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Edited Legal Collections Data |
Book Title: 3D Printing and Beyond
Editor(s): Mendis, Dinusha; Lemley, Mark; Rimmer, Matthew
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing
ISBN: 9781786434043
Section Title: Contents
Number of pages: 2
Extract:
Contents List of contributors Acknowledgements Introduction From the Maker Movement to the 3D printing era: opportunities and
challenges Dinusha Mendis, Mark Lemley and Matthew Rimmer 1. IP in a world without scarcity Mark Lemley PART I UNITED KINGDOM vii
ix 1 30
2. `Back to the future'? From engravings to 3D printing implications for UK copyright law 56 Dinusha Mendis 3. Design rights
and 3D printing in the UK: balancing innovation and creativity in a (dis)harmonised and fragmented legal framework 77 Thomas Margoni
4. Digital trade mark infringement and 3D printing implications: what does the future hold? 99 Dukki Hong and Simon Bradshaw 5. 3D
printing and patent law a UK perspective: apt and ready? 115 Marc D. Mimler 6. Transformative technologies and responsive legal
scholarship 137 Roger Brownsword PART II UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 159
7. 3D printing and US copyright law: implications for software, enforcement and business strategies Peter S. Menell and Ryan Vacca
v
vi
3D printing and beyond
8. Integrating a classic tool for a modern challenge: US design patents implications for 3D printing Elizabeth Ferrill, Robert MacKichan,
Christopher McKinley and Kelly Horn 9. How 3D printing disrupts trade dress protection and resurrects the need for source and quality
assurance Deven Desai 10. Remedies for digital patent infringement: a perspective from the USA Timothy Holbrook 11. How democratized
production challenges society's ability to regulate Deven Desai PART III AUSTRALIA
185
203
217
234
12. Makers Empire: Australian copyright law, 3D printing and the `Ideas ...
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/ELECD/2019/250.html