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3D Printing and Intellectual Property

SKU: 9781316605349
Regular price $67.95
Unit price
per
  • Author:
    OSBORN Lucas
  • ISBN:
    9781316605349
  • Publication Date:
    November 2019
  • Edition:
    1
  • Pages:
    242
  • Binding:
    Paperback
  • Publisher:
    Cambridge University Press
  • Country of Publication:
    United Kingdom
3D Printing and Intellectual Property
3D Printing and Intellectual Property

3D Printing and Intellectual Property

SKU: 9781316605349
Regular price $67.95
Unit price
per
  • Author:
    OSBORN Lucas
  • ISBN:
    9781316605349
  • Publication Date:
    November 2019
  • Edition:
    1
  • Pages:
    242
  • Binding:
    Paperback
  • Publisher:
    Cambridge University Press
  • Country of Publication:
    United Kingdom

Description

Intellectual property (IP) laws were drafted for tangible objects, but 3D printing technology, which digitises objects and offers manufacturing capacity to anyone, is disrupting these laws and their underlying policies. In this timely work, Lucas S. Osborn focuses on the novel issues raised for IP law by 3D printing for the major IP systems around the world. He specifically addresses how patent and design law must wrestle with protecting digital versions of inventions and policing individualised manufacturing, how trademark law must confront the dissociation of design from manufacturing, and how patent and copyright law must be reconciled when digital versions of primarily utilitarian objects are concerned. With an even hand and keen insight, Osborn offers an innovation-centered analysis of and balanced response to the disruption caused by 3D printing that should be read by nonexperts and experts alike. 

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  • Intellectual property (IP) laws were drafted for tangible objects, but 3D printing technology, which digitises objects and offers manufacturing capacity to anyone, is disrupting these laws and their underlying policies. In this timely work, Lucas S. Osborn focuses on the novel issues raised for IP law by 3D printing for the major IP systems around the world. He specifically addresses how patent and design law must wrestle with protecting digital versions of inventions and policing individualised manufacturing, how trademark law must confront the dissociation of design from manufacturing, and how patent and copyright law must be reconciled when digital versions of primarily utilitarian objects are concerned. With an even hand and keen insight, Osborn offers an innovation-centered analysis of and balanced response to the disruption caused by 3D printing that should be read by nonexperts and experts alike. 

Intellectual property (IP) laws were drafted for tangible objects, but 3D printing technology, which digitises objects and offers manufacturing capacity to anyone, is disrupting these laws and their underlying policies. In this timely work, Lucas S. Osborn focuses on the novel issues raised for IP law by 3D printing for the major IP systems around the world. He specifically addresses how patent and design law must wrestle with protecting digital versions of inventions and policing individualised manufacturing, how trademark law must confront the dissociation of design from manufacturing, and how patent and copyright law must be reconciled when digital versions of primarily utilitarian objects are concerned. With an even hand and keen insight, Osborn offers an innovation-centered analysis of and balanced response to the disruption caused by 3D printing that should be read by nonexperts and experts alike.