Readership: Legal practitioners working in intellectual property law, competition law and communications law worldwide; law firms, patent agencies, IT consultants, corporate legal and business development functions, policy makers, universities and law schools in the US and Europe. Academics and reference libraries in the UK and worldwide.
Ilkka Rahnasto, Vice President of IPR at Nokia Corporation, Finland
"The author makes good use of charts and diagrams to illustrate and explain some of the concepts explored in the book. For anyone interested in understanding some of the underpinnings for the approach to the protection of patents and copyright, this is a very worthwhile work." - International Business Lawyer
1: Introduction 2: How the tension between intellectual property protection and antitrust laws is balanced 2.1 Introduction 2.2 Supremacy of antitrust laws 2.3 Supremacy of intellectual property laws 2.4 Theory based on the scope of exclusive rights 2.5 Intellectual property rights as property 2.6 Cost-benefit theories 3: External effects and balancing theories 3.1 Introduction 3.2 Balance between intellectual property rights, competition and external effects in network-based value chain 4: External effects theory applied 4.1 Relevance of addressee/impact combination 4.2 Relevance of chosen action 4.3 Intellectual property and effects of technical design 4.4 Relevance of totality of circumstances 5: Fragmentation problem 5.1 Fragmentation and success of new products 5.2 Fragmentation problem introduced 5.3 The problem of anticommons in the communications industry 6: External effects of intellectual property rights in technology adoption 6.1 Tipping of scale 6.2 Technology adoption re-examined: standardization 7: Conclusions