25.05.2012: Social media platforms allow users to create and join in many overlapping communities, and to contribute content. While some content uploaded by users is original, other content has been appropriated from others, and its use may be characterized as "tribute," "homage," "parody," "fair use" or "infringement."
A significant motivation for users to upload, link and repost appropriated content is to declare an affinity for a product or service, and this is widely encouraged not only by the social media platforms themselves, but also the content providers. This is a distinct change from the strict usage guidelines that owners of trademarks traditionally followed and enforced, and opens up many possibilities for marks to be positioned together with marks owned by others, or used in ways that the trademark owner would not have approved in the past.
How should trademark law respond when consumers, not mark owners, have significant control over the appearance, positioning, affiliation and usage of the marks? Are trademark owners losing control of their proprietary rights? Can the traditional rationale underlying trademark law adapt to this more democratized world of usage?
im RW 2 des Fachbereichs Rechts- und Wirtschaftswissenschaften der JGU
Begrüßung
Professor Dr. Udo Fink
stellvertretender Direktor des Mainzer Medieninstituts
Podiumsdiskussion
Professor Barton Selden
Attorney; Adjunct Professor, Golden Gate University School of Law, San Francisco
Götz M. Schneider-Rothhaar
Rechtsanwalt, Mitglied IAEL – International Association of Entertainment Lawyers, Frankfurt
Moderation
Dr. Jan Oster, LL.M.
Rechtsanwalt, DAAD Lecturer in Law, King's College London
Kooperationspartner
Weiterführende Links
» Website des Mainzer Medieninstituts