This article traces the development of copyright law in commercial prints and labels, looking at the history of the 1874 Act which placed registration of copyrights in the Patent Office (the "unwanted" copyrights because the Library of Congress had no desire for them), as well as the two Supreme Court cases which dealt with this act - Higgins v. Keuffel and Bleistein v. Donaldson Lithographing [concerning the image at left]. In so doing the development of the scope of copyright law in both the constitutional and normative senses is addressed, specifically the importance of the preamble to the intellectual property clause as a substantive limit of Congressional legislation in the nineteenth century. Statistics are also included, demonstrating the development and use of this copyright law.Hat tip: Cohen, et al., Copyright in a Global Information Economy
Friday, November 20, 2009
Rosen on Unwanted Copyrights
Zvi S. Rosen, a member of the New York Bar, has posted The Unwanted Copyrights: Higgins, Bleistein, and Commercial Prints & Labels 1874-1940. Here’s the abstract: