Walt's Friend: Puzzle #46
"Stuff slung in debates"
As Justice Sonia Sotomayor noted during oral arguments, the right to sell a shirt is different from the right to be the only one who can sell that shirt.
As allegations of intellectual property theft swirl, a deeper look reveals a tale of phony numbers and twisted data.
As allegations of intellectual property theft swirl, a deeper look reveals a tale of phony numbers and twisted data.
How lax intellectual property rules created a nerd culture phenomenon
And a federal judge just said so.
"How small do you have to be for Nike not to care?"
The bill is broad enough to target a Saturday Night Live skit lampooning Trump, a comedic impression of Taylor Swift, or a weird ChatGPT-generated image of Ayn Rand.
Plus: Nuking the Hamptons, upcharging the autists, tearing down the statues, and more...
Even though only one very specific version of the character is free to use, it still represents a positive step for creative expression.
Nike should welcome the reinvention of their popular shoes.
When keeping cultural archives safe means stepping outside the law.
When keeping cultural archives safe means stepping outside the law
A listless, cynical wrap-up to a decade of chaotic superhero storytelling.
The case could have long-term implications for how broadly fair use can be applied.
Bonus: Calling someone a "nut" isn't libel.
Plus: the editors field a listener question on intellectual property.
These days, he may run for president. His politics have changed.
The indie artists suing Stable Diffusion may not realize it, but they're doing the Mouse's dirty work.
For 20 years, D&D has offered third-party publishers an open, royalty-free license to create new works using its game. A leaked revision would end all of that.
Nearly a century after author Arthur Conan Doyle's death, the character is finally free.
The company alleges the composers ignored multiple warnings to cease commercial production of the musical.
As pop culture icons enter the public domain, a strange new era of copyright begins.
Plus: Inflation eats up Americans' savings, copyright officials want to protect your fireworks photos, and more...
Despite the senator's clear culture war animus, there are things to like about his bill.
Plus: A short debate on intellectual property
A Santa Ana police officer is the latest official to use YouTube's copyright infringement algorithm as a means to evade accountability.
By blaming their reasoning on culture war grievances rather than the best interests of the law, the GOP risks undermining a completely defensible position.
It's the two Spider-Mans meme in $200 million movie form.
Patent lawyer Stephan Kinsella debates Law Professor Richard Epstein
Patent lawyer Stephan Kinsella debates law professor Richard Epstein
Once Upon a Time in Shaolin, formerly owned by Martin Shkreli, was auctioned off by the government and bought by the blockchain/art enthusiasts at PleasrDAO.
The deal appears to have accomplished none of the Trump administration's goals, from boosting domestic steel production to getting China to abide by international rules regarding intellectual property.
What's in a name? Money, apparently.
Rasta Imposta has a history of defending its "unique" banana costume design with copyright litigation.
Fretting over deficits and intellectual property will do no good and much harm.
Popular video game should prevail in lawsuit over its depiction of the infamous detective agency.
Should the law respect copyrights and patents?
When alt-right activists adopted this amphibian as their own, were they stealing a cartoonist's property or exercising free speech?
The Post Office must pay $3.5 million for using a "fresh-faced," "sexier" Statue of Liberty replica on a stamp.
The solution to government interference isn't more of it.
The pact is better without American influence-but now we won't enjoy the benefits.