On the one hand, the movie title clearly capitalizes on the similarity to the Potter name, but taken as a whole, it is not likely to leave anybody in doubt about whether it is another in the Potter series. It should be laughed out of court.
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current posts | more recent posts | earlier posts My name is Hari Puttar; Don't confuse with the real Harry Potter
The Harry Potter intellectual monopoly and its billionaires continue to try to extract more money from us consumers or its entertainment competitors, according to this story in the New York Times link here. An Indian film company has produced a film entitled "Hari Puttar: A Comedy of Terrors," about "a 10-year-old boy who moves to Britain and becomes involved in a series of adventures." It is now being sued by Warner Brothers for having a title "too similar to that of the Harry Potter series."
On the one hand, the movie title clearly capitalizes on the similarity to the Potter name, but taken as a whole, it is not likely to leave anybody in doubt about whether it is another in the Potter series. It should be laughed out of court. [Posted at 08/26/2008 02:29 PM by John Bennett on IP as a Joke Aharonian on Patent Trolls -- The Invalid Presumption of Patent Legitimacy My comment posted on this Patently-O blog post: Greg Aharonian Discussed the WSJ's "Idiotic Article on Patent Tr-lls"
Aharonian writes: "Worse, this paragraph completely betrays free markets (something the Journal is glad to do when it is in the interests of its big company buddies), because it forgets the fact that a patent is an asset created by the government in exchange for an inventor's public disclosure of a new and useful invention. When the asset is so created, there is absolutely nothing freakin wrong with people doing with patents what they do with all other financial assets - buying, selling and exploiting them. To attack this practice is to attack free market economics." In a sense, I agree with Aharonian: IF patents are a legitimate property right, then there is nothing wrong with using them. And Aharonian is right that there is nothing any worse about "trolls" than any normal patent holder. I have noted as much elsewhere: Patent Trolls and Empirical Thinking ("patent law simply does not require inventors to make or produce their inventions. And to attack "patent trolls" as somehow worse than those who do is confused"); The Coming Software Patent Apocalypse ("given a patent system, there's nothing wrong with patent trolls. It's a natural outcome and use of the system. Those who favor the system should stop whining about its predictable results"); Patent Law: Baby Steps ("One of their concerns [of the "Coalition for Patent Fairness" members] is "patent trolls - companies that exist primarily to make money from patents through litigation instead of commercialization"--but as I've noted, the hostility against patent trolls is misplaced. They are no different than any other patentee who takes advantage of the corrrupt and unjust patent system."). But in another sense, I disagree with Aharonian, because it is not true that patents are a legitimate property right. In fact, they are at odds with genuine property rightss. (See my Against Intellectual Property; and Intellectual Property and the Support of the State). To expect the welfare-warfare state--which taxes, regulates, murders, invades, bombs, hampers, lies, steals, and jails, which impoverishes us and hampers the economy, which penalizes innocent behavior and wastes trillions of dollars--to expect this agency to "create" legitimate property rights or to add "wealth" to the economy--and by setting up a government bureaucracy to grant monopolies to applicants, under the oversight of the federal courts--is naive and confused beyond belief. [Posted at 08/25/2008 08:32 AM by Stephan Kinsella on Is IP Property Is Disney losing its copyright on Mickey Mouse? The Los Angeles Times reports that the first Mickey Mouse cartoons have ambiguous copyright claims, listing two other potential claimants between "Disney" and the word "copyright". Under interpretation of the law at the time, this does not constitute a proper copyright claim.
Given that previous copyright rulings against Disney were unsuccessful on the basis of the existence of previous copyright claims, and these claims now appear not to be valid, this is significant news to one of the biggest beneficiaries of copyright laws. [Posted at 08/23/2008 10:11 AM by Christian Zimmermann on Copyright IP as bad karma![]() [Posted at 08/23/2008 08:03 AM by John Bennett on IP as a Joke Anti-IP Book Sales Prove Their Own Thesis As noted previously, both my and Boldrin & Levine's recent anti-IP books are selling well on Amazon--despite being offered for free online.
Jeff Tucker makes a similar observation on the Mises blog: Kinsella Vindicated [Posted at 08/22/2008 02:50 PM by Stephan Kinsella on Copyright HOLY FARGLESNOT!!!![]() [Posted at 08/22/2008 10:57 AM by John Bennett on IP as a Joke The Next Generation of P2P file sharing? Not only faster - but it might do away with the argument that file sharing networks need to be shut down because they use a disproportionate amount of the broadband network that slows the whole system down.
Details here. [Posted at 08/21/2008 05:12 PM by Justin Levine on Was Napster Right? Just in case Joe Biden turns out to be Obama's pick for VP.... Wired has a primer on Biden's views relating to IP.
Not good news. But then again, few Congressional leaders offer much in terms of better alternatives. (Sigh) [Posted at 08/21/2008 05:06 PM by Justin Levine on Politics and IP America's Musical Heritage In Danger Of Being Lost? There are plenty of sad things to note about this story about the world's largest remaining vinyl records collection. But the one thing that really caught my attention was the curator's claim that less than 20% of the collection is available on CD.
Most people at this site know what has to happen to make sure that copies remain available in the future... [Posted at 08/21/2008 04:16 PM by Justin Levine on Was Napster Right? Brainstorming![]() [Posted at 08/21/2008 08:16 AM by David K. Levine on John Bennet |
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