Description

Book Synopsis
Refusal to license intellectual property rights (IPRs) are an ongoing topic within the enforcement of Article 102 TFEU (ex Article 82 EC). Nevertheless, so far an economic founded instrument to analyse these cases is missing. To close this gap, the Innovation Effects and Appropriability Test will be developed throughout this book. Innovation research has been showing that firms rely on more appropriation mechanisms than only IPRs. The availability of these alternative instruments depends on the involved technologies, the kind of innovation, the concerned industry and so on. Consequently, it is in the centre of the Innovation Effects and Appropriability Test to analyse whether the dominant firm could rely on other appropriation instruments to protect its innovation and to recoup its investments in R&D.

Table of Contents
Contents: Refusal to license – Intellectual property rights – European caselaw – Microsoft case – Relation of competition policy and intellectual property rights – Economics of intellectual property rights – Innovation research – Appropriability conditions – Innovation effects and Appropriability test.

Refusal to License- Intellectual Property Rights

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A Hardback by Claudia Schmidt

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    View other formats and editions of Refusal to License- Intellectual Property Rights by Claudia Schmidt

    Publisher: Peter Lang AG
    Publication Date: 06/01/2011
    ISBN13: 9783631610015, 978-3631610015
    ISBN10: 3631610017

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Refusal to license intellectual property rights (IPRs) are an ongoing topic within the enforcement of Article 102 TFEU (ex Article 82 EC). Nevertheless, so far an economic founded instrument to analyse these cases is missing. To close this gap, the Innovation Effects and Appropriability Test will be developed throughout this book. Innovation research has been showing that firms rely on more appropriation mechanisms than only IPRs. The availability of these alternative instruments depends on the involved technologies, the kind of innovation, the concerned industry and so on. Consequently, it is in the centre of the Innovation Effects and Appropriability Test to analyse whether the dominant firm could rely on other appropriation instruments to protect its innovation and to recoup its investments in R&D.

    Table of Contents
    Contents: Refusal to license – Intellectual property rights – European caselaw – Microsoft case – Relation of competition policy and intellectual property rights – Economics of intellectual property rights – Innovation research – Appropriability conditions – Innovation effects and Appropriability test.

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