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ANTITRUST AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY

Title
ANTITRUST AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
Author
R. Hewitt Pate, Acting Assistant Attorney General, Antitrust Division, U.S. Department of Justice
Date
3/11/2015
(Original Publish Date: 2003)
Abstract
Many observers, particularly in the antitrust community, contend there is a tension between antitrust and intellectual property, arguing that the antitrust laws seek to eliminate monopolies and encourage competition, while the intellectual property laws reward creators and inventors with a limited monopoly. Some suggest that there is a need for an expansion of antitrust that would place severe limits on the enjoyment of intellectual property rights. They say that courts afford undue weight to intellectual property protections in the balancing of the two regimes.
Link
Full Text (PDF) from Department of Justice
Technical Areas
  • Antitrust (see also "Economics")
  • Antitrust (see also "Litigation and Legal Issues")
  • Economics
  • Intellectual Property Rights (IPR)
  • Intellectual Property Rights (see also separate category of the same name)
  • IPR Policies (see also Litigation and Legal Issues)
  • Litigation & Legal Issues
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