2022-04-21T09:40:41 n33899

3D Printing Intellectual Property Litigation 2020

Viewed: 1026

This project will provide guidance for industry and policy-makers in respect of intellectual property, 3D Printing, and innovation policy. It will consider the evolution of 3D printing, and examine its implications for the creative industries, branding and marketing, manufacturing and robotics, clean technologies, health-care, and the digital economy. The study will examine how 3D printing will disrupt key regimes of intellectual property – such as copyright law, designs law, trade mark law, patent law, and confidential information. As well as providing practical advice in respect of intellectual property management and commercialisation, this study will offer policy recommendations in respect of domestic and international law reform.

Geographical area of data collection

text
This legal database includes results from a range of jurisdictions - including India, China, Japan, South Korea, Singapore, the European Union, Germany, the United States, and Brazil.

Research areas

Patent landscapes
Patent analytics
Patent litigation
3d printing
Intellectual property
Additive manufacturing
Patent law

Cite this collection

Rimmer, Matthew; Darts-IP; (2022): 3D Printing Intellectual Property Litigation 2020. Queensland University of Technology. (Text) https://doi.org/10.25912/RDF_1650498035995

Data file types

Legal Database

Licence


Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 (CC-BY-NC)
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/

Copyright

© Queensland University of Technology and Darts IP, 2022.

Dates of data collection

From 2020-07-16 to 2020-07-16

Connections

Has chief investigator
Matthew Rimmer  (Researcher)

Contacts

Name: Professor Matthew Rimmer
Phone: +61731381599

Other

Date record created:
2022-03-21T15:14:48
Date record modified:
2022-04-21T09:40:41
Record status:
Published - Open Access