@article{41935,
      recid = {41935},
      author = {Shipley, David E.},
      title = {All for Copyright Stand Up and Holler! Three Cheers for  Star Athletica and the U.S. Supreme Court's Perceived and  Imagined Separately Test},
      pages = {22 pages},
      abstract = {This article  discusses  the  potential  impact  of  the  Star  Athletica decision and the Court’s new two-part  test   for  separability.  The  first section  summarizes  how   product  shape  and  design  are  protected  under our  intellectual property laws, explains the preference for  copyright, and sets  forth  federal  policy  allowing  the   public  to  copy  products  that  our patent and copyright  laws leave in the public domain. It next provides an   overview  of  how  copyright  protection  for  the   artistic  features incorporated  in  useful  articles  evolved between the Supreme Court’s 1954  decision  in  Mazer  v.  Stein and  its  decision  in Star  Athletica in  2017. After   summarizing   the   majority,   concurring,    and   dissenting opinions  in Star  Athletica, the  article   applies  the  new  test  in  several difficult pre-Star  Athletica cases in order assess the decision’s practical  impact on a variety of useful articles.},
      url = {http://tind.wipo.int/record/41935},
}