Artwork for podcast Centre for Intellectual Property and Information Law (CIPIL) Podcast
'Copyright in Fictional Characters and the Parody and Pastiche Defences': CIPIL Evening seminar (audio)
Episode 1499th February 2024 • Centre for Intellectual Property and Information Law (CIPIL) Podcast • CIPIL
00:00:00 00:55:02

Share Episode

Shownotes

Speaker: Thomas St Quintin, Hogarth Chambers

Abstract: Lessons from the decision of the IPEC in Shazam v Only Fools the Dining Experience, and cases referred to in that decision, addressing the findings that copyright can subsist in fictional characters (and the factors that the court relied upon in reaching that conclusion), and the defences of fair dealing for the purposes of parody and pastiche.

Biography: Thomas St Quintin is a barrister at Hogarth Chambers. He specialises in intellectual property, media and entertainment. He has been instructed in cases in the Court of Justice of the European Union and the General Court, and has appeared as the sole or lead advocate in each of the Supreme Court, Court of Appeal, High Court, Intellectual Property Enterprise Court, and in the UKIPO. His practice covers all areas of IP law, and is fairly evenly split between patents, trade marks, copyright, designs and confidential information cases (both technical and those involving privacy). He is a co-author of the Modern Law of Trade Marks, of Intellectual Property in Europe, and is a contributor to Copinger and Skone-James on Copyright.


For more information see:


https://www.cipil.law.cam.ac.uk/seminars-and-events/cipil-seminars


This entry provides an audio source for iTunes.

Links

Chapters

Video

More from YouTube