 2022)

Categories
Progress Reports

C-IP2 2022 Spring Progress Report (December 2021-February 2022)

Sean O'ConnorGreetings from C-IP2 Faculty Director Sean O’Connor

As we move further into spring of 2022, we are simultaneously emerging––gradually and hopefully––from the global health crisis of these past two years. In-person gatherings and events are steadily resuming in the Washington, D.C., area and in many places around the world, and it’s wonderful to share the same spaces once again with friends and colleagues, old and new. Early last December, C-IP2 held our first large-scale in-person event since 2020 with our hybrid conference on Intellectual Property and Innovation Policy for 5G and the Internet of Things. Excepting January 2022’s Edison Fellowship meeting and precautions taken against the Omicron variant, we have been moving ahead with primarily in-person programming for 2022, and we hope you will keep an eye on our website and email communications for opportunities to join us and engage with us. In the meantime, our Spring 2022 Progress Report below (spanning December 2021 through February 2022) will catch you up on the activities and scholarship of C-IP2 and affiliates in recent months, and we continue to wish you good health in the months to come.


C-IP2 Hosted & Co-Hosted Events

Academic ConferenceOn December 2-3, 2021, C-IP2 hosted an academic conference on 5G and Beyond: Intellectual Property and Competition Policy in the Internet of Things. The event was both held in person and livestreamed from George Mason University, Antonin Scalia Law School, and featured as speakers many of the contributors for the upcoming corresponding book, 5G and Beyond: Intellectual Property and Competition Policy in the Internet of Things, which is being co-edited by Professors Jonathan Barnett and Sean O’Connor and has been accepted for publication by Cambridge University Press (Forthcoming 2022). Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy FellowshipOn January 20-21, 2022, C-IPhosted the third and final meeting of the 2021-2022 Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship. The Edison Fellows presented substantially revised drafts of their research papers and received feedback from Distinguished Senior Commentators and other Fellows. The plan is for Fellows to submit their final papers to journals for the March submission period.


News & Speaking Engagements

We are pleased to welcome and announce the scholars and practitioners who have joined C-IP2 over the course of December 2021 through February 2022: Tun-Jen Chiang as a Senior Scholar; Gregory DolinJohn Liddicoat, and Amy Semet as Scholars; and Theo ChengStephanie Semler, and Eric Solovy as Practitioners in Residence. The Antonin Scalia Law School winter graduation was held on December 16, 2021, at Eagle Bank Arena in Fairfax, VA. C-IP2’s December 2021 5G conference was mentioned by ThinkBRG, which noted BRG Executive Chairman David J. Teece’s participation in a panel on “Global Differences in Antitrust Treatment of SEPs and SSOs.” C-IP2 was mentioned in a February story on Broadway World, highlighting their upcoming April 2022 event with GRAMMY Award-winning composer Maria Schneider, co-hosted with George Mason University Center for the Arts. In February, Jeffrey E. Depp—a 2022-2023 Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellow with C-IP2 and PhD student at the University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public and International Affairs—received the Volunteer of the Year Award from AUTM. Professor Sean M. O’Connor posted his book chapter “AI Replication of Musical Styles Points the Way to an Exclusive Rights Regime,” which is part of the upcoming book Research Handbook on Intellectual Property and Artificial Intelligence (Edward Elgar 2022 Forthcoming), edited by Dr. Ryan Abbott. Sandra Aistars (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Copyright Research and Policy & Senior Scholar; Founding Director, Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic; Clinical Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

    • Served as a commentator at the University of Akron IP Scholars Forum on December 9-10, 2021
    • Scholarly contributions to advancing copyright law cited in a December 16 IPWatchdog article on The Year in Copyright: From Google v. Oracle to the Takings Clause by Devlin Hartline, Legal Fellow at the Hudson Institute’s Forum for Intellectual Property in Washington, D.C. (Items cited include: March 27, 2018, organizing and drafting IP scholars briefing in a decade of briefing culminating before the Supreme Court in Google LLC v Oracle America, Inc. opinion; a May 9, 2019, IPWatchdog article with the Copyright Alliance’s Kevin Madigan on the CASE Act; 2018 scholarly article on a small copyright claims tribunal; and research and analysis cited in the August 2021 U.S. Copyright Office’s Copyright and State Sovereign Immunity report)
    • On January 13, participated in a Copyright Alliance meeting to discuss the December 30 CASE Act notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM)
    • In February, along with the Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic, filed initial and reply comments by IP scholars regarding Law Student and clinic participation in representation of individuals and small businesses before the CCB pursuant to the CASE Act
    • Quoted in a February 11 article on The Verge, “Artists Are Playing Takedown Whack-A-Mole To Fight Counterfeit Merch”

Jonathan Barnett (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Innovation Policy & Senior Scholar; Torrey H. Webb Professor of Law, USC Gould School of Law)

    • Helped to organize and participated in C-IP2’s December conference on 5G and IP as a co-editor with Professor Sean O’Connor on the upcoming corresponding book, 5G and Beyond: Intellectual Property and Competition Policy in the Internet of Things
    • On January 19, presented at a webinar hosted by the 4iP Council (Jan. 20, 2022), “Solution in Search of a Problem: The Economic Case Against Licensing Negotiation Groups in the Internet of Things”
    • On February 4, co-authored and submitted comments with fellow scholars of law, economics, and business regarding the Draft USPTO, NIST, & DOJ Policy Statement on Licensing Negotiations and Remedies for Standard Essential Patents Subject to Voluntary F/RAND Commitments
    • Mentioned in a February 7 Foss Patents blogpost, “In its replies to Apple’s public interest statements, Ericsson points the ITC to Apple’s 30% app tax and market definition in Epic Games case”

Chief Judge Susan G. Braden (Court of Federal Claims (Ret.); C-IP2 Jurist in Residence)

    • On December 8, attended the USPTO Private Patent Advisory Committee Meeting on Congressional Legislation
    • On January 19, took part in Designated Chair of Artificial Intelligence Tools and Information Technology Subcommittee, USPTO Private Patent Advisory Committee
    • On January 27, joined Meeting with Matthew Such, Group Leader, Patent Product Line Lead, Office of Patent Information Management, USPTO re AI priorities for 2022
    • On January 31, completed Working Draft of “Section 1498 (a): NOT A RX FOR LOWER PHARMA PRICES” (out for academic comment), which was co-authored with Joshua Kresh, C-IP2 Managing Director
    • In February, was appointed to the 2022 National Vaccine Law Conference Committee
    • On February 8, attended the USPTO Private Patent Advisory Committee Innovation, Expansion, and Outreach Subcommittee Meeting
    • On February 9, attended the Executive Session of USPTO Private Patent Advisory Committee
    • On February 10, attended the USPTO Private Patent Advisory Artificial Intelligence Tools and Information Technology Subcommittee Meeting
    • On February 25, met with the Lead Business Development SAS US Alliances/Channels Team

Terrica Carrington (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; VP, Legal Policy and Copyright Counsel, Copyright Alliance)

    • Helped organize and co-host a December 6 event (sponsored by the Copyright Alliance and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s Global Innovation Policy Center and Equality of Opportunity Initiative) titled “A Conversation on Diversity and Inclusion in Copyright,” where speakers and attendees discussed how to increase participation from underrepresented communities in the copyright sector industries and professions
    • Nominated in January 2022 for the G. Hamilton Loeb Award for Pro Bono Excellence in recognition of her work to support the arts
    • Quoted in a January 11 article by Franklin Graves on Tubefilter, “Here Are The Legal Issues Affecting Content Creators in 2022”

Theo Cheng (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; Arbitrator and Mediator, ADR Office of Theo Cheng LLC; Adjunct Professor, New York Law School)

    • In December, his article “Conducting Remote Mediations During the Pandemic” was published in the New York State Bar Association Trial Lawyers Digest
    • On December 22, gave a two-hour presentation on “Diversity, Implicit Bias & Cross-Cultural Skills in ADR” to the court staff at the Supreme Court of New York, Appellate Division, Second Department
    • Joined C-IP2 as a Practitioner in Residence in January
    • On January 11, was a co-presenter on a program entitled “Nonparty Discovery in U.S. Arbitrations: The Legal Challenges & Differences from Litigation” for the New York State Bar Association that was sponsored by the Dispute Resolution Section Domestic Arbitration Committee
    • On February 23, moderated a panel entitled “Diversity, Inclusion and Elimination of Bias in Evidentiary Analysis and Decision Making.” The panel was part of an all-day program held by the New York County Lawyers Association for New York’s Part 137 Fee Disputes and Conciliation Arbitration Training Program

Tun-Jen Chiang (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, George Mason University, Antonin Scalia Law School)

    • Joined C-IP2 as a Senior Scholar in January

Eric Claeys (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Scholarly Initiatives & Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

    • On January 20-23, co-organized and participated in the third and final meeting of the 2021-2022 Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship

Gregory Dolin (C-IP2 Scholar; Associate Professor of Law, University of Baltimore School of Law)

    • Joined C-IP2 as a Scholar in January

John F. Duffy (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Samuel H. McCoy II Professor of Law and Paul G. Mahoney Research Professor of Law, University of Virginia School of Law)

    • On January 20-21, served as a Distinguished Senior Commentator during the third and final meeting of the 2021-2022 Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship

Tabrez Ebrahim (C-IP2 Scholar; Associate Professor, California Western School of Law)

    • Professor Ebrahim will be joining Lewis & Clark Law School and the Center for Business Law and Innovation [Lewis & Clark Law SchoolLeiter Law School] this coming Fall 2022
    • In January, gave a presentation entitled “Datafication & Data Governance at the Patent Office” at the virtual AALS Annual Meeting: New Voices in Intellectual Property Law Scholarship
    • Joined a research project with the University of Arizona’s Center for Quantum Networks (January 2022-Present) as a Fellow (Thrust 4: Societal Impact of the Quantum Internet)
    • On February 4, presented on a panel entitled Data Privacy & Democracy at the Lewis & Clark Law School’s 3rd Annual Data Privacy Forum
    • On February 19, presented a draft article entitled An Information Theory of Data Governance at the Patent Office as part of the 19th Works in Progress for Intellectual Property Scholars Colloquium (WIPIP 2022), co-hosted by St. Louis University School of Law and University of Missouri School of Law

Jon M. Garon (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law and Director of the Intellectual Property, Cybersecurity, and Technology Law program, Nova Southeastern University Shepard Broad College of Law)

    • In December, served as Moderator and Program Coordinator for Business Law Basics – Lost in Tokenization: Legal Implications of Non-Fungible Tokens on Finance, Art, Property, and Culture, American Bar Association Business Law Section [This 90-minute CLE is free-on-demand for all ABA Business Law Section members]
    • In December, developed a CLE program which he moderated entitled Business Law Basics – Lost in Tokenization: Legal Implications of Non-Fungible Tokens on Finance, Art, Property, and Culture, American Bar Association Business Law Section
    • In January, presented Legal Strategies for the Metaverse and the Evolving Media Landscape (American Bar Association, Business Law Section Cyberspace Law Committee, Cyberspace Law Institute)
    • Has contracted to publish a new book entitled Teaching and Learning in the Metaverse: Using Online Platforms, Games, NFTs, and Blockchain in Education with Rowman & Littlefield (2023)
    • On February 22, gave a virtual presentation on Understanding the Evolving Media Landscape for Nova Southeastern University’s Lifelong Learning Institute
    • On February 22, received a “Top Ten” Download from SSRN.com for six electric journals. His draft article, Legal Implications of a Ubiquitous Metaverse and a Web3 Future, is available at SSRN
    • Latest book, Parenting for the Digital Generation – The Parent’s Guide to Digital Education and the Online Environment (Rowman & Littlefield 2022), is available for order both in stores and online [Rowman & LittlefieldAmazonBarnes & Noble]

Christopher Holman (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Life Sciences & Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law)

    • Spoke at the FDA-PTO Roundtable at the George Washington University Law School on December 21
    • On January 20-21, served as a Distinguished Senior Commentator during the third and final meeting of the 2021-2022 Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship
    • On January 21, spoke as a panelist at the FDA-PTO Roundtable on patents and pharmaceutical pricing at the George Washington University Law School
    • On January 28, spoke on a panel entitled “FDA and Patents? FDA’s Letter to the USPTO and Possible Next Steps” as part of the Food, Drug & Cosmetic Law Section at the New York State Bar Association Annual Meeting
    • On February 18, presented a draft article entitled Evolution of the Antibody Patent as part of the 19th Works in Progress for Intellectual Property Scholars Colloquium (WIPIP 2022), co-hosted by St. Louis University School of Law and University of Missouri School of Law

Camilla A. Hrdy (C-IP2 Scholar; Research Professor in Intellectual Property Law, University of Akron School of Law)

    • Article “Abandoning Trade Secrets” (with Mark A. Lemley), 72 Stan. L. Rev. 1 (2021) was cited by a U.S. District court in Providence Title Co. v. Truly Title, Inc., et al., No. 4:21-CV-147-SDJ, 2021 WL 2701238 (E.D. Tex. July 1, 2021)
    • Article “The Trade Secrecy Standard for Prior Art” (with Sharon K. Sandeen), 70 Am. U. L. Rev. 1269 (2021) was selected as the featured patent law article for American University Law Review’s annual Federal Circuit Symposium Issue
    • On December 10, new article, “The Value in Secrecy,” was identified as one of the best works of recent scholarship relating to intellectual property law by Jotwell: The Journal of Things We Like (Lots) [SSRN]
    • On December 13-14, attended The Sedona Conference WG12 Annual Meeting 2021 in Phoenix, AZ. Prof. Hrdy is a Member of Brainstorming Group on “What Can and Cannot Be a Protectable Trade Secret?”
    • Authored a January 12 post on the Written Description blog entitled “Jessica Litman: Who Cares What Edward Rogers Thought About Trademark Law?”
    • Mentioned in a February 10 Law360 article, “Hytera Indictment May Set New Path For Trade Secrets Cases

Dmitry Karshtedt (C-IP2 Scholar; Associate Professor of Law, The George Washington University Law School)

    • Co-authored a December 22 amicus brief on Amgen Inc. v. Sanofi
    • Quoted in a January 12 BloombergLaw article by Ian Lopez, Hikma Drug Label Win Still Leaves Generics on Hook for Liability
    • Spoke at the FDA-PTO Roundtable at the George Washington University Law School on January 21
    • Quoted in a January 27 Law360 article by Ryan David, Breyer’s Rulings Shaped By Wariness Of Intellectual Property
    • On February 18, presented a draft article entitled An Information Theory of Data Governance at the Patent Office as part of the 19th Works in Progress for Intellectual Property Scholars Colloquium (WIPIP 2022), co-hosted by St. Louis University School of Law and University of Missouri School of Law
    • Placed in-progress paper, Pharmaceutical Patents and Adversarial Examination in The George Washington Law Review, forthcoming 2023

Hon. Prof. F. Scott Kieff (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Fred C. Stevenson Research Professor, The George Washington University Law School)

    • Gave the keynote address at C-IP2’s December conference on 5G and IP as a contributor to the upcoming corresponding book, 5G and Beyond: Intellectual Property and Competition Policy in the Internet of Things

Dr. John Liddicoat (C-IP2 Scholar; Senior Research Associate and Affiliated Lecturer, Faculty of Law, University of Cambridge)

    • Joined C-IP2 as a Scholar in January 2022
    • On January 20-21, participated as an Edison Fellow during the third and final meeting of the 2021-2022 Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship
    • Chaired a February 10 seminar hosted by Cambridge University’s Centre for Intellectual Property and Information Law (CIPIL), presented by speaker David Webb (Herbert Smith Freehills), and entitled FRAND: Where are we: And where are we going? (read more here and click here to view the recording on YouTube)

Joshua Kresh (C-IP2 Managing Director)

    • On January 20-21, co-organized and participated in the third and final meeting of the 2021-2022 Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship
    • On January 31, completed Working Draft of “Section 1498 (a): NOT A RX FOR LOWER PHARMA PRICES” (out for academic comment), which was co-authored with Judge Susan G. Braden

Daryl Lim (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law and the Director of the Center for Intellectual Property (IP), Information & Privacy Law, University of Illinois Chicago School of Law)

    • On December 9, was a Discussant during the virtual Fordham IP Institute Global IP Roundtable
    • On December 14, was a Moderator during the virtual 4th edition of the Paris conference on Standard Essential Patents (SEPs) and FRAND (Session 1)
    • Was a Speaker for “Can Computational Antitrust Succeed?” during the virtual Computational Antitrust: Exploring Antitrust 3.0 conference at the Stanford Center for Legal Informatics, December 13-15, 2021
    • On December 17, was a Discussant/Commentator at the Centre for Financial Regulation and Economic Development (CFRED) at the Chinese University of Hong Kong Law (CUHK Law) and the Center for Law and Intellectual Property at Texas A&M University School of Law’s workshop on Anti-suit Injunctions and FRAND Litigation in China
    • In a December 28 IPWatchdog piece, provided his choices for “the biggest moments in IP for 2021”
    • Mentioned in a February 3 article by Penn State, “Penn State Dickinson Law announce new resident faculty appointment”
    • On February 8, spoke on “What can Copyright Law Learn from Design Law?” during the virtual ABA-IPL Design Rights Committee Fireside Chat

Hina Mehta (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; Director, Office of Technology Transfer, George Mason University)

    • Attended the February 20-23 Association of University Technology Managers Conference where she served as instructor for a half day professional development course on Negotiations

Emily Michiko Morris (C-IP2 Senior for Life Sciences and Scholar; C-IP2021-2022 Edison Fellow; David L. Brennan Endowed Chair, Associate Professor, and Associate Director of the Center for Intellectual Property Law & Technology, University of Akron School of Law)

    • Spoke at the FDA-PTO Roundtable at the George Washington University Law School on December 21
    • On January 20-21, participated as an Edison Fellow during the third and final meeting of the 2021-2022 Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship
    • Spoke at the FDA-PTO Roundtable at the George Washington University Law School on January 21

Sean M. O’Connor (C-IP2 Faculty Director; Faculty Director, Innovation Law Clinic; Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

    • On December 1, gave an LLC presentation with Antonin Scalia Law School’s Dean Ken Randall to George Mason University’s Green Machine
    • Helped to organize and spoke at C-IP2’s December conference on 5G and IP as a co-editor with Professor Jonathan Barnett on the upcoming corresponding book, 5G and Beyond: Intellectual Property and Competition Policy in the Internet of Things
    • On January 20-21, co-organized and participated in the third and final meeting of the 2021-2022 Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship
    • On January 23, gave a virtual Texas A&M IP Management talk
    • On January 31, spoke at a seminar as part of the Loyola Law School’s Intellectual Property and Information Law Speaker Series at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles, California

Kristen Jakobsen Osenga (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Austin E. Owen Research Scholar and Professor of Law, University of Richmond School of Law)

    • Spoke at C-IP2’s December conference on 5G and IP as a contributor to the upcoming corresponding book, 5G and Beyond: Intellectual Property and Competition Policy in the Internet of Things
    • On January 5, served as a senior commentator in an IP Works in Progress session for a paper by Tabrez Ebrahim at the Association of American Law Schools (AALS) Annual Meeting
    • On January 7, served a moderator for a Federalist Society Works in Progress Mini-Conference panel
    • On January 25, participated in a Hudson Institute roundtable about national security & IP
    • On February 4, was cited in and submitted comments with fellow scholars of law, economics, and business regarding the Draft USPTO, NIST, & DOJ Policy Statement on Licensing Negotiations and Remedies for Standard Essential Patents Subject to Voluntary F/RAND Commitments
    • Filed a brief with Professors Jonathan Barnett, Richard Epstein, and Adam Mossoff to the International Trade Commission about the importance of exclusionary order for SEPs and public interest in the Ericsson v. Apple case. Filing was mentioned in a February 7 Foss Patents blogpost, “In its replies to Apple’s public interest statements, Ericsson points the ITC to Apple’s 30% app tax and market definition in Epic Games case”
    • Spoke on a February 16 panel entitled, “Theory to Doctrine: Should Specific Antitrust Doctrines or Cases Be Revisited in the Digital Age?” The panel was part of the Big Tech and Antitrust Conference, and sponsored by the Gibbons Institute of Law, Science & Technology, and the Institute for Privacy Protection at Seton Hall Law School.
    • On February 18, participated in the 15th Annual Evil Twin Debate against Jorge Contreras (Presidential Scholar and Professor of Law, University of Utah S.J. Quinney College of Law). Profs. Contreras and Osenga debated Efficient Infringement: Awful or Awesome?

Mark F. Schultz (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company Chair in Intellectual Property Law, University of Akron School of Law; Director, Center for Intellectual Property Law and Technology)

    • On December 2, participated in the Global Trade and Innovation Policy Alliance’s 2021 Global Trade and Innovation Policy Alliance Annual Summit in Washington, D.C., where he spoke on trends in national regulation of Video on Demand Streaming Services worldwide
    • On December 16, spoke in a MacDonald-Laurier Institute (Canada) webinar regarding the appropriate regulatory and IP policies to avoid supply chain disruptions in the manufacturing and distribution of vaccines for the next pandemic
    • Spoke in January 2022 at an event hosted by UC Berkeley and the Sunwater Institute on empirical methods for measuring the strength of national IP systems
    • On January 20-21, served as a Distinguished Senior Commentator during the third and final meeting of the 2021-2022 Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship
    • On January 28-29, participated as a commentator at the Three Rivers IP Colloquium
    • On February 8, spoke at a webinar entitled “Extending Bio-manufacturing Networks in Emerging Regions,” sponsored by Bobab (an Africa-based NGO) and the Innovation Council (a Swiss NGO), about creating an enabling environment for manufacturing vaccines and therapeutics in Africa and other emerging regions
    • Quoted in a February 11 article on The Verge, “Artists Are Playing Takedown Whack-A-Mole To Fight Counterfeit Merch.”
    • On February 18, spoke at an online roundtable sponsored by the National Law University of Bangalore and the Government of India about drafting a trade secret statute for India

Amy Semet (C-IP2 Scholar; Associate Professor, University at Buffalo School of Law)

    • Joined C-IP2 as a Scholar in January 2022

Stephanie M. Semler (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; Adjunct Professor, George Mason University, Antonin Scalia Law School; Associate Attorney, Venable LLP; Supervising Attorney, Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic)

    • Joined C-IP2 as a Practitioner in Residence in January 2022

Eric M. Solovy (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; Partner, Sidley Austin LLP)

    • In February, joined C-IP2 as a Practitioner in Residence

Scholarship & Other Writings

Jonathan Barnett, Does the Market Know Something the FTC Doesn’t?, Truth on the Market (February 10, 2022) Jonathan Barnett, The Economic Case Against Licensing Negotiation Groups in the Internet of Things (January 10, 2022). USC CLASS Research Paper Series No. CLASS22-1, USC Legal Studies Research Paper Series No. 22-1 [SSRN] Jonathan Barnett, How Not to Promote US Innovation (February 18, 2022), Truth on the Market Jonathan Barnett, Time To Nix Antitrust Policies That Fueled Blocked Nvidia Deal (February 10, 2022), Law360 Terrica Carrington, Copyright Office Activities in 2021: A Year In Review, Copyright Alliance (Jan. 11, 2022) Jon M. Garon, Book Chapter, “Legal Issues for Database Protection in the US and Abroad,” in Bioinformatics Law: Legal Issues for Computational Biology in the Post-Genome Era, ed. Jorge Contreras (Edward Elgar Publishing 2d Ed. 2021) (December 2021) Thomas Grant and Scott Kieff, 3 Safe Passages To Avoid Sanctions Double Binds, Law360 (February 9, 2022) Christopher M. Holman, Is the Chemical Genus Claim Really “Dead” at the Federal Circuit?: Part I, 41 Biotechnology Law Report 4 (2022) Camilla Hrdy, Jessica Litman: Who Cares What Edward Rogers Thought About Trademark Law?, Written Description (Jan. 12, 2022) Camilla Alexandra Hrdy, The Value in Secrecy (August 2, 2021). Fordham Law Review, Vol. 91, 2022 Dmitry Karshtedt and Mark A. Lemley and Sean B. Seymore, The Death of the Genus Claim, 35 Harv. J.L. & Tech. 1 (Fall 2021) [SSRN] Daryl Lim, AI, Equality, and the IP Gap, Southern Methodist University Law Review (Forthcoming 2022) Daryl Lim, Antitrust’s AI Revolution, Tennessee Law Review (Forthcoming 2022) Daryl Lim, Confusion, Simplified, Berkeley Technology Law Journal (Forthcoming 2022) Daryl Lim, Trademark Confusion Revealed: An Empirical Analysis, American University Law Review (Forthcoming 2022) Adam Mossoff and Jonathan Barnett, Comment of Legal Academics, Economists, and Former Government Officials on Draft Policy Statement on the Licensing and Remedies for Standard Essential Patents (February 4, 2022) Sean M. O’Connor, “AI Replication of Musical Styles Points the Way to An Exclusive Rights Regime” (February 15, 2022). Research Handbook on Intellectual Property and Artificial Intelligence, Ryan Abbott ed. (Edward Elgar 2022 Forthcoming) Kristen Osenga, More Antitrust Scrutiny Of Pharma Won’t Help Patient Health (February 16, 2022), Law360 Eric A. Priest, The Future of Music Copyright Collectives in the Digital Streaming Age (December 23, 2021), Columbia Journal of Law & the Arts, Vol. 45, 2021 (published February 2022) Philip Stevens and Mark Schultz, The role of intellectual property rights inpreparing for future pandemics, Geneva Network (February 28, 2022) Raju Narayana Swamy, COVID-19 Pandemic: Should Nations Resort to Compulsory Licensing of Drugs and Vaccines? An Analysis of the Effect of Such Pervasive Steps and Non-Market Price-Setting on the Economics and Political Economy of Creative Industries (October 26, 2021) [SSRNLexForti] Shine (Sean) Tu and Christopher M. Holman, Technology Changes Drive Legal Changes for Antibody Patents: What Patent Examiners Can Teach Courts About the Written Description and Enablement Requirements (February 3, 2022) [Note: Offer has been accepted to publish this article in the Berkeley Technology Law Journal]

Categories
Progress Reports

C-IP2 2021 Winter Progress Report (September-November 2021)

Sean O'ConnorGreetings from C-IP2 Faculty Director Sean O’Connor

Warmest greetings for this holiday season. While 2021 has continued to be challenging, we are thankful that our community has stayed strong and thrived, nonetheless. We hope that if the pandemic has directly affected you or your loved ones, you are finding your way back to peace and health. As difficult as these times can be for many of us, I think we all know that it has been even harder for others. Take extra time this holiday season to be with loved ones and reflect on the things we do have.

In this Winter 2021 Progress Report, we include not only our news the last quarter of 2021, but also a recap of major developments this year.

This year we accomplished several major goals that have been in the works for a few years.

    • Rebranded the Center. While our old name had developed good brand recognition, it had outlived much of its original usefulness and did not fully reflect the range of work we do in the innovation ecosystem. It is also important to signal that intellectual property (IP) is a core part of such ecosystems.
    • Formed Advisory Board. A strong center such as ours needs the guidance of leaders in IP and innovation. We are so thankful that our “dream team” of influential leaders accepted our invitation to advise us. The Board includes:
      • Troy DowVice President and Counsel, Government Relations and IP Legal Policy and Strategy, The Walt Disney Company
      • Mitch GlazierChairman and Chief Executive Officer, Recording Industry Association of America
      • Dr. Kirti GuptaVice President, Economic Strategy | Chief Economist, Qualcomm
      • Lawrence HornPresident and Chief Executive Officer, MPEG LA, LLC
      • Andrei IancuPartner, Irell Manella LLP, Los Angeles, California; Former Director, United States Patent & Trademark Office
      • David J. KapposPartner, Cravath, Swaine & Moore LLP, New York; Former Director, United States Patent & Trademark Office
      • John KolakowskiDirector, Patent Licensing, & Head of IP Regulatory Affairs, North America, Nokia Technologies
      • David KornVice President, Intellectual Property and Law, Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA)
      • Keith KupferschmidPresident and Chief Executive Officer, Copyright Alliance
      • The Honorable Paul R. MichelFormer Chief Judge, United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
      • Karen MarangiDirector, Federal Government Affairs, RELX Group
      • Maria A. PallantePresident and Chief Executive Officer, Association of American Publishers; Former Register of Copyrights and Director, United States Copyright Office
      • The Honorable Randall R. RaderFormer Chief Judge, United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
      • Jon SantamauroSenior Director, International Government Affairs, AbbVie
      • Hans SauerDeputy General Counsel, Vice President for Intellectual Property, Biotechnology Innovation Organization
      • Ian SlotinSenior Vice President, Intellectual Property, NBCUniversal
      • Dr. Claudia Tapia Garcia, LL.M.Director IPR Policy and Legal Academic Research, Ericsson; President, 4iP Council
      • Karyn A. TempleSenior Executive Vice President and Global General Counsel, Motion Picture Association; Former Register of Copyrights and Director, United States Copyright Office
      • The Honorable John F. WitherspoonProfessor and Director Emeritus, Intellectual Property Program, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School
    • Expanded Affiliate Scholars and Practitioners Network. This year we added a phenomenal group of leading academics and experienced practitioners such as Senior Fellows (directing our substantive area programming), Scholars (assistant and associate professors), Senior Scholars (full professors), Jurists in Residence, and Practitioners in Residence.
    • Virtual and hybrid events. We were able to transition all of our extensive programming to either fully online or hybrid format. This included the WIPO-U.S. Summer School on Intellectual Property2021 Annual Fall Conference, BioPharma Roundtable, Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship meetings, and academic conference Intellectual Property and Innovation Policy for 5G and the Internet of Things.
2022 will be our tenth year as an academic center, and we are excited to see how C-IP2 continues to grow in the years ahead. Whether you participated in our events this year or in the past, generously donated or helped sponsor C-IP2’s activities, engaged with us in any way, or simply looked out for our emails in your inbox—thank you very much for your interest and support. All our best wishes for your health and happiness this holiday season and for the New Year 2022!

C-IP2 Hosted & Co-Hosted Events

Now in its seventh iteration, C-IP2‘s Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship is a year-long non-resident fellowship program that brings together a group of scholars to develop research papers on intellectual property law and policy. Meeting 2 of the Fellowship was held September 23-24 at George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School. This meeting was devoted to the Edison Fellows’ presenting their draft works-in-progress that they researched and drafted over the summer months of 2021. Each Edison Fellow received extensive feedback during presentation sessions devoted to each draft work-in-progress, including specific commentary from the Distinguished Senior Commentators. Guest Speakers for this meeting were Walter Copan (Senior Adviser and Co-Founder, “Renewing American Innovation,” CSIS; Vice President for Research and Technology Transfer, Colorado School of Mines; Former Director, NIST) and Andrei Iancu. For more information on this Fellowship, please visit our website.

Washington Lawyers for the Arts (WALA) and DC Shorts co-hosted a presentation and free clinic session with Scalia Law’s Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic. The session, “Entertainment Law 101 for Filmmakers,” was held virtually on September 11 and featured WALA’s Brian Frankel, Maggie Gladson, John Mason, and the Clinic’s Prof. Sandra Aistars and Terrica Carrington.

On October 13-14, C-IP2 hosted our 2021 Virtual Annual Fall Conference, with Artificial Intelligence and Intellectual Property as this year’s theme. This year’s Annual Conference was structured around Professor Ryan Abbott’s forthcoming edited volume Research Handbook on Intellectual Property and Artificial Intelligence, which is being funded in part by a C-IP2 Da Vinci Grant. The conference included panels covering the current state of the art in AI and how the various types of IP rights interact with AI in diverse and sometimes controversial contexts––such as authorship of AI-generated works, changing inventive step analysis, data and text mining exceptions, deep fakes, and more. The event also featured keynote speakers Grimes and Jaron Lanier, who participated in a fireside chat with C-IP2 Faculty Director Sean O’Connor. The conference was connected with and featured many speakers who are writing for the upcoming Research Handbook on Intellectual Property and Artificial Intelligence in the Research Handbooks in Intellectual Property Series by Edward Elgar (Forthcoming 2022), an edited volume with contributions from an internationally leading group of authors from academia, practice, and government that provides a broad overview of research in AI & IP as well as a deep critical examination. Conference videos are available on C-IP2‘s YouTube channel.

On November 18, C-IP2 hosted an academic roundtable on Intellectual Property and Biopharmaceutical Policy in person at and virtually from George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School. The roundtable consisted of presentations of works in progress on topics including evergreening and time to generic entry, regulatory exclusivities, the history of Bayh-Dole, potential trade secret waivers, and more.


News & Speaking Engagements

In September 2021, C-IP2 RAs and Scalia Law students Kyle Maxey and David Ward began fall internships with the Copyright Alliance.

In September, C-IP2, in conjunction with Mason’s Center for Government Contracting at the School of Business, won a Department of Defense IP study contract  on a study for Washington Headquarters Services covering the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and defense laboratories’ contracting and intellectual property management policies and their effects on commercialization of and further innovation in dual-use technology. Click here for more details.

Masami Kawase (JIPO) joined C-IP2 as a Visiting Scholar in September! While here, Masami will be working on a research project covering valuation of patents in the US and Japan.

In September, C-IP2 welcomed Professors Daryl Lim and Irina D. Manta as Senior Scholars.

C-IP2 Faculty Director Sean O’Connor and C-IP2 were featured in the “Research Spotlight” put out by Mason’s Institute for Digital InnovAtion (IDIA) in their “The Weekly” newsletter on October 10.

C-IP2 2021-2022 Edison Fellow and USPTO Attorney Advisor, Copyright Law and Policy Molly Torsen Stech moderated a panel discussion co-hosted by the USPTO and USCO on October 26 for the virtual conference Copyright Law and Machine Learning for AI: Where Are We and Where Are We Going?.

On October 26, Prof. Sandra Aistars and Terrica Carrington led Antonin Scalia Law School’s Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic in co-hosting a virtual online chat and legal clinic on Copyright Law, Choreography, and Social Media with Washington Area Lawyers for the Arts (WALA). The event featured a fireside chat with the Copyright Alliance’s Terrica Carrington and David Hecht, founder of Hecht Partners LLP and attorney for celebrity choreographer JaQuel Knight, choreographer of Beyonce’s “Single Ladies” dance. The Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic hosts similar events once or twice a semester, giving students a chance to give live advice to artists as part of their supervised legal clinic work.

In November 2021, C-IPwelcomed Emily Michiko Morris (University of Akron School of Law Professor of Law and C-IP2 Scholar) as our Senior Fellow for Life Sciences.

Sandra Aistars (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Copyright Research and Policy & Senior Scholar; Founding Director, Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic; Clinical Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

Jonathan Barnett (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Innovation Policy & Senior Scholar; Torrey H. Webb Professor of Law, USC Gould School of Law)

    • On October 14, was a lead presenter of “Innovators, Firms, and Markets: The Organizational Logic of Intellectual Property,” hosted by Escuela de Gobierno, Universidad Adolfo Ibàñez
    • On October 15, was a panelist during the webinar “Toward a Deeper Understanding: Berkeley Asia IP SEP Talk Series 2021, The Role of Antitrust,” hosted by the University of California at Berkeley, School of Law
    • On October 28, was a panelist for “The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly – Outlook for the U.S. Patent System,” hosted by IPWatchdog

Chief Judge Susan G. Braden (Court of Federal Claims (Ret.); C-IP2 Jurist in Residence)

    • On October 8, attended and participated in capacity as a Judicial Adviser to the American Law Institute’s Working Group Review of Preliminary Draft 7 of the Restatement of Copyright Law
    • On October 12, attended and participated in the Board of Directors’ Meeting of the United Inventors Association
    • On October 15, attended and participated in the Board of Directors’ Meeting for LegalSifter, Inc. in Pittsburg, PA
    • On October 8, attended and participated in the IT and Artificial Intelligence Committee of the USPTO’s Private Patent Advisory Committee
    • On October 19, attended the Senate Intellectual Property Subcommittee hearing, “Pride in Patent Ownership: The Value of Knowing Who Owns a Patent”
    • On October 22, attended the USPTO’s presentation on DOCX
    • On November 5, attended and participated in the USPTO’s Private Patent Advisory Committee’s AI and IT Subcommittee and PTAB Subcommittee meetings
    • Also on November 5, attended and participated in Board of Directors meetings for LegalSifter, Inc. and Dustoff Technology, Inc.; both companies are engaged in using artificial intelligence and software in the commercial and defense sectors
    • On November 9, attended and engaged in the USPTO’s International Subcommittee and Legislative Subcommittee
    • On November 10, participated on a panel concerning the “Benefits of Arbitration in Resolving SEP Disputes,” hosted by IPWatchDog. The other panel members were Judge Randall Rader, former Chief Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, and Judge David Folsom, former Chief Judge of the US District Court of the Eastern District of Texas
    • On November 12, attended and participated in the USPTO’s PPAC’s International Subcommittee meeting
    • On November 17, attended and participated in the USPTO’s Legislative Subcommittee meeting
    • On November 17, attended the Executive Session of the USPTO’s PPAC
    • On November 18, attended and participated in the Public Session of the USPTO’s PPAC
    • Also on November 18, attended and participated in CIP2’s academic roundtable on Intellectual Property and Biopharmaceutical Policy in Arlington, Virginia
    • Was a significant author on the USPTO’s 2021 Patent Public Advisory Committee (PPAC) Annual Report, which was made available to the public on November 30

Terrica Carrington (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; VP, Legal Policy and Copyright Counsel, Copyright Alliance)

Eric Claeys (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Scholarly Initiatives & Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

    • On September 23-24, participated at C-IP2’s Thomas Edison Innovation Law & Policy Fellowship meeting at GMU Antonin Scalia School
    • On October 14, moderated a panel on “Owning AI and Protecting AI Output” during C-IP2’s 2021 Annual Fall Conference, Artificial Intelligence and Intellectual Property

John F. Duffy (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Samuel H. McCoy II Professor of Law and Paul G. Mahoney Research Professor of Law, University of Virginia School of Law)

Tabrez Ebrahim (C-IP2 Scholar; Associate Professor, California Western School of Law)

Jon Garon (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law and Director of the Intellectual Property, Cybersecurity, and Technology Law program, Nova Southeastern University Shepard Broad College of Law)

David Grossman (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; Senior Director of Technology Transfer & Industry Collaboration, Office of Technology Transfer, George Mason University)

    • Gave a presentation to the Bioengineering Alliance on October 29 on Innovation and Economic Development

Christopher Holman (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Life Sciences & Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law)

    • On September 23-24, participated as a distinguished senior commentator at C-IP2’s Thomas Edison Innovation Law & Policy Fellowship meeting at George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School
    • On November 18, participated in the C-IP2’s academic roundtable on Intellectual Property and Biopharmaceutical Policy in Arlington, Virginia

Camilla A. Hrdy (C-IP2 Scholar; Research Professor in Intellectual Property Law, University of Akron School of Law)

Dmitry Karshtedt (C-IP2 Scholar; Associate Professor of Law, The George Washington University Law School)

    • On September 10, presented a paper at European Policy for Intellectual Property Conference, Pharmaceutical Patents and Adversarial Examination, Madrid, Spain
    • Was quoted by Bloomberg Law in an article published on September 29, “Fed. Cir. Limits Review of Serial Patent Challenges (Correct)
    • Started a new position as a Visiting Scholar at the Centre for Advanced Studies for Biomedical Innovation (CeBIL) at University of Copenhagen, Faculty of Law
    • Presented a paper on Pharmaceutical Patents and Adversarial Examination on October 5 at the Virtual Israeli IP Scholar Conference
    • On October 15, presented selected paper on Pharmaceutical Patents and Adversarial Examination at the virtual Fourth Junior Faculty Forum on Law & STEM, organized by the University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School
    • On October 25, gave a seminar on Copyright Volition as Causal Responsibility with Professor Sean A. Pager, hosted by Assistant Professor Vishv Priya Kohli at the Copenhagen Business School Law Colloquium
    • Gave an October 26 hybrid seminar on Pharmaceutical Patents and Adversarial Examination for the University of Copenhagen’s Centre for Advanced Studies in Biomedical Innovation Law (CeBIL) as part of a lunch seminar series
    • On November 10, spoke on a panel on “Patent Law at the Supreme Court: Where We Are and Where We’re Going,” which was hosted virtually by Los Angeles Intellectual Property Law Association (LAIPLA)
    • On November 16, gave a virtual presentation on “Pharmaceutical Patents and Adversarial Examination,” which was hosted by the Judge Paul R. Michel Intellectual Property American Inn of Court

Hon. Prof. F. Scott Kieff (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Fred C. Stevenson Research Professor, The George Washington University Law School)

Joshua Kresh (C-IP2 Managing Director)

    • On September 23-24, participated in C-IP2’s Thomas Edison Innovation Law & Policy Fellowship meeting at GMU Antonin Scalia School
    • On October 13-14, participated in C-IP2’s 2021 Annual Fall Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Intellectual Property
    • Spoke at AIPLA’s 2021 Annual Meeting during the October 30 Closing Plenary Session “The Year in Review” and gave the Patent Litigation Year in Review Update
    • Concluded his term as Chair of AIPLA’s New Lawyers Committee and started as Vice Chair of AIPLA’s Patent Litigation Committee
    • On November 18, participated in the CIP2’s academic roundtable on Intellectual Property and Biopharmaceutical Policy in Arlington, Virginia

Daryl Lim (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law and the Director of the Center for Intellectual Property (IP), Information & Privacy Law, University of Illinois Chicago School of Law)

    • Joined C-IP2 as a Senior Scholar in September
    • On October 14, spoke on a panel on “Tech Policy in Artificial Intelligence” during C-IP2’s 2021 Annual Fall Conference, Artificial Intelligence and Intellectual Property
    • Speaker at an October 21 online event: Confusion Simplified, Indiana University Maurer School of Law, Bloomington, Issues in International Intellectual Property
    • Speaker at an October 22 event: Life after Google v. Oracle, Indiana University Maurer School of Law, Bloomington, Symposium Honoring Professor Marshall Leaffer
    • Discussant at an October 28 online event: Inventing Ideas: Patents, Prizes, and the Knowledge Economy, Classical Liberal Institute at the NYU School of Law
    • Spoke on “AI in the Automotive Sector” on November 19 at the 2021 ijiwei Automotive Semiconductor Ecosystem Summit, hosted online from Shanghai
    • Delegate during the virtual 37th Annual Meeting of the US Bar-EPO Liaison Council on November 3
    • Featured in a November 25 IPWatchdog article, Thank You! From Trademark Amendments to Mentors, IP Stakeholders are Grateful, noting the consensus between the biopharmaceutical and technology industries about patents for AI. Many thanks to Professor Lim for his mention of C-IP2’s 2021 Annual Fall Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Intellectual Property!

Irina D. Manta (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, Hofstra University School of Law)

    • Joined C-IP2 as a Senior Scholar in September

Hina Mehta (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; Director, Office of Technology Transfer, George Mason University)

    • Participated in Accelerate 2022 at George Mason University October 19-20
    • On October 31, spoke at the National Institute of Technology, about “Technology Transfer: Bench to Market” at the International Conference on Women Leadership in Science and Technology

Emily Michiko Morris (C-IP2 Senior for Life Sciences and Scholar; C-IP2021-2022 Edison Fellow; David L. Brennan Endowed Chair, Associate Professor, and Associate Director of the Center for Intellectual Property Law & Technology, University of Akron School of Law)

    • On September 23-24, participated as an Edison Fellow at C-IP2’s Thomas Edison Innovation Law & Policy Fellowship meeting at GMU Antonin Scalia School
    • In November, accepted the position as C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Life Sciences
    • On November 18, participated in the CIP2’s academic roundtable on Intellectual Property and Biopharmaceutical Policy in Arlington, Virginia

Christopher M. Newman (C-IP2 Scholar; Associate Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

    • In October, participated in a meeting on American Law Institute’s Copyright Restatement project as part of the Members Consultative Group
    • On October 13, moderated a panel on “Artificial Intelligence – Challenges and Controversies” during C-IP2’s 2021 Annual Fall Conference, Artificial Intelligence and Intellectual Property

Sean M. O’Connor (C-IP2 Faculty Director; Faculty Director, Innovation Law Clinic; Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

    • Performed with the band, Buzzard Point Caucus, at the Sixth Annual LawRocks Washington D.C. on September 23 at the 9:30 Club to raise funds for Central Union Mission
    • On September 23-24, participated at C-IP2’s Thomas Edison Innovation Law & Policy Fellowship meeting at George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School
    • On September 29, spoke on a panel hosted by George Mason University School of Business’ Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship on “NIL (Name Image Likeness): Branding, Sports Marketing and Amateur Athletics” along with Dr. David J. Miller (CIE), Scott Lewis (Director of Strategic Initiatives, Zoomph), and Malcolm Grace (Deputy AD, Compliance and NCAA Governance, Intercollegiate Athletics at Mason)
    • Moderated the keynote fireside chat between Grimes (Music Producer, Songwriter, Singer, and Innovator in the digital and AI art space) and Jaron Lanier (Scientist, Musician, Visual Artist & Author of Who Owns the Future?) during C-IP2’s 2021 Annual Fall Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Intellectual Property, held online from October 13-14
    • On October 20, was featured with C-IP2 in the “Research Spotlight” of The Weekly, a newsletter put out by George Mason University’s Institute for Digital InnovAtion (IDIA)
    • On October 28, spoke on “Panel 1: Ownership, Transfer, and Tracing of Intellectual Property Rights – Part 1: Contracting in the Face of Uncertainty – Music Tourism, Royalties Trademark, and Copyright Law” in Jackson, Mississippi, as part of the Sixteenth Meeting of the American College of Business Court Judges, hosted by the Judicial Education Program of the Law & Economics Center, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School
    • Interviewed in October as a guest for a forthcoming episode of the Pedagogy Podcast, hosted by Dr. Jason Lee Guthrie, Assistant Professor of Communication and Media Studies at Clayton State University
    • On November 4, moderated a panel discussion entitled “Copyright: The New Normal” during UIC John Marshall Law School’s 65th Annual IP Law Conference in Chicago, IL
    • In November, joined George Mason University’s Intellectual Property (IP) Committee
    • On November 18, participated in the CIP2’s academic roundtable on Intellectual Property and Biopharmaceutical Policy in Arlington, Virginia

Kristen Jakobsen Osenga (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Austin E. Owen Research Scholar and Professor of Law, University of Richmond School of Law)

Yogesh Pai (C-IP2 Scholar; Assistant Professor, National Law University Delhi (NLUD); Co-Director, Centre for Innovation, Intellectual Property and Competition at NLUD)

Mark F. Schultz (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company Chair in Intellectual Property Law, University of Akron School of Law; Director, Center for Intellectual Property Law and Technology)

    • Mentioned in Akron Legal News on Sept. 3, 2021, in the report “Akron Law kicks off its Centennial celebration
    • Spoke on a Geneva Network virtual panel on September 14 on “Why Trade Secrets Matter: “Covid vaccine manufacturing scale-up and the WTO’s proposed IP waiver
    • On September 23-24, participated as a distinguished senior commentator at C-IP2’s Thomas Edison Innovation Law & Policy Fellowship meeting at GMU Antonin Scalia School
    • On October 12, spoke on a Geneva Network virtual panel on “Building the Gulf life science innovation economy: Lessons from the region and worldwide
    • On October 14, moderated a panel on “Artificial Intelligence in the Life Sciences” during C-IP2’s 2021 Annual Fall Conference, Artificial Intelligence and Intellectual Property
    • Published a report for the Innovation Council, a Geneva Switzerland based NGO, entitled “Unprecedented: The Rapid Innovation Response to COVID-19 and the Role of Intellectual Property” (Innovation Council, December 2021). It is available on its own dedicated website at https://www.unpackingip.org. The report extensively documents the role of IP in the fight against COVID-19 and includes interviews with chief IP counsels and manufacturing experts from the world’s leading biopharma companies.
    • Participated in the annual meeting of the U.S.-India IP Dialogue in November, speaking on IP and global supply chain issues related to manufacturing and delivery of COVID-19 vaccines. Prof. Schultz serves as an expert in this multilateral Track 1.5 diplomatic dialogue held by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry, and the Governments of the United States and India.
    • On November 18, presented his research on IP and the fight against COVID-19 at CIP2’s academic roundtable on Intellectual Property and Biopharmaceutical Policy in Arlington, Virginia

Ted Sichelman (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, University of San Diego School of Law; Director, Center for Intellectual Property Law & Markets; Founder & Director, Center for Computation, Mathematics, and the Law; Founder & Director, Technology Entrepreneurship and Intellectual Property Clinic)


Scholarship & Other Writings

Jonathan M. Barnett, FTC strays from fact-based enforcement and rule of law, The Hill (Nov. 16, 2021)

Jonathan M. Barnett, “The Great Patent Grab,” in The Battle Over Patents: History and Politics of Innovation (ed. Stephen Haber and Naomi Lamoreaux, Oxford University Press 2021)

Joe Bennett and Sean M. O’Connor, “Determining the Composition,” in The Oxford Handbook of Music Law and Policy (ed. Sean M. O’Connor, Oxford University Press, published online July 2020)

C-IP2 Staff, C-IP2 2021 Fall Progress Report (June-August 2021), C-IP2 Blog (June 29, 2021)

Tabrez Y. Ebrahim, Guest Post: Patents In Islamic Law, Patently-O (Nov. 3, 2021)

Jon Garon, Article: Beyond the First Amendment: Higher Education’s Need for Procedural Safeguards to Mute Social Media Outrage, 40 Quinnipiac L. Rev. __ (2022) (forthcoming)

Jon Garon, Book Chapter: Legal Issues for Database Protection in the US and Abroad, in Bioinformatics: Legal Issues for Computational Biology in the Post-Genome Era (Jorge Contreras ed., Edward Elgar Publishing 2d Ed. 2021)

Jon Garon, Article: To be Seen but Not Heard: The Internet’s Impact on the Constitutional Right to Privacy, Speech, and Autonomy for Minors, __ Mecer L. Rev. __ (2022) (forthcoming)

Jon Garon, Book Chapter: Chapter 6: White v. Samsung Elecs. Am., Inc., 971 F.2d 1395 (9th Cir. 1992), in Feminist Judgments: Rewritten Property Opinions (Eloisa C. Rodriguez-Dod and Elena Maria Marty-Nelson, eds., Cambridge University Press 2021)

Camilly Hrdy, Courtney Cox on Trade Secrets and Lying, Written Description (Oct. 10, 2021)

Alan B. Morrison and Robert L. Glicksman and Dmitry Karshtedt and Mark A. Lemley and Joshua D. Sarnoff, Who is an Inferior Office, and Why Does it Matter? (February 18, 2021) (Yale Journal on Regulation Notice and Comment 2021)

Kristen Osenga, Big Tech’s IP theft a common problem with a high cost (Richmond Times Dispatch, Sep 26, 2021)

Kristen Osenga, Changing the Story: Artificial Intelligence and Patent Eligibility, Just Security (Oct. 25, 2021)

Kristen Osenga, COVID Vaccine IP Waiver: A Pathway to Fewer, Not More, Vaccines, released by the Regulatory Transparency Project of the Federalist Society (Oct. 28, 2021)

Kristen Osenga et al, Putting Innovation First: The “New Madison Approach” to Patent Licensing and Antitrustreleased by the Regulatory Transparency Project of the Federalist Society (Oct. 19, 2021)

Kristen Osenga (2021), Striking the Right Balance: Following the DOJ’s Lead for Innovation in Standardized Technology (Akron Law Review: Vol. 54 : Iss. 3, Article 4)

Kristen Osenga, Time to Punish Big Tech’s IP Theft, AL DIA Opinion (Nov. 16, 2021)

Mark Schultz, Trade Secrecy and Covid-19: How trade secrets and other IPRs underpin innovation and manufacturing of Covid-19 Vaccines (Geneva Network, September 2021)

Ted Sichelman, The flawed case against noncompetes, The Hill (July 29, 2021)

Ted Sichelman, Should Noncompete Clauses for Executives Be Legal?, The Wall Street Journal (Sept. 22, 2021)

Eric M. Solovy and Deepak Raju, Recent Threats to Global Trade Secret Protection: Why Compulsory Licensing is Not (and Should Not Be) a Viable Legal Option (Ctr. for Intell. Prot. x Innov. Pol. Oct. 2021)

Categories
Communications

C-IP2 2021 Fall Progress Report (June-August 2021)

Sean O'ConnorGreetings from C-IP2 Faculty Director Sean O’Connor

Now that fall has officially begun, C-IP2 is wrapping up the summer with our Fall Progress Report for 2021 covering activities June through August. This is also our first progress report under our new name, since we rebranded on July 1 as the Center for Intellectual Property x Innovation Policy (C-IP2, also: C-IP2), formerly the Center for the Protection of Intellectual Property (CPIP).

    • Some of this summer’s highlights include the fourth iteration of the WIPO U.S. Summer School on Intellectual Property and a panel discussion on Vaccines, Intellectual Property, and Global Equity, co-hosted with the Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation at the Smithsonian National Museum of American History. We are proud to organize and host the only WIPO U.S. summer school in the world. Both events were hosted virtually for a second year running, but we look forward to moving them in person again next year.
    • We also had some exciting changes in staff and affiliates. Joshua Kresh was promoted to Managing Director in August and we expanded our affiliates to include our first Jurist in Residence, Chief Judge Susan Braden, U.S. Court of Federal Claims (ret.), and Practitioners in Residence Terrica Carrington, Copyright Alliance, and David Grossman, Senior Director of Technology Transfer and Industry Collaboration, George Mason University, as well as new affiliate scholars Professors John F. Duffy, University of Virginia School of Law; Tabrez Ebrahim, California Western School of Law; Camilla A. Hrdy, University of Akron School of Law; Dmitry Karshtedt, The George Washington University Law School; F. Scott Kieff, The George Washington University Law School; Emily Michiko Morris, University of Akron School of Law; Christopher M. Newman, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School; and Yogesh Pai, National Law University Delhi.

Keep an eye on our website or sign up for our News & Events mailing list to learn about upcoming fall events. Hope to see you at upcoming event, such as our Annual Conference on AI & IP in October featuring a fireside chat with Jaron Lanier and Grimes!


C-IP2 Hosted & Co-Hosted Events

C-IP2 proudly partnered with the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) to host the fourth iteration of the only WIPO-U.S. Summer School on Intellectual Property in the world from June 1-12. This two-week summer course was held online due to COVID, but that format enabled a wider range of participants to attend. While we hope to return to in person next year to take advantage of our location in Arlington, Virginia—just minutes from Washington, D.C., one of the world’s key centers of IP law and policymaking—we may include a hybrid component to facilitate access among participants who cannot travel to the U.S. Among the instructors this year were several C-IP2 directors, scholars, and affiliates: Sandra Aistars, Jonathan Barnett, Chief Judge Susan G. Braden (ret.), Christopher Holman, Joshua Kresh, Hina Mehta, Christopher Newman, Sean O’Connor, Kristen Osenga, Eric Priest, and Mark Schultz. You can read more about the event here.

As part of the Summer School, C-IP2 co-hosted a panel on “Vaccines, Intellectual Property, and Global Equity” with the Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation at the Smithsonian, following a presentation on the history of vaccines by Lemelson Director Arthur Daemmrich. Moderated by C-IP2 Faculty Director Professor Sean O’Connor, the panel featured speakers Eric Aaronson (Senior Vice President and Chief Counsel, Intellectual Property, Pfizer Inc.), Dan Laster (Director, Washington State COVID-19 Vaccine Action Command and Coordination System (VACCS) Center), and Dr. Arti K. Rai (Elvin R. Latty Professor of Law and co-Director, Duke Law Center for Innovation Policy). A recording of the panel is available here.


News & Speaking Engagements

On June 17, George Mason University’s President, Dr. Gregory Washington, took part in a fireside chat about technology and innovation at Mason’s Arlington campus, including the new Institution for InnovAtion (IDIA). Later, on July 30, Virginia Business published an article, “George Mason aims to produce nearly 16,000 high-tech workers,” focusing on the University’s Arlington Campus, plans for its new building, and Mason’s Institute for Digital InnovAtion (IDIA) and School of Computing. Professor Sean O’Connor’s Innovation Law Clinic and Professor Sandra Aistars’ Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic will be housed in the IDIA space and working amid these exciting developments. Professor O’Connor serves on the Advisory Council for IDIA and on the Planning Committee for the Arlington Innovation Pilot project which includes the new building going up on the Arlington Campus. He works closely with Mason Associate Dean for Strategic Initiatives and Community Engagement Liza Wilson Durant and Associate Vice President of Innovation and Economic Development Paula Sorrell, both of whom are cited in July article.

In June, C-IP2 welcomed Professors Tabrez Ebrahim and Emily Michiko Morris as Scholars.

On July 1, our center––formerly the Center for the Protection of Intellectual Property (CPIP)––announced that we would be changing our name to the Center for Intellectual Property x Innovation Property (C-IP2, also: C-IP2; pronounced “sip-squared” or “Center for Intellectual Property by Innovation Policy”). C-IP2 produces research, education, and service at the intersection of IP and innovation policy to better understand and shape the means of innovation as a positive force for good. We do so by promoting a diverse set of perspectives and voices to present a fuller picture than that of the dominant legal academic literature on the role of IP and other legal mechanisms to transform great ideas into useful or aesthetic artifacts and activities. Find us on the web at cip2.gmu.edu, on Twitter @CIP2GMU, or on LinkedIn here.

This summer, Tomás Gómez-Arostegui, a 2019-2020 Edison Fellow, along with co-author Sean Bottomly, finalized an article for the Fellowship, The Traditional Burdens for Final Injunctions in Patent Cases c.1789 and Some Modern Implications. The article was originally published in 2020 in the Case Western Reserve Law Review and can be found on SSRN at the link above. Tomás is the Kay Kitagawa & Andy Johnson-Laird IP Faculty Scholar and Professor of Law at Lewis & Clark Law School.

In July, C-IP2 welcomed Professors John F. Duffy and F. Scott Kieff as Senior Scholars and Professors Dmitry Karshtedt and Yogesh Pai as Scholars.

This July, Gerardo Con Diaz’s Edison paper from his 2019-2020 participation in the Edison Fellowship, Patent Law and the Materiality of Inventions in the California Oil Industry: The Story of Halliburton v. Walker, 1935-1946, was published by Cambridge University Press. Con is an Associate Professor at UC Davis and a historian of digital law.

We are pleased to announce that, as of August 1, 2021, the Innovation Law Clinic has been accepted into the USPTO’s Clinic Certification Program. Many thanks to the USPTO and to Dale Lazar of Scalia Law, Randy Noranbrock and Thomas Auchterlonie of Hauptman Ham, and Raj Davé of Davé Law Group for their help in the process. We are fortunate to have such excellent support from our alumni and community.

In August, C-IP2 welcomed Chief Judge Susan G. Braden (Ret.) as our first Jurist in Residence. Judge Braden retired from the United States Court of Federal Claims in 2019 after serving for 16 years, including her time as the Chief Judge. Following her retirement, in addition to joining C-IP2, Judge Braden is serving on the USPTO’s Private Patent Advisory Committee, the Administrative Conference of the U.S., the Advisory Board of the Washington Legal Foundation, and the Board of Directors of the United Inventors Association, as well as on the boards of several other organizations. We look forward to continuing to work with Judge Braden on future projects, including an upcoming law review article that she is co-authoring with C-IP2 Faculty Director Professor Sean O’Connor.

In August, C-IP2 also welcomed Professors Camilla A. Hrdy and Christopher M. Newman as Scholars and Terrica Carrington, David Grossman, and Hina Mehta as Practitioners in Residence.

In August, C-IP2 announced the promotion of Deputy Director Joshua Kresh to Managing Director. Even as Joshua was C-IP2’s first “virtual hire” due to COVID-19, he successfully integrated with the team and has proved invaluable in C-IP2’s ability to not only maintain existing operations, but also advance new initiatives. “Joshua has exceeded my expectations for his position in C-IP2 and as we begin a new academic year it is only fitting to recognize formally the role he has been playing in leading our team,” said C-IP2 Faculty Director Sean O’Connor. In this new position, Joshua will be the primary point of contact for C-IP2, lead day-to-day operations, and manage staff. To reach Joshua, please see his profile page on C-IP2’s website.

Antonin Scalia Law School started a new semester on Monday, August 23 and welcomed 259 incoming First Year JD students, as well as 19 new residential LLMs, 37 online LLMs, 12 JM students, and 29 transfer students. This fall, C-IP2’s Professors Sean O’Connor and Sandra Aistars are again leading the Innovation Law Clinic and the Arts & Entertainment Advocacy, respectively.

The USCO Sovereign Immunity report was released in August 2021 and acknowledged the helpful work of the Arts and Entertainment Advocacy Clinic. Register of Copyrights and Director, Shira Perlmutter stated, “I am also grateful to the Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic at the Antonin Scalia Law School. Led by Sandra Aistars, Senior Fellow for Copyright Research and Policy and a Senior Scholar at the Law School’s Center for Intellectual Property x Innovation Policy, and adjunct professor Stephanie Semler, law students Michaela Cloutier, Jacob Hopkins, Kyle Maxey, Gina McKlveen, Laura Quesada, and Austin Shaffer worked diligently to review evidence of state infringement submitted by parties in furtherance of this report. I appreciate their thoughtful contributions.”

Sandra Aistars (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Copyright Research and Policy & Senior Scholar; Founding Director, Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic; Clinical Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

    • Spoke about IP and trade agreements, including the proposed TRIPS waiver, at Biocom California’s Q2 IP Committee virtual meeting on June 10
    • During the 2021 WIPO-U.S. Summer School of IP, taught the session on “Fundamentals of Copyright,” moderated the panel on “Copyright in the Creative Industries,” and held a fireside chat with Shira Perlmutter, Register of Copyrights and Director of the United States Copyright Office. She also held an IP “Office Hours” session for students with Prof. O’Connor and Joshua Kresh.

Jonathan Barnett (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Innovation Policy & Senior Scholar; Torrey H. Webb Professor of Law, USC Gould School of Law)

    • During the 2021 WIPO-U.S. Summer School of IP, taught the session titled “Overview and Economics of Intellectual Property”
    • Quoted in a June 30 article on LATimes.com, “Elizabeth Warren calls for more scrutiny of Amazon-MGM deal.”
    • Cited in a July 19 article by Law360.com, “FTC Should Take Nuanced Approach on Noncompete Regs”

Chief Judge Susan G. Braden (Court of Federal Claims (Ret.); C-IP2 Jurist in Residence)

    • Was a guest speaker for IPWatchdog’s Patent Masters™ Litigation 2021 on Wednesday, June 9, 2021
    • During the 2021 WIPO-U.S. Summer School of IP, co-taught the session titled “Enforcing Right: U.S. Patent Litigation” with C-IP2 Managing Director Joshua Kresh
    • Joined C-IP2 as a Juror in Residence in August
    • In August, continued to work on an article with Professor Sean M. O’Connor discussing why Section 1498 is not a “license” for the federal government to infringe patents and thus cannot be used to lower drug prices
    • In August, attended the USPTO Private Patent Advisory Committee (PPAC) PTAB Subcommittee meeting, Executive Meeting of the USPTO’s PPAC, and the Public Meeting of the USPTO’s PPAC

Terrica Carrington (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; VP, Legal Policy and Copyright Counsel, Copyright Alliance)

    • On July 29, was appointed as a trustee of the Copyright Society of the USA (CSUSA)
    • Joined C-IP2 as a Practitioner in Residence in August

Eric Claeys (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Scholarly Initiatives & Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

    • Quoted in a July 8 blog on The Beacon, “Protecting Intellectual Property Rights Will Save Lives Now and in the Future.”

John F. Duffy (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Samuel H. McCoy II Professor of Law and Paul G. Mahoney Research Professor of Law, University of Virginia School of Law)

Tabrez Ebrahim (C-IP2 Scholar; Associate Professor, California Western School of Law)

    • Joined C-IP2 as a Scholar in June
    • As part of the 2021 Southeastern Association of Law Schools (SEALS) Conference, gave a presentation on Datafication at the Patent Office during a discussion group on “New Perspectives in Technology Law and Intellectual Property” on July 28, and on July 29, gave a presentation on Monitoring Corporate Cybersecurity & Data Privacy Risk during an intellectual property workshop on “Tensions Within Law & Technology”
    • Also gave a virtual presentation on Monitoring Corporate Cybersecurity & Data Privacy Risk to the Junior IP Scholars Association (JIPSA) in July
    • Organized and moderated the July 29 panel on “Emerging Digital Legal Issues for Businesses & Managers” at the 2021 Society for Business Ethics (SBE) Annual Conference
    • Joined C-IP2 as a Scholar in August
    • In August, named a 2021-2022 faculty fellow with the Nebraska Governance and Technology Center at University of Nebraska College of Law
    • Presented Monitoring Corporate Cybersecurity & Data Privacy Risk at Academy of Legal Studies in Business (ALSB) Annual Meeting, held virtually August 1-6, 2021.
    • Presented Datafication at the Patent Office at the 21st Annual IP Scholars Conference (IPSC), held virtually August 4-5, and 11-12, 2021.
    • Presented Monitoring Corporate Cybersecurity & Data Privacy Risk at Loyola Univ. Chicago School of Law: Prof. Charlotte Tschider’s Domestic Cybersecurity Law course, held virtually on Aug. 25, 2021.

David Grossman (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; Senior Director of Technology Transfer & Industry Collaboration, Office of Technology Transfer, George Mason University)

    • Joined C-IP2 as a Practitioner in Residence in August

Christopher Holman (C-IP2 Senior Fellow for Life Sciences & Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law)

Camilla A. Hrdy (C-IP2 Scholar; Research Professor in Intellectual Property Law, University of Akron School of Law)

    • Joined C-IP2 as a Scholar in August

Dmitry Karshtedt (C-IP2 Scholar; Associate Professor of Law, The George Washington University Law School)

    • Joined C-IP2 as a Scholar in July
    • Quoted in a July 8 article by Law.com, “Patent Owners are Throwing in the Towel on Arthrex – With a Couple Exceptions”
    • Quoted in a July 21 article by MedCityNews., “Cost-cutting generics and biosimilars stuck in legal limbo”
    • On July 22, presented a paper, Volition and Intent in the Law of Direct Copyright Infringement, at the virtual Junior IP Scholars Association Workshop with Sean Pager
    • Started a visiting position at the University of Copenhagen’s Centre for Advanced Studies in Biomedical Innovation Law (CeBIL)
    • Co-presenter, United States v. Arthrex (with Alan B. Morrison & John M. Whealan) at the George Washington Law School Summer Wednesday Virtual Lunch Series, on July 28.
    • On August 4, presented a paper, Volition and Intent in the Law of Direct Copyright Infringement, at the virtual 21st Annual Intellectual Property Scholars Conference with Sean Pager
    • Quoted in an August 6 article by Bloomberg Law, “Teva ‘Skinny Label’ Ruling Comes Amid Lawmaker Drug Cost Fight”
    • On August 26, discussed the fate of genus claiming in patent law at an LSPN Connect webinar organized by Newton Media and World IP Review

The Honorable F. Scott Kieff (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Fred C. Stevenson Research Professor, The George Washington University Law School; Former Commissioner, U.S. International Trade Commission)

    • Joined C-IP2 as a Senior Scholar in July

Joshua Kresh (C-IP2 Managing Director)

    • During the 2021 WIPO-U.S. Summer School on IP, he moderated the panel on “The Role of IP Institutions in the Global IP System” and co-taught the session titled “Enforcing Right: U.S. Patent Litigation” with Judge Susan G. Braden. He also held an IP “Office Hours” session for students with Profs. Sean O’Connor and Sandra Aistars.
    • Promoted to C-IP2 Managing Director on August 25

Erika Lietzan (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; William H Pittman Professor of Law & Timothy J. Heinsz Professor of Law, University of Missouri School of Law)

    • Forthcoming University of Missouri School of Law Legal Studies Research Paper Ignoring Drug Trademarks to be published in the Wake Forest Law Review

Hina Mehta (C-IP2 Practitioner in Residence; Director, Office of Technology Transfer, George Mason University)

    • Gave a webinar on research trends at George Mason University for the University of Bahrain’s Research Nights in May
    • During the 2021 WIPO-U.S. Summer School of IP, taught the session titled “Transfer of Technology and Licensing”
    • Was a panelist on “Innovation and Entrepreneurship Ecosystem” on July 16th at LEAD VA Class 2021, Northern VA Chamber of Commerce
    • Quoted in a July 28 GMU News article, “Mason’s Michael Buschmann and team at start-up AexeRNA Therapeutics Inc. pursue patents for improved COVID-19 vaccines”
    • Starting in August, continued affiliation with C-IP2 under new title of Practitioner in Residence
    • During August 2-4, volunteered an expert instructor for the virtual “Practical Negotiations Course” delivered by the Association of Technology Managers (AUTM)
    • In its August 26 newsletter, George Mason University’s Institute for Biohealth Innovation mentioned Hina Mehta and her team at Mason’s Office of Technology Transfer for an outstanding 2021 fiscal year, citing a number of invention disclosures and licenses

Emily Michiko Morris (C-IP2 Scholar; C-IP2 2021-2022 Edison Fellow; David L. Brennan Endowed Chair, Associate Professor, and Associate Director of the Center for Intellectual Property Law & Technology, University of Akron School of Law)

    • Joined C-IP2 as Scholar in June
    • On August 4, presented her forthcoming article, A Global Pandemic Remedy to Vaccine Nationalism (co-authored with Orit Fischman-Afori and Miriam Marcowitz-Bitton, Cornell Int’l L.J., forthcoming) at IPSC 2021 (virtual), sponsored by the Cardozo School of Law
    • On August 6, presented her current project on pharma-specific incentives to invest in R&D at the Inaugural Workshop for Asian American and Pacific Islander Women in the Legal Academy (virtual), sponsored by Penn State Law and Western New England School of Law

Christopher M. Newman (C-IP2 Scholar; Associate Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

Sean M. O’Connor (C-IP2 Faculty Director; Founding Director, Innovation Law Clinic; Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

    • During the 2021 WIPO-U.S. Summer School of IP, taught the session titled “The Different Kinds of Property in Intellectual Property”; moderated the panel “Patents in the Innovation Industries”; held a fireside chat with Andrei Iancu, Former Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property and Director of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office; and moderated the panel “Vaccines, Intellectual Property, and Global Equity,” which was co-hosted with the Smithsonian’s Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation. He also held an IP “Office Hours” session for students with Prof. Sandra Aistars and Joshua Kresh.
    • Taught on July 6 and July 7 during the WIPO-CEIPI-IP Advanced Course on IP, Technology Transfer and Licensing, which was held June 28-July 9

Kristen Jakobsen Osenga (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Austin E. Owen Research Scholar and Professor of Law, University of Richmond School of Law)

    • During the 2021 WIPO-U.S. Summer School of IP, taught the session titled “Fundamentals of U.S. Patent Law”
    • Spoke at the virtual conference Standards & Patents: Law and Litigation, which was held from July 14 through July 16
    • July 27 – New think piece in Competition Policy International’s (CPI) latest Antitrust Chronicle
    • On August 17, participated in a webinar on Arthrex for the Federalist Society Regulatory Transparency Project

Yogesh Pai (C-IP2 Scholar; Assistant Professor, National Law University Delhi (NLUD); Co-Director, Centre for Innovation, Intellectual Property and Competition at NLUD)

    • Joined C-IP2 as a Scholar in July
    • On August 11, participated in a virtual panel discussion on “COVID-19’s Intellectual Property Rights (IPRs) Waiver: Will suspending IPRs bring COVID- 19 vaccines to Mexico and the world more rapidly?,” which was organized by the Geneva Network and Fundación IDEA, Mexico.

Eric Priest (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Associate Professor, University of Oregon School of Law)

    • During the 2021 WIPO-U.S. Summer School of IP, taught the session on “Securing & Using Copyright Protection Globally”
    • Cited in a July 13 article by Law360.com, “ITC Already Has Authority Offered By Trade Secret Misuse Bill”

Mark F. Schultz (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company Chair in Intellectual Property Law, University of Akron School of Law; Director, Center for Intellectual Property Law and Technology)

    • During the 2021 WIPO-U.S. Summer School of IP, taught the sessions on “Fundamentals of Trade Secrets,” “Real World Value of Trade Secrets in a Global Innovation Economy,” and “Best Practices for Protecting Trade Secrets,” and moderated the panel titled “Trade Secrets in Global Business”
    • Earlier in 2021, was the drafting team co-lead on the Sedona Conference Framework for Analysis on Trade Secret Issues Across International Borders: Extraterritorial Reach (Sedona Conference 2021), which has been published for public comment and is available here, and in June, spoke about the project at the virtual 2021 Sedona Conference webinar for the Sedona Working Group 12 on Trade Secrets
    • On August 11, participated in a virtual panel discussion on “COVID-19’s Intellectual Property Rights (IPRs) Waiver: Will suspending IPRs bring COVID- 19 vaccines to Mexico and the world more rapidly?,” which was organized by the Geneva Network and Fundación IDEA, Mexico.

Ted Sichelman (C-IP2 Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, University of San Diego School of Law; Director, Center for Intellectual Property Law & Markets; Founder & Director, Center for Computation, Mathematics, and the Law; Founder & Director, Technology Entrepreneurship and Intellectual Property Clinic)

    • Cited in a July 19 article by Law360.com, “FTC Should Take Nuanced Approach on Noncompete Regs”

Scholarship & Other Writings

Jonathan M. Barnett, Anti-innovation Policy, Center for Strategic & International Studies (June 4, 2021)

Jonathan M. Barnett, Christopher Beauchamp, Sean Bottomly, Gerardo Con Díaz, Alexander Galetovic, B. Zorina, Khan, Victor Menaldo, and Steven W. Usselman, The Battle over Patents: History and Politics of Innovation, ed. Stephen H. Haber and Naomi R. Lamoreaux (Oxford University Press 2021)

Jonathan M. Barnett, Going Back to Antitrust Basics, Truth on the Market (July 1, 2021)

Jonathan M. Barnett, “The Great Patent Grab,” in The Battle Over Patents: History and Politics of Innovation (ed. Stephen Haber and Naomi Lamoreaux, Oxford University Press 2021)

Jonathan M. Barnett, How IP Rights Keep Markets Free, Hudson Institute (June 9, 2021)

Jonathan M. Barnett and Ted Sichelman, The flawed case against noncompetes, The Hill (July 29, 2021)

Jonathan M. Barnett, Old Ideas and the New New Deal, Truth on the Market (Aug. 2, 2021)

Jonathan M. Barnett, Patent Groupthink Unravels, 34 No. 2 Harvard Journal of Law & Technology 420 (Spring 2021) [SSRN]

Jonathan M. Barnett, Startup Exit Strategies in the New Antitrust Era, Bloomberg Law (Aug. 11, 2021)

C-IP2 Staff, CPIP Second Quarter Progress Report (March-May 2021), C-IP2 Blog (June 29, 2021)

C-IP2 Staff, Panel Discussion: Vaccines, Intellectual Property, and Global Equity, C-IP2 Blog (July 6, 2021)

C-IP2 Staff, A View from Both Sides: COVID-19, the TRIPS Waiver, IP Rights, and How to Increase the Supply of Vaccines, C-IP2 Blog (June 22, 2021)

Eric Claeys, Covid-19 and Intellectual Property Rights, Law & Liberty (July 6, 2021)
Also: Eric Claeys, Covid-19 and Intellectual Property Rights, VBLSA (July 6, 2021)

Gerardo Con Diaz, Patent Law and the Materiality of Inventions in the California Oil Industry: The Story of Halliburton v. Walker, 1935-1946, Enterprise & Society 1-23 (July 29, 2021)

Tabrez Y. Ebrahim, Intellectual Property Through a Non-Western Lens: Patents in Islamic Law, 37 Georgia State University Law Review 789 (2021)

Joel B. Eisen and Kristen Jakobsen Osenga, “Smart Grid standards development and patent protection in the United States: striking the balance between dramatic overhaul of the electric grid and encouragement of innovation,” in Intellectual Property and Sustainable Markets, ed. Ole-Andreas Rognstad and Inger B. Ørstavik, (Edward Elgar Publishing, Inc., 2021), 188-205

Tómas Gómez-Arostegui and Sean Bottomley, The Traditional Burdens for Final Injunctions in Patent Cases c.1789 and Some Modern Implications (September 7, 2020), 71 Case Western Reserve Law Review 403 (2020)

Christopher M. Holman, The Federal Circuit Continues to Grapple with the Question of Patent Eligibility for Diagnostic Methods, 40 Biotechnology Law ­Report 151 (2021)

Mark David Janis and Ted M. Sichelman, “Chapter 1: The Patent and Its Claims,” in Patent Law: An Open-Source Casebook (Fall 2021)

Dmitry Karshtedt, Nonobviousness: Before and After (April 6, 2021), 106 Iowa Law Review 1609 (2021), GWU Legal Studies Research Paper No. 2021-25, GWU Law School Public Law Research Paper No. 2021-25

Jyh-An Lee and LiLi Yang, Viagra Did Not Work, but Michael Jordan Still Made It: Trademark Policy Toward the Translation of Foreign Marks in China (forthcoming)

Erika Lietzan, Ignoring Drug Trademarks (June 16, 2021), Wake Forest Law Review (Forthcoming)

Sean O’Connor, The curious contrast between corporate authorship and inventorship in the United States, in Niklas Bruun & Marja-Leena Mansala (Eds.) Research Handbook on Intellectual Property and Employment Law (Edward Elgar 2021)

Kristen Osenga, Putting Together a Competitive Puzzle: How to Understand and Assemble the Pieces of the New Madison Approach, CPI Antitrust Chronicle (July 27, 2021)

Kristen Osenga, We Must Win the Race to 5G, InsideSources (June 4, 2021)

Prashant Reddy T. and Yogesh Pai, What’s the point of continuing a discussion on the unworkable TRIPs COVID-19 waiver proposal?, The IPKat Blog (July 13, 2021)

Ryan Reynolds, Just What Is the Case with the CASE Act? A Brief Overview, C-IP2 Blog (June 14, 2021)

Kathleen Wills, Esq., Privacy Law Considerations of AI and Big Data – In the U.S. & Abroad, C-IP2 Blog (July 27, 2021)

Categories
C-IP2 News Communications Progress Reports

CPIP Second Quarter Progress Report (March-May 2021)

Sean O'ConnorGreetings from CPIP Executive Director Sean O’Connor

We are cautiously optimistic as locations around the globe move towards greater control of the COVID pandemic. With luck, diligence, and generosity by public and private sectors around the world, we can all strive for vaccines to be more widely accessible and a future in which we can see other in person again.

Our Second Quarter Progress Report for 2021 covers CPIP’s and our affiliates’ events, news, scholarship, and more from March through May of this year. Our team has just wrapped up the fourth iteration of the WIPO-U.S. Summer School on Intellectual Property at CPIP, and we’re looking forward to in-person and hybrid programming in the coming months––look for details in our future progress reports and communications. We also have an exciting new name announcement coming later this week, and we’re looking forward to seeing what the rest of the year brings. In the meantime, I’m pleased to present this report on CPIP’s output from the past few months.


CPIP Hosted & Co-Hosted Events

On Wednesday, March 3, Arlington Economic Development’s BizLaunch network co-hosted a public online event entitled “Mason Law Clinic @BizLaunch: Which Entity is Right for Your Startup?” with George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School’s Innovation Law Clinic, which is led by CPIP Executive Director Sean O’Connor. The virtual clinic addressed entrepreneurship and which business entities might best fit a business’s needs and attract investment. The panelists were Kenneth Silverberg, Senior Counsel at Nixon Peabody, and third-year Scalia Law students Mitch Gibson and Rebecka Haynes. A video of the event is available on CPIP’s YouTube page.

Now in its seventh iteration, CPIP’s 2021-2022 Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship had its first virtual meeting on Thursday, March 18, and Friday, March 19. The Edison Fellowship is a year-long non-resident fellowship program that brings together a group of scholars to develop research papers on intellectual property law and policy. The Edison Fellowship is one of the centerpieces of CPIP’s mission to promote a better academic discussion about intellectual property rights with substantial scholarship produced from rigorous research that examines the moral and economic value of innovation. This year’s topics include: the PTAB, patent disclosures and artificial intelligence, levels of licensing of SEPs, SEPs vs NEPs in litigation, drug repurposing and generics, regulatory exclusivities, copyright law, privacy law, and the right of publicity.

From April 15-16, CPIP hosted a virtual roundtable discussion on Copyright and the Constitution. This private, invitation-only roundtable explored current and historical topics in Copyright and the Constitution. Proposals to address challenges faced by authors and owners of copyrighted works are frequently met by claims from opponents that the proposals do not pass constitutional muster. Such allegations are typically baseless; however, they delay and increase the costs of pursuing legislative and other measures intended to protect and promote the creativity of authors. This roundtable investigated what has transpired in the courts and public discourse as well as how these precedents might inform current and future efforts to protect the interests of the creative community and ultimately the public.

On May 4 and as part of Arlington Forward’s 20:20 Series, CPIP co-hosted a virtual panelProtecting What You Build: Intellectual Property as the Entrepreneur’s Core Asset, with CPIP Directors Professor Sean O’Connor, Professor Sandra Aistars, and Joshua Kresh as the featured speakers. Great entrepreneurs execute on an innovative vision to improve the lives of others. Whether for profit or not for profit, the core of these ventures consists of particular solutions to tough problems. Such solutions in turn are combinations of information and practical methods, code or devices that are legally defined as intellectual property. Patents, copyrights, trade secrets and trademarks play different roles in defining the scope, title and rights to innovative solutions. This session guided attendees through these types of intellectual property and explained how experienced entrepreneurs rely on them to implement their visions. A video of the event is available on CPIP’s YouTube page.


News & Speaking Engagements

On Tuesday, March 30, the U.S. News & World Report Rankings came out, and CPIP is pleased to report that Scalia Law placed 41 overall and that the IP program went from 30 to 26. Also, the part-time law program at Scalia Law ranked No. 4 among public and private institutions.

Congratulations to all the Scalia Law students who graduated on May 15! This was a challenging year with unprecedented obstacles and we appreciate the students’ patience in adjusting to the online class format and doing their best. Well done and best of luck!

Further, CPIP would like to congratulate The Honorable Kimberly A. Moore, who became Chief Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit on May 22, 2021. She succeeded the Honorable Sharon Prost, who served as Chief Judge since May 31, 2014. Before joining the bench, Judge Moore was a faculty member of our George Mason University School of Law.

The Innovation Law Clinic, an affiliate of CPIP, was mentioned in the article “New pilot space debuts in Arlington” in Mason’s newsletter, The George, on May 27. The Clinic and other related innovation programs will temporarily be housed in a “showroom” location at Vernon Smith Hall until moving into the Mason Exchange building under construction here on the Arlington campus with a scheduled opening date of May 2025.

Sandra Aistars (CPIP Director of Copyright Research and Policy; Founding Director, Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic; Clinical Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

    • Spoke at Scalia Law’s virtual Admissions Event on March 18
    • Along with filmmaker Lynn Hughes, was a featured speaker for an online clinic, “Copyright Law and the CASE Act,” on March 23. The event was organized under Prof. Aistars’ guidance by the Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic at Antonin Scalia Law School and co-hosted with Washington Area Lawyers for the Arts (WALA). The clinic also conducted a live Q&A session for artists.
    • Spoke that same evening (March 23) on a virtual panel, “Representing Women: A Conversation on Representation for Artists and of Women in the Arts,” as part of the George Washington Law Association for Women’s March webinar series Nine: Portraits of Women in the Law
    • On April 6, moderated a virtual panel entitled “Artist Roundtable: Representing and Working with Artists in the Digital Age,” which was hosted by Scalia Law’s Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic. The panel consisted of three creators on the forefront of art and creativity in the digital age: musician, singer, and songwriter David Lowery; film director, producer, and editorial photographer Stacey Marbrey; and author, communications professional, and copyright advocate David Newhoff. They spoke about their careers and what artists look for when partnering with legal counsel or other advocates, as well as issues that matter to artists and businesses in the arts today.
    • Spoke on the virtual panel “Platform Liability in the US and EU” during the 28th Annual Fordham IP Conference on April 9
    • Organized and signed an April 15 letter to the Biden Administration urging opposition to the proposed WTO waiver to the TRIPS Agreement’s IP protections
    • Moderated a virtual Federalist Society panel, “Courthouse Steps Decision Webinar: Google v. Oracle,” on April 16 (the podcast version is also available via the link)
    • Participated as a panelist during an IP law section discussion on Google v. Oracle hosted virtually by the American Bar Association on April 29
    • Participated in Scalia Law’s Law & Economics Center’s program Introduction to the Economics of Information, Privacy, and Data Security from May 19-23
    • Co-wrote, organized, and filed a May amicus brief, signed by IP scholars, stating that the Federal Circuit should reverse the Eastern District of Texas’ judgment in SAS Institute Inc. v. World Programming Ltd.: “The Court’s holding that Plaintiff’s works are uncopyrightable in their entirety was reached through a flawed examination, in the context of a novel proceeding, that is inconsistent with both the Copyright Act and applicable case law. If sustained, this approach would significantly undermine Congressional intent of promoting and rewarding copyright registration, and set the bar of establishing copyrightability so high that it would prejudice copyright owners not merely in the software sector, but across the full spectrum of creative works.” Students of the Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic helped to research and prepare the brief; Robert W. Clarida (Partner, Reitler Kailas & Rosenblatt, LLC) served as counsel of record, and Steven M. Tepp (President & CEO, Sentinel Worldwide) provided valuable advice.

Jonathan Barnett (CPIP Senior Fellow for Innovation Policy & Senior Scholar; Torrey H. Webb Professor of Law, USC Gould School of Law)

Eric Claeys (CPIP Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

Devlin Hartline (Former Director of Communications, CPIP; Former Assistant Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law)

    • Served as Presiding Officer on March 23, the first day of the virtual 16th Annual Advanced Patent Law Institute, and introduced Acting USPTO Director Drew Hirshfeld, among others. This event was co-sponsored by the University of Texas School of Law and the Antonin Scalia Law School and hosted by the USPTO.
    • Attended the University of Akron School of Law’s virtual 23rd Annual Symposium on Intellectual Property Law and Policy on March 25-26 and moderated the final panel, “The Latest Tools and Challenges for Copyright Enforcement,” on March 26
    • Signed an April 15 letter to the Biden Administration urging opposition to the proposed WTO waiver to the TRIPS Agreement’s IP protections
    • Along with other IP scholars, signed a May amicus brief stating that the Federal Circuit should reverse the Eastern District of Texas’ judgment in SAS Institute Inc. v. World Programming Ltd.
    • As of late May 2021, Devlin Hartline has left CPIP and George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School. Devlin joined CPIP in May 2015 and, as a core member of the team, has contributed substantially to CPIP’s mission, events, programs, and scholarship––as well as team morale––over these past six years. As his teammates, we will miss working with him, and we want to thank him for all his contributions and dedicated work at CPIP. We also wish him the best as he joins the Hudson Institute this July. For now, you can find Devlin on Twitter @devlinhartline.

Christopher Holman (CPIP Senior Fellow for Life Sciences & Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law)

    • Participated as a Distinguished Senior Commentator in the first meeting of the 2021-2022 Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship, held virtually March 18-19
    • With CPIP Executive Director Prof. Sean O’Connor, submitted written comments on April 5 to NIST on proposed changes to Bayh-Dole Regulations
    • Signed an April 15 letter to the Biden Administration urging opposition to the proposed WTO waiver to the TRIPS Agreement’s IP protections

Joshua Kresh (CPIP Deputy Director)

    • Attended the 28th Annual Fordham IP Conference on April 8-9
    • Signed an April 15 letter to the Biden Administration urging opposition to the proposed WTO waiver to the TRIPS Agreement’s IP protections
    • Served as a coordinator for AIPLA’s 2021 Virtual Spring Meeting, which was held from May 10-14 (the event program can be viewed here)

Erika Lietzan (CPIP Senior Scholar; William H Pittman Professor of Law & Timothy J. Heinsz Professor of Law, University of Missouri School of Law)

Hina Mehta (CPIP Scholar; Director, Office of Technology Transfer, George Mason University)

    • Gave a webinar on Research Trends at George Mason University for University of Bahrain’s event UoB Research Nights held in mid-May

Sean M. O’Connor (CPIP Executive Director; Founding Director, Innovation Law Clinic; Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School)

    • Featured CLE speaker at Washington State Patent Lawyers Association’s event, “Bypassing Patents in the Pandemic? The Biden Administration Should Beware Revisionist Accounts of March-In Rights and Sec. 1498” on March 17
    • Spoke at Scalia Law’s virtual Admissions Event on March 18
    • Quoted in a March 29 article by FiercePharma, “Biden faces calls to break COVID-19 vaccine patents. Would that boost global supply?”
    • With CPIP Senior Scholar Prof. Chris Holman, submitted written comments on April 5 to NIST on proposed changes to Bayh-Dole Regulations
    • Featured CLE speaker at Patent and Trademark Office Society (PTOS) event “Bypassing Patents in the Pandemic? The Biden Administration Should Beware Revisionist Accounts of March-In Rights and Sec. 1498” held virtually on April 6
    • Spoke on the virtual panel “Copyright & Music” during the 28th Annual Fordham IP Conference on April 9
    • Spoke on the virtual panel “Intermediary Liability at the Application Layer and Beyond” at the Silicon Flatirons conference, Platform Policy for Networks, Infrastructure, and Applications, on April 14
    • Signed an April 14 “Open Letter by Academics in Favor of Direct EV Sales and Service” supporting direct-to-consumer sales by EV manufacturers such as Tesla (the accompanying letter by public interest organizations can be found here)
    • Signed an April 15 letter to the Biden Administration urging opposition to the proposed WTO waiver to the TRIPS Agreement’s IP protections
    • Spoke on the virtual panel “Google v. Oracle: An Initial Appraisal” hosted by Berkeley Center for Law and Technology on April 20
    • Participated in the U.S. Embassy Tokyo’s World IP Day virtual program on IP & SMEs: Taking your ideas to market, speaking on the panel entitled “Patents to Patients: The Role of Intellectual Property in Innovative Healthcare” on the evening of April 26 JST (Japanese-language video of event available here)

Kristen Jakobsen Osenga (CPIP Senior Scholar; Austin E. Owen Research Scholar and Professor of Law, University of Richmond School of Law)

    • Moderated a Federalist Society panel, “Courthouse Steps Oral Argument Webinar: United States v. Arthrex Inc.,” on March 1
    • Starting in March 2021, Prof. Osenga has taken over the chair of the Federalist Society Intellectual Property Group Executive Committee from Professor Mark Schultz.
    • Featured in a short video by the Federalist Society on “What is a Trademark? [Legal Terms]” on April 13
    • Signed an April 15 letter to the Biden Administration urging opposition to the proposed WTO waiver to the TRIPS Agreement’s IP protections
    • Spoke on the virtual panel on “The Common Purposes of Intellectual Property and Antitrust” with Ashley Baker and Seth Cooper and organized by the Committee for Justice on April 19 (Video of panel available here)
    • Mentioned in an April 28 Patently-O post, “The Public Private Nature of Patents,” by Dennis Crouch, as representing the appellant company Kannuu in Kannuu Pty Ltd. v. Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd.
    • Featured in the Gray Matters podcast on May 4 in the episode “Regulating Vaccines After COVID-19: A Conversation with Sam Kalabi and Kristen Osenga”
    • Featured in a video by University of Richmond School of Law, “The Synopsis: Patents on COVID Vaccines,” on May 12

Eric Priest (CPIP Senior Scholar; Associate Professor, University of Oregon School of Law)

    • Along with other IP scholars, signed a May amicus brief stating that the Federal Circuit should reverse the Eastern District of Texas’ judgment in SAS Institute Inc. v. World Programming Ltd.

Mark Schultz (CPIP Senior Scholar; Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company Chair in Intellectual Property Law, University of Akron School of Law; Director, Center for Intellectual Property Law and Technology)

    • Participated as a Distinguished Senior Commentator in the first meeting of the 2021-2022 Thomas Edison Innovation Law and Policy Fellowship, held virtually March 18-19
    • Was the drafting team co-lead on the 2021 Sedona Conference’s Framework for Analysis on Trade Secret Issues Across International Borders: Extraterritorial Reach, which has been published for public comment as of March
    • Held the University of Akron School of Law’s 23rd Annual Symposium on Intellectual Property Law and Policy virtually on March 25-26
    • Signed an April 15 letter to the Biden Administration urging opposition to the proposed WTO waiver to the TRIPS Agreement’s IP protections
    • On April 28, spoke on the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) webinar “Closing the Gender Gap in Intellectual Property – Mapping and Addressing Barriers”
    • On April 29, spoke on the virtual panel “How Intellectual Property Has Played a Pivotal Role in the Global COVID-19 Response,” which hosted by the Information Technology & Innovation Foundation (ITIF)
    • On May 27, spoke on a webinar on “The Role of Intellectual Property during the pandemic,” held by the Institute for Prospective and Innovation in Health (INNOS) in Colombia. Both the writeup and a link to the webinar recording can be found on this page.
    • Along with other IP scholars, signed a May amicus brief stating that the Federal Circuit should reverse the Eastern District of Texas’ judgment in SAS Institute Inc. v. World Programming Ltd.

Ted Sichelman (CPIP Senior Scholar; Professor of Law, University of San Diego School of Law; Director, Center for Intellectual Property Law & Markets; Founder & Director, Center for Computation, Mathematics, and the Law; Founder & Director, Technology Entrepreneurship and Intellectual Property Clinic)

    • Mentioned in an April 28 Patently-O postThe Public Private Nature of Patents, written by Dennis Crouch, as representing the appellant company Kannuu in Kannuu Pty Ltd. v. Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd.

Scholarship & Other Writings

Alden Abbott, Kevin Madigan, Adam Mossoff, Kristen Osenga, and Zvi Rosen, Holding States Accountable for Copyright Piracy, Regulatory Transparency Project of the Federalist Society (May 13, 2021)

Jonathan M. Barnett, Antitrust Lessons from AT&T’s M&A Fiasco, Truth on the Market (May 24, 2021)

Jonathan M. Barnett, Have tech platforms captured the Supreme Court?, The Hill (Apr. 17, 2021)

Jonathan Barnett, Investors and Regulators Can Both Fall for Platform Bubbles, Truth on the Market (Mar. 2, 2021)

Jonathan Barnett, Why Big Tech Likes Weak IP, Cato Institute (Spring 2021)

CPIP Staff, CPIP First Quarter Progress Report (December 2020-February 2021), CPIP Blog (Mar. 31, 2021)

CPIP Staff, UC Hastings’ Evergreen Drug Patent Search Database: A Look Behind the Statistics Reveals Problems with this Approach to Identifying and Quantifying So-Called “Evergreening,” CPIP Blog (Mar. 4, 2021)

Wade Cribbs, Accenture Report Outlines How 5G Technology Accelerates Economic Growth, CPIP Blog (Mar. 8, 2021)

Wade Cribbs, Scalia Law’s Innovation Law Clinic Partners with BizLaunch for Online Legal Clinic on Business Entities for Startups, CPIP Blog (Mar. 10, 2021)

Tabrez Ebrahim, Professor Tabrez Ebrahim on Clean and Sustainable Technological Innovation, CPIP Blog (Mar. 25, 2021)

Christopher M. Holman, Branded Drug Companies Are Successfully Asserting the Doctrine of Equivalents in Hatch-Waxman Litigation, 40 Biotechnology Law Report 72 (Mar. 2021)

Mark David Janis and Ted M. Sichelman, Patent Law: An Open-Source Casebook (Chapter 5: Anticipation) (Apr. 26, 2021)

Mark David Janis, Ted M. Sichelman, John R. Allison, Thomas F. Cotter, Christopher Anthony Cotropia, Dmitry Karshtedt, Jeffrey A. Lefstin, Jason Rantanen, David Taylor and Shine (Sean) Tu, Patent Law: An Open-Source Casebook (Entire Book), UC Hastings Research Paper Forthcoming (May 6, 2021)

David J. Kappos and Jonathan Barnett, Covid-19 Vaccine Highlights the Need for Balanced Patent Policy, Bloomberg Law (Mar. 16, 2021)

Douglas C. Lippoldt and Mark F. Schultz, An Opportunity for Leadership on Trade Secrets Protection in the Australia-UK Free Trade Agreement, Institute for International Trade (Mar. 25, 2021)

Adam Mossoff and Devlin Hartline, Google v. Oracle: A Copyrightability Decision Masquerading as Fair Use, Washington Legal Foundation (May 7, 2021)

Christopher M. Newman, Isn’t Infringement Ever Apparent?: Toward a Balanced Reading of §512 of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, George Mason Legal Studies Research Paper No. LS 21-03 (Mar. 5, 2021)

Kristen Osenga, If You’re Sailing Into the Headwinds, You Might Be Going In the Wrong Direction, RealClearMarkets (Apr. 20, 2021)

Kristen Osenga, Online Symposium: Prof. Osenga’s Top 2020 Federal Circuit Patent Decisions, FedCircuitBlog (Mar. 30, 2021)

Yogesh Pai, WTO IP waiver too simplistic: Global vaccine tech-transfer needs other strategies, CPIP Blog (Apr. 29, 2021) (Originally posted in the Express Pharma edition of the Indian Express, Apr. 28, 2021)

Jason Rantanen, Mark David Janis, and Ted M. Sichelman, Patent Law: An Open-Source Casebook (Chapter 7: Infringement) (Apr. 29, 2021)

Ryan Reynolds, Professors Balganesh and Menell on “The Curious Case of the Restatement of Copyright, CPIP Blog (Apr. 8, 2021)

Ryan Reynolds, Professor Justin Hughes on “Restating Copyright Law’s Originality Requirement, CPIP Blog (May 20, 2021)

Mark Schultz, The EU can put trust back into online commerce, The Brussels Times (Mar. 6, 2021)

Austin Shaffer, Artist Roundtable Presented by the Mason Sports & Entertainment Law Association and the Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic, CPIP Blog (May 5, 2021)

Liz Velander, Ninth Circuit Narrows Copyright Owner’s Ability to Receive Multiple Statutory Damages Awards, CPIP Blog (Mar. 17, 2021)

Liz Velander, Recap of the Supreme Court’s Google v. Oracle Opinion,“ CPIP Blog (Apr. 23, 2021)