Found 13 relevant results in 2.59s where lecturer="Stefan Bechtold"
This course introduces students to societal perspectives on the artificial intelligence revolution. Discussing important contributions from machine learning and data science, the course explores their legal, economic, ethical, and political implications in the past, present, and future.
This course examines and critiques the design of the Internet, with a focus on the connection between the engineering features and principles of the network and the legal, economic, and political concerns which have followed its evolution.
Introduction to registration procedures around the world; IP searching; EPC procedure, EPC claim drafting; patentability under the EPC with a focus on novelty and inventive step issues; EPC and trademark opposition.
This course starts with a broad conceptual and historical perspective on technological and scientific innovation, and then focuses on concepts, theories, and methods for policy analysis as well as their application to policy questions in a variety of issue areas.
U.S. and PCT applications; EPC - U.S. claim drafting compared.
Comparative overview of legal systems; fundamentals of contracts, torts and corporation law; basics of constitutional and administrative law; private international law issues; enforcement framework;survey of IP treaties and IP harmonization reforms, with a focus on TRIPS
This interdisciplinary course explores how generative Artificial Intelligence builds upon and clashes with copyright, contract, privacy, and competition law.
Territoriality of patent protection, especially regarding parallel imports; duration of patents; substantive scope of patents; patent enforcement; patent litigation in Germany and Switzerland; design and trademark litigation in Europe; IP litigation in Germany, France and the UK.
The course introduces students to the basics of the intellectual property system and of innovation policy. Areas covered include patent, copyright, trademark, design, know-how protection, open source, and technology transfer. The course looks at Swiss, European, U.S. and international law and uses examples from a broad range of technologies. Insights can be used in academia, industry or start-ups.
Students acquire the contextual knowledge for analyzing public policies. They learn why and how public policies and laws are developed, designed, and implemented at national and international levels, and what challenges arise in this regard.
This is an add-on module to the course: 860-0001-00L. It focuses on students writing an essay on an issue covered by the main course 860-0001-00L.
This series is a joint project by ETH Zurich and the Universities of St. Gallen and Zurich. It provides an overview of interdisciplinary research on intellectual property, innovation, antitrust, privacy & technology policy. Scholars from law, economics, management and related fields present their current research. All speakers are internationally well-known experts from Europe, the U.S. & beyond.
This workshop and lecture series is a joint project by the ETH Zurich and the University of Zurich. It provides an overview of current interdiscplinary research on intellectual property, innovation and antitrust policy. Legal, economics, and psychology scholars will give a lecture and/or present their current research. All speakers are internationally well-known experts from Europe and the U.S.