Intellectual Property in New Zealand: A User's Guide to Copyright, Patents, Trade Marks and More
By (Author) Paul Sumpter
Auckland University Press
Auckland University Press
1st July 2015
New Zealand
General
Non Fiction
346.93048
Paperback
160
A handy introduction to copyright, patents, trade marks and other key elements of IP. From small businesses filing patents to designers protecting their copyright, from a gas station seeing its logo ripped off by a competitor to a blogger posting photographs, New Zealanders encounter intellectual property every day. Sometimes they need to call a lawyer. But at other times, they just need to get a clear understanding of what they can and can't do in order to go about their business. This handy little book, written by one of the country's leading intellectual property lawyers and author of the major texts on the subject, is an accessible introduction to patents, trade marks, copyright and other key elements of IP. Aimed at non-lawyers looking to understand basic concepts and key issues, the book will be a guiding light through the often murky waters of intellectual property law. What can be patented Do you have to register a trade mark How does copyright work on the internet Tackling common questions in concise and accessible prose, Intellectual Property in New Zealand: A User's Guide should sit on the desk of entrepreneurs and designers, journalists, inventors and many more across New Zealand. Costing about three minutes of a lawyer's time, it's a book worth owning.
Paul Sumpter is senior academic in law at the University of Auckland, a consultant with Chapman Tripp, and a member of the Copyright Tribunal of New Zealand. He is the author of Intellectual Property Principles in Practice (CCH NZ, 2006), Trade Marks in Practice (LexisNexis, second edition, 2011) and a co-author of Copyright and Design (LexisNexis, 2013).