
doi: 10.2139/ssrn.573881
In June 2004, the Lancome opinion from the Netherlands held that perfume compositions are copyrightable. The thesis of this paper is that the Dutch Court's approach runs afoul of basic copyright principles. Protecting scents instead would be relatively novel, but hardly radical, and necessary adaptations to copyright law would be modest. The paper nevertheless concludes that, lacking evidence of need, judges should not be quick to expand copyright law and should await legislative action.[An English translation of the Dutch opinion by Annemarie Louise Margot (Dooijes) Field, the author's daughter-in-law, follows at 31.]
copyrights, Comparative and Foreign Law, fragrances, scents, compositions, Intellectual Property Law, Law, perfumes
copyrights, Comparative and Foreign Law, fragrances, scents, compositions, Intellectual Property Law, Law, perfumes
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