In the twenty-first century, it has become easy to break IP law accidentally. The challenges presented by orphan works, independent invention or IP trolls are merely examples of a much more fundamental problem: IP accidents. This book argues that IP law ought to govern accidental infringement much like tort law governs other types of accidents. In particular, the accidental infringer ought to be liable in IP law only when their conduct was negligent. The current strict liability approach to IP infringement was appropriate in the nineteenth century, when IP accidents were far less frequent. But in the Information Age, where accidents are increasingly common, efficiency, equity, and fairness support the reform of IP to a negligence regime. Patrick R. Goold provides the most coherent explanation of how property and tort interact within the field of IP, contributing to a clearer understanding of property and tort law and private law generally.
ISBN: | 9781108841481 |
Publication date: | 17th March 2022 |
Author: | Patrick Russell Goold |
Publisher: | Cambridge University Press |
Format: | Hardback |
Pagination: | 200 pages |
Series: | Cambridge Intellectual Property and Information Law |
Genres: |
Intellectual property law Comparative law |