Category: Artificial Intelligence

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Navigating the New Frontier: The Rise of U.S. Trade Secret Litigation in a Globalized Economy 

For many lawyers practicing outside the United States, intellectual property protection and risk are most often associated with patents, trademarks and copyrights. Trade secrets are frequently treated as the forgotten stepchild—associated with employment law and contracts rather than as an independent body of law. But since the passage of the Federal Defend Trade Secrets Act … Continue Reading

WHAT’S THE “USE”?: 

Missed Anthropic Perspectives & Mixed AI Meta-Phors Cloud Copyright Law   By James Flynn & Ariana Tagavi,* Epstein Becker Green  The evolution of generative artificial intelligence has prompted courts in two highly-publicized recent federal district court decisions to apply copyright law’s doctrine of fair use to the “training” and output of generative AI systems. We will … Continue Reading

New SAG-AFTRA Commercials Contract Is Now in Effect 

Authors: James Johnston, Samantha G. Rothaus, Jordan M. Thompson and Howard R. Weingrad.  SAG-AFTRA and the Joint Policy Committee (JPC) have reached agreement on a new Commercials Contract, which is now officially in effect. Notably, the deal was reached without a strike — a rare outcome in recent entertainment-related collective bargaining where disputes, particularly over … Continue Reading

Charting a Course on AI Policy: the U.S. Copyright Office Speaks! 

By Gregory J. Krabacher, Epstein Becker Green  Recently, the U.S. Copyright Office published the second of an intended three-part report entitled “Copyright and Artificial Intelligence.” Here are those three parts:   Collectively, this report – I’ll refer to it here as the “AI Report” –  is intended to provide the Copyright Office’s perspective on fundamental questions … Continue Reading

SAG-AFTRA vs. AI: Protecting Performers in the Digital Age

Authors: Samantha Rothaus, Howard Weingrad and Jordan Thompson The power and application of AI is growing exponentially. As is often the case with the introduction of revolutionary technologies, legislation at both the federal and state level has been slow to catch up. On a daily basis, industries are grappling with how to adapt, and how … Continue Reading

New Year’s Resolutions?: Intellectual Property Questions That May–Or May Not–Get Decided In 2025

As we head into a new year after a US election year, we are sure to see two things in the media, all kinds of articles on New Year’s Resolutions and all kinds of articles on what we can anticipate occurring in the inaugural year of the new administration.  So I thought that I would … Continue Reading
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