Stanford Technology Law Review

The Stanford Technology Law Review (STLR) strives to present well-rounded analyses of the legal, business, and policy issues that arise at the intersection of intellectual property law, science and technology, and industry. STLR publishes exclusively online, providing timely coverage of emerging issues to its readership base of legal academics and practitioners. As of the Spring of 2015, all articles published by STLR are peer-reviewed prior to acceptance.

Latest Online

Bargaining Power and Patent Damages

J. Gregory Sidak

In patent-infringement litigation, if no established royalty for the patent in suit has emerged from multiple market transactions at a readily observable price, then the finder of fact needs to infer a reasonable royalty from the many factors identified in the Georgia-Pacific framework. The well-recognized problem with the Georgia-Pacific framework is that it poses many potentially relevant questions but does not say how the finder of fact should weight the answers. The case law offers no algorithm or decision tree for the finder of fact to follow.... Read more about Bargaining Power and Patent Damages

  • July 12, 2015
  • 19 Stan. Tech. L. Rev. 1

Volume 18, Issue 2

COPYRIGHT’S TECHNOLOGICAL INTERDEPENDENCIES.................................. 189 Clark D. Asay THE CRIMINAL COPYRIGHT GAP ................................................................... 247 Eldar Haber MISAPPROPRIATION AND THE MORALITY OF FREE-RIDING........................... 289 Michael E. Kenneally INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY INFRINGEMENT AS VANDALISM .......................... 331 Irina D. Manta & Robert E. Wagner FUNCTIONAL CLAIMING AND THE PATENT BALANCE.................................... 365... Read more about Volume 18, Issue 2

  • June 25, 2015
  • 18 Stan. Tech. L. Rev.