Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2012
Abstract
Design patents are an area of intellectual property law focused entirely on the visual, unlike copyright, patent, trademark, trade secret, or the various sui generis protections that have occasionally been enacted for specific types of innovation. Judges and lawyers in general are highly uncomfortable with images, yet design patents force direct legal engagement with images. This short piece offers an outsider’s view of what design patent law has to say about the use of images as legal tools, why tests for design patent infringement are likely to stay unsatisfactory, and what lessons other fields of intellectual property, specifically copyright, might take from design patent.
Publication Citation
19 J. Intell. Prop. L. 409-426 (2012)
Scholarly Commons Citation
Tushnet, Rebecca, "The Eye Alone Is the Judge: Images and Design Patents" (2012). Georgetown Law Faculty Publications and Other Works. 1092.
https://scholarship.law.georgetown.edu/facpub/1092