Hot! Court Rules on Geographical Interpretation of Owners’ Rights

031313_Textbook_Enokson

The Supreme Court has ruled on a landmark case concerning the re-sale of textbooks in the U.S., which affects the “first sale” of books. The first sale doctrine in the U.S. Copyright Act allows people to resell the copyrighted works they’ve bought. In the case Kirtsaeng v. Wiley, SCOTUS ruled that “if you bought it, you own it,” regardless of the country it was bought in.

The case was filed by textbook publisher Wiley, who claimed that the first sale doctrine only applied to works published in the U.S. The defendant, Supap Kirtsaeng, was ” infringing its copyright by purchasing books at a reduced rate in his native Thailand and selling them below list price in the States.”

Thailand Trademark Lawyer

International Patent & Trademark Law Firm with Thai and American Trademark Attorneys

SCOTUS rejected Wiley’s claim, stating that the first sale doctrine has no “geographical interpretation,” and applies to works bought anywhere in or outside the U.S. What’s considered is whether the “copyright owner authorized the manufacture of the copy.”

Read the full article here.

 

Related articles: US Copyright Group Recommends Thailand’s Addition to “Watch List”

Related texts: Thailand Trademark Act

US Digital Millienium Copyright Law

Major Issues in the Thai Patent System

 

Flickr photo courtesy of Enokson

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Weekly Reload Bonus - Neon 54 casino! Cógaslann ar líne Clonaslee Pharmacy leis na praghsanna is fearr in Éirinn