This incisive Handbook offers novel theoretical and doctrinal insights alongside practical guidance on some of the most challenging issues in the field of artificial intelligence and intellectual property. Featuring all original contributions from a diverse group of international thought leaders, including top academics, judges, regulators and eminent practitioners, it offers timely perspectives and research on the relationship of AI to copyright, trademark, design, patent and trade secret law. The Handbook is divided into four thematic parts, beginning with topics that address the intersection of IP and AI broadly before focusing on issues associated with specific types of IP. Chapters tackle critical legal questions, from issues with protecting AI-generated output to the impact of AI on how trademarks are used, offering valuable lessons on technology regulation and how technological evolution will disrupt existing legal frameworks. Scholars and students of intellectual property law and its intersections with AI and related technologies will find this Handbook ’s cutting-edge contributions to be a crucial read. Its guidance on the practical legal implications of technological advances will also be of interest to IP practitioners, as well as policymakers and regulators. Provided by publisher.
Note
Includes index.
Formatted Contents Note
Part I: Multi-Subject 1 Artificial intelligence and intellectual property: an introduction; 2 The human cause; 3 Considering intellectual property law for embodied forms of artificial intelligence; 4 AI replication of musical styles points the way to an exclusive rights regime; 5 The elusive intellectual property protection of trained machine learning models: a European perspective; 6 An abject failure of intelligence: intellectual property and artificial intelligence Part II: Copyright And Related Rights 7 The AI–copyright challenge: tech-neutrality, authorship, and the public interest; 8 Four theories in search of an A(I)uthor; 9 Copyright law should stay true to itself in the age of artificial intelligence; 10 The protection of AI-generated pictures (photograph and painting) under copyright law; 11 Performers’ rights and artificial intelligence; 12 AIn’t it just software?; 13 Can artificial intelligence infringe copyright? Some reflections Part III: Trade Marks And Designs 14 Computational trademark infringement and adjudication; 15 Online shopping with artificial intelligence: what role for trade marks?; 16 Trademark law, AI-driven behavioral advertising, and the Digital Services Act: toward source and parameter transparency for consumers, brand owners, and competitors; 17 A quotidian revolution: artificial intelligence and trade mark law; 18 The impact of AI on designs law Part IV: Patents And Trade Secrets 19 Legal fictions and the corporation as an inventive artificial intelligence; 20 Economic reasons to recognise AI inventors; 21 Reverse engineering (by) artificial intelligence; 22 Trade secrets versus the AI explainability principle; 23 The inventive step requirement and the rise of the AI machines; 24 Trade secrecy, factual secrecy and the hype surrounding AI Index
Source of Description
Description based on print record.
Series
Research Handbooks in Intellectual Property Series.