Legal Blogs: Intellectual Property

Patent Blogs

Copyright Blogs

  • ©ollectanea (Sponsored by the University of Maryland's Center for Intellectual Property)
  • Copyrights & Campaigns ("This blog provides news and analysis of copyright, First Amendment, and related issues from a pro-copyright-owner perspective")
  • Creative Commons (Blog of Creative Commons, nonprofit organization founded by law professor Lawrence Lessig)
  • Digital Copyright Canada (Russell McOrmond coordinates this site with news on digital copyright issues in Canada)
  • Freedom to Tinker 
    (Hosted by Princeton's Center for Information Technology Policy, a research center that studies digital technologies in public life)
  • OnCopyright (News and commentary from Copyright Clearance Center) 

Trademark Blogs 

Cyberlaw/IT Blogs

  • Cyberlaw Cases ("The Top Pending Cyberlaw Cases") 
  • Deeplinks (Blog of the Electronic Frontier Foundation)
  • E-Commerce and Tech Law Blog ("Covers cyberlaw—intellectual property, contracts, jurisdiction, privacy and media law topics—with an emphasis on case developments")
  • Groklaw ("Legal news of interest to the free and open-source software community")
  • InternetCases.com ("Covering law and the internet since 2005")
  • John Palfrey (Professor of law at Harvard Law School and executive director of the Berkman Center for Internet & Society)
  • The Legal Satyricon ("Occasionally Irreverent Thoughts on Law, Liberty, Tech, and Politics") 
  • Madisonian.net (Group blog of law professors writing about law, technology, and society)
  • Privacy.org (Joint effort of the Electronic Privacy Information Center and Privacy International)
  • Public Knowledge  ("Washington, DC based public interest group working to defend your rights in the emerging digital culture") 
  • Stanford Center for Internet and Society ("People & Blogs") 
  • Technology & Marketing Law Blog (Blog of Eric Goldman, law professor at the Santa Clara University School of Law)
  • The Technology Liberation Front ("Tech policy blog dedicated to keeping politicians' hands off the 'net and everything else related to technology")

GW Law Portal