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    1. Of songs and chairs, or why do we need a public domain - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Thus we give extra rights — rights that come with a social cost — to people who create intangible goods, and we call those (...)

    2. Loans and Bonds - Ad*Access Research Guide - LibGuides at Duke University

      Production rates were hitting new peaks, while availability of goods was low and consumer earning rates were high.

    3. The quest for "super-property" - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Omega case from a few years ago that also dealt with unauthorized importation of copyrighted goods. First, it is interesting that that (...)

    4. First sale goes to the Supreme Court, again - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      If rights holders want to practice price discrimination in different countries, they should rely on the cost of exporting to enforce (...)

    5. Getting first sale wrong - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      In last week’s ruling they decided that first sale did not apply even when the work manufactured abroad was sold in the U.S. with the (...)

    6. 1946-1955 - Ad*Access Research Guide - LibGuides at Duke University

      By the early 1980s, over 90% of televisions sold were color. September 4, 1951. The first transcontinental television broadcast is (...)

    7. Peterson Collection of Advertising Cookbooks - Emergence of Advertising in America Research Guide -

      Rapid advances in technology made it possible to mass-produce more food products and to create time-saving prepared foods sold in (...)

    8. Holiday Gift Guide for Lawyers and Law Students

      When shopping online, be mindful to calculate the cost of sales tax (if applicable) and shipping to your purchase.

    9. https://sites.fuqua.duke.edu/fordlibrary/page/36/

      Or are there certain moral and civic goods that markets do not honor and money cannot buy.” 

    10. Scholarly Communications @ Duke - Page 14 of 58 - Discussions about the changing world of scholarly

      The one that caught my attention is “Open Access: The true cost of science publishing.”  The author, Richard Van Noorden, provides a (...)

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