Filed under Academia, Patent
IP Colloquium has released a new podcast interview with Chief Judge Randall Rader:
Intellectual Property Colloquium
A new audio program is ready for listening at www.ipcolloquium.com. The title and description are included below. As always, sincere thanks to our several partners: the UCLA School of Law; the economic consultancy Compass Lexecon; the computer technology company Microsoft; and the Kauffman Foundation.
Title: A Conversation with Chief Judge Randall Rader
Guest: Honorable Randall R. Rader (Chief Judge of the US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit).
Description: In this edition of the IP Colloquium, the Honorable Randall R. Rader, Chief Judge of the Federal Circuit, joins us to discuss a wide range of legal and policy issues related to the nation’s patent system. The conversation is a frank and open discussion, with exchanges about (among other things) the need for Federal Circuit judges to experience district court proceedings in order to meaningfully evaluate them, and the possibility that independent creation is in fact evidence of patent obviousness. UCLA Law Professor Doug Lichtman hosts.

Kal Raustiala, Professor of Law at UCLA, has released a new paper titled Knockoffs and Fashion Victims. Raustiala, in the paper, questions whether what he terms as the “property rights theory” underlying copyright is applicable in the field of fashion:
A different way to ask this question is: how do fashion designers remain so creative? To a large degree, the answer is that creativity in fashion thrives due to copying, not in spite of copying. Extensive copying accelerates the fashion cycle, rendering once-desired designs to the apparel scrapheap. And extensive copying allows trends, the cornerstone of contemporary fashion, to develop and spread.
In this way copying provides the functional equivalent of the striking new feature on a cellphone–the feature that makes a customer toss out a perfectly usable item in favor of a new one. In fashion, of course, the new design is not an improvement so much as it is a distinction. But this is a distinction with a difference: for many consumers, a key appeal of any garment is whether it sends the right kind of signal. As the garment’s design spreads via copying, the distinction offered by the design is lost—and the shopper is ready to buy a new design. The property rights theory of copyright has virtually no place in this story. And subsequent chapters will show, fashion is not alone in this regard.

Berkman Center accepting fellowship applications for 2011-2012 academic year
The Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University is now accepting applications for fellowships for the 2011-2012 academic year.
We are currently accepting applications through two distinct channels:
* 1) We are accepting applications for a specific fellowship opportunity: our academic fellowship for rising early-to-mid career academics.
* 2) We are accepting applications for fellowships through our annual open call.
The academic fellowship is intended for a rising scholar who will use the period of the fellowship to develop his/her teaching and research career and produce compelling, potentially paradigm-shifting contributions to our understanding of cyberspace. It is a stipended fellowship and residency in Cambridge, MA is required. The deadline for applications for the academic fellowship is 11:59 p.m. ET on November 15, 2010.
