Copyright Exhaustion Rationales and Used Software: A Law and Economics Approach to Oracle v. UsedSoft
Data(s) |
02/01/2014
31/12/2013
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Resumo |
This article aims to provide courts and policymakers with an analytical framework that, building upon the traditional rationales of IP exhaustion doctrine, identifies factors which advocate for a modulation or flexibilization of the role of exhaustion in copyright law. Factors include (i) the personal features of acquirers of copies of copyrighted works, distinguishing between consumers and commercial users; (ii) whether post-sale restrictions have been adequately communicated to acquirers and have been agreed in the contract or license; (iii) the degree of complexity of the acquired goods and their prospects of productive uses and interoperability; (iv) the role of other exclusive rights in providing rightholders with indirect control over uses of the copies in the aftermarket; (v) the impact of post-sale restraints in preventing opportunism in long-term contracts and in reducing deadweight losses created by IP pricing; and (vi) the temporal scope of post-sale restraints. After setting out this analytical framework, the ECJ Judgement in Oracle v. UsedSoft is discussed. |
Identificador |
urn:nbn:de:0009-29-38421 |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Direitos |
DPPL |
Fonte |
jipitec ; 4 , 3 |
Palavras-Chave | #340 #http://dewey.info/class/340/ #Exhaustion #Information Costs #Law and Economics #Ownership Rationale |