Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Berkeley Technology Law Journal
Abstract
The Copyright Principles Project (CPP), whose Report appears below, was formed in 2007 out of a collective sense among its members that although copyright law today works reasonably well in some domains, it can be improved and should be refined in light of dramatic technological advances. The twenty people who joined the CPP have various kinds of expertise and experience with copyright law and policy. Among us are law professors, lawyers from private practice, and lawyers for copyright industry firms. The goal of the CPP was to explore whether it was possible to reach some consensus about how current copyright law could be improved and how the law’s current problems could be mitigated.
First Page
1175
Volume
25
Publication Date
2010
Recommended Citation
Pamela Samuelson, Christopher A. Baumgarten, Michael W. Carroll, Julie E. Cohen, Troy Dow, Brian Fitzgerald, Laura Gasaway, Daniel Gervais, Terry Ilardi, Jessica Litman, Lydia P. Loren, Glynn Lunney, Tyler Ochoa, R. A. Reese, Jule Sigall, Kate Spelman, Christopher J. Sprigman, Michael Traynor, Tara Wheatland & Jeremy Williams,
The Copyright Principles Project: Directions for Reform,
25
Berkeley Technology Law Journal
1175
(2010).
Available at:
https://gretchen.law.nyu.edu/fac-articles/1107
