Live Webinar
Date: Wednesday, October 24, 2012
Time: 1:00 - 2:15 PM ET
World Congres is proud to announce IP in Entertainment Webinar: Intellectual Property Disputes within TV and Digital Distribution, to be held on Wednesday, October 24, 2012 at 1 pm EST.
This webinar addresses key issues and uncovers the latest developments for in-house and outside counsel's who manage today's increasingly complex regulation of intellectual property rights in the new media and entertainment television and digital distribution industry. Leading industry experts address the current intellectual property issues relating to IP disputes in television and digital distribution and the future of the business, how to distribute content and a primer on the copyright rules relating to digital distribution platforms, recent developments in copyright law, what content you can distribute, and the top entertainment litigation cases and what they mean for the future.
This is a must attend event for lawyers and entertainment industry professionals who need to know how IP rights will affect their next transaction!
Key Reasons to Attend:
- Identifying current IP issues relating to IP disputes in television and digital distribution
- Discussing legal developments and pending cases relating to digital distribution
- Addressing recent developments in copyright law as they apply to the digital distribution of various types of content, including:
- Over-the-air broadcast content (e.g., Aereo);
- Cable content (e.g., Cablevision)
- User-generated content (e.g., Viacom v. YouTube); and
- Digital streams of physical media (e.g., WTV Systems (Zediva))
- Understanding what content you can distribute
- Exploring the top entertainment litigation cases and what they mean for the future
- Understanding recent cases from the media and entertainment trenches, including:
- Celebrity consent to red carpet photos
- Errors in nightly news stories
- Video games score First Amendment protection
- Cop ride-alongs and the First Amendment
- "That's my show!"- idea-submission cases
- Learning the right to tell the story versus the right to use the photo