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Rita Matulionyte, The Law Applicable to Online Copyright Infringements int ALI and CLIP Proposals: A Rebalance of Interest Needed?, 2 (2011) JIPITEC 26 para 1.
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%0 Journal Article %T The Law Applicable to Online Copyright Infringements int ALI and CLIP Proposals: A Rebalance of Interest Needed? %A Matulionyte, Rita %J JIPITEC %D 2011 %V 2 %N 1 %@ 2190-3387 %F matulionyte2011 %X The article discusses the problems of applicable law to copyright infringements online. It firstly identifies the main problems related to the well established territoriality principle and the lex loci protectionis rules. Then; the discussion focuses on the "ubiquitous infringement" rule recently proposed by the American Law Institute (ALI) and the European Max Planck Group for Conflicts of Law and Intellectual Propoperty (CLIP). The author strongly welcomes a compromise between the territoriality and universality approaches suggested in respect of ubiquitous infringement cases. At the same time; the paper draws the attention that the interests of "good faith" online service providers (such as legal certainty and foreseeability) have been until now underestimated and invites to take these interests into account when merging the projects into a common international proposal. %L 340 %K ALI %K Applicable law %K CLIP %K Copyright %K Internet %K Territoriality %K Ubiquitous infringement %U http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:0009-29-29615 %P 26-36Download
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@Article{matulionyte2011, author = "Matulionyte, Rita", title = "The Law Applicable to Online Copyright Infringements int ALI and CLIP Proposals: A Rebalance of Interest Needed?", journal = "JIPITEC", year = "2011", volume = "2", number = "1", pages = "26--36", keywords = "ALI; Applicable law; CLIP; Copyright; Internet; Territoriality; Ubiquitous infringement", abstract = "The article discusses the problems of applicable law to copyright infringements online. It firstly identifies the main problems related to the well established territoriality principle and the lex loci protectionis rules. Then; the discussion focuses on the ``ubiquitous infringement'' rule recently proposed by the American Law Institute (ALI) and the European Max Planck Group for Conflicts of Law and Intellectual Propoperty (CLIP). The author strongly welcomes a compromise between the territoriality and universality approaches suggested in respect of ubiquitous infringement cases. At the same time; the paper draws the attention that the interests of ``good faith'' online service providers (such as legal certainty and foreseeability) have been until now underestimated and invites to take these interests into account when merging the projects into a common international proposal.", issn = "2190-3387", url = "http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:0009-29-29615" }Download
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TY - JOUR AU - Matulionyte, Rita PY - 2011 DA - 2011// TI - The Law Applicable to Online Copyright Infringements int ALI and CLIP Proposals: A Rebalance of Interest Needed? JO - JIPITEC SP - 26 EP - 36 VL - 2 IS - 1 KW - ALI KW - Applicable law KW - CLIP KW - Copyright KW - Internet KW - Territoriality KW - Ubiquitous infringement AB - The article discusses the problems of applicable law to copyright infringements online. It firstly identifies the main problems related to the well established territoriality principle and the lex loci protectionis rules. Then; the discussion focuses on the "ubiquitous infringement" rule recently proposed by the American Law Institute (ALI) and the European Max Planck Group for Conflicts of Law and Intellectual Propoperty (CLIP). The author strongly welcomes a compromise between the territoriality and universality approaches suggested in respect of ubiquitous infringement cases. At the same time; the paper draws the attention that the interests of "good faith" online service providers (such as legal certainty and foreseeability) have been until now underestimated and invites to take these interests into account when merging the projects into a common international proposal. SN - 2190-3387 UR - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:0009-29-29615 ID - matulionyte2011 ER -Download
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PT Journal AU Matulionyte, R TI The Law Applicable to Online Copyright Infringements int ALI and CLIP Proposals: A Rebalance of Interest Needed? SO JIPITEC PY 2011 BP 26 EP 36 VL 2 IS 1 DE ALI; Applicable law; CLIP; Copyright; Internet; Territoriality; Ubiquitous infringement AB The article discusses the problems of applicable law to copyright infringements online. It firstly identifies the main problems related to the well established territoriality principle and the lex loci protectionis rules. Then; the discussion focuses on the "ubiquitous infringement" rule recently proposed by the American Law Institute (ALI) and the European Max Planck Group for Conflicts of Law and Intellectual Propoperty (CLIP). The author strongly welcomes a compromise between the territoriality and universality approaches suggested in respect of ubiquitous infringement cases. At the same time; the paper draws the attention that the interests of "good faith" online service providers (such as legal certainty and foreseeability) have been until now underestimated and invites to take these interests into account when merging the projects into a common international proposal. ERDownload
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Full Metadata
Bibliographic Citation | Journal of intellectual property, information technology and electronic commerce law 2 (2011) 1 |
---|---|
Title |
The Law Applicable to Online Copyright Infringements int ALI and CLIP Proposals: A Rebalance of Interest Needed? (eng) |
Author | Rita Matulionyte |
Language | eng |
Abstract | The article discusses the problems of applicable law to copyright infringements online. It firstly identifies the main problems related to the well established territoriality principle and the lex loci protectionis rules. Then; the discussion focuses on the "ubiquitous infringement" rule recently proposed by the American Law Institute (ALI) and the European Max Planck Group for Conflicts of Law and Intellectual Propoperty (CLIP). The author strongly welcomes a compromise between the territoriality and universality approaches suggested in respect of ubiquitous infringement cases. At the same time; the paper draws the attention that the interests of "good faith" online service providers (such as legal certainty and foreseeability) have been until now underestimated and invites to take these interests into account when merging the projects into a common international proposal. |
Subject | ALI, Applicable law, CLIP, Copyright, Internet, Territoriality, Ubiquitous infringement |
DDC | 340 |
Rights | DPPL |
URN: | urn:nbn:de:0009-29-29615 |