In the INS case, the Supreme Court held that a news agency may enjoin third parties from copying its news stories while these are still ‘fresh’. Chronopoulos seeks to clarify the heavily debated doctrinal issues that have since arisen as to: the exact legal nature of the recognized entitlement; whether the Supreme Court sought to establish a principle of general application; and the extent to which state claims to protect valuable intangibles under a common-law theory of liability survive federal preemption. Chronopoulos argues that the protection offered at state level should not be confined to the availability of a narrow tort of unfair competition protecting highly time-sensitive subject matter against parasitic appropriation by direct competitors; rather, the application of the misappropriation doctrine is bound to generate judge-made property rights in intangibles with time value.
Apostolos G Chronopoulos, Judicially Crafted Property Rights in Valuable Intangibles: An Analysis of the INS Doctrine. 2024, Edward Elgar, 384pp, ISBN: 978 1 03533 597 8.
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