Refresh

0 Hits

Sousa e Silva

The Ownership Problems of Overlaps in European Intellectual Property

Nomos,  2014, 116 Pages

ISBN 978-3-8487-1395-0


Our continuation service: You will receive new series titles or new editions automatically and without obligation to purchase. If you wish to do so, you can mark it in the shopping cart.

The work is part of the series Munich Intellectual Property Law Center – MIPLC (Volume 21)
29,00 € incl. VAT
Also available as eBook
0,00 € free of charge
Available
Add to shopping cart
Add to notepad
 Further options for registered users

englischIntellectual Property rights are expanding and, thus, overlapping more than ever before. This poses challenges to a system devised as comprising a set of isolated compartments, each with its defined purpose.

The diverging rules concerning ownership and entitlement can lead to different rights on the same object being owned by different persons. What happens then?

This question is addressed under European law, focusing on the existing corpus of EU primary and secondary legislation and jurisprudence and the national laws of France, Germany and the UK.

Five specific cases are considereded: trade marks and designs, trade marks and copyright, designs and copyright, data-base sui generis right and copyright and copyright and patents in the field of computer programs.

Some solutions to the problem, namely convergence of ownership rules, avoidance of overlaps, prevalence of the closest regime, abuse of rights, implied licences, and expanding copyright solutions by analogy, are analysed.