AI Enforcement With CMI; Copyright Grant Termination and Estate Planning Tips

Intro

Music lawyer Tamera Bennett and TV lawyer Gordon Firemark discuss: Was “Over The Rainbow” copied; Was the script of “The Holdovers” copied; This month a “loyalty certificate” is original enough for copyright protection compared to the case we discussed in Episode 165; Legal strategies are shifting in AI cases toward removal of copyright management information; “Road House” remake is the target of a copyright grant termination notice; Link to chart of AI and IP lawsuits; Nickelback wins in Fifth circuit on alleged copyright infringement; Earth, Wind and Fire prevail in trademark lawsuit against tribute band; The band manager does not “use” the bands’ trademark; A look at force majeure litigation post-covid; Practice pointers on copyright grant terminations, loan-outs, trusts and more; NFT study completed by USCO and USPTO.

Episode Highlights

Practice Pointers on Copyright Grant Terminations, Loan-outs, Trusts and More

Resources:

Road House Dispute over Copyright Grant Termination Notice

Que Sera Sera Copyright Grant Termination Dispute Resolved by Court


AI and IP Corner: Copyright Management Causes of Action

Should Open AI and chatGPT be held liable for allegedly removing copyright management information from source/training materials?

Resources:

The Washington Post Examines AI Cases



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Tamera H. Bennett

Tamera H. Bennett is a wife, mom, lawyer, mediator, blogger, podcaster, and legal writer. For two decades she’s helped clients protect what they create by practicing trademark, copyright and entertainment law in Texas and Tennessee.

Tamera has co-hosted more than 85 episodes of the Entertainment Law Update Podcast since 2009. And, she’s been honored to write for BILLBOARD magazine and the TEXAS LAWYER.

In the summer of 2015, Tamera backpacked 100 miles over 10 days with her son's Boy Scout Troop. Tamera walked her first half-marathon in 2012 and walked the Cowtown Half Marathon in February 2016 and February 2017 with a PR each time. You can visit Tamera’s blog at createprotect.com and follow her on Twitter @tamerabennett.

http://www.tbennettlaw.com
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What’s Original Enough for Copyright Protection?