Vol. 18, Issue 1, 2010January 01, 2010 EDT
There is No “I” in NCAA: Why College Sports Video Games Do Not Violate Colelge Athletes’ Rights of Publicity Such to Entitle Thme to Compensation for Use of Their Likenesses
There is No “I” in NCAA: Why College Sports Video Games Do Not Violate Colelge Athletes’ Rights of Publicity Such to Entitle Thme to Compensation for Use of Their Likenesses
Mary Catherine Moore,
NCAAright of publicitylikenessvideo gameamateurism bylawslikeness licensing litigationRogers Testtransformative testKirby v. Sega of America Inc.Abdul-Jabbar v. General Motors Corp.College Licensing CompanyCLC
Mary Catherine Moore, There Is No “I” in NCAA: Why College Sports Video Games Do Not Violate Colelge Athletes’ Rights of Publicity Such to Entitle Thme to Compensation for Use of Their Likenesses, 18 Journal of Intellectual Property 269 (2010).