• Latest
    • AI
    • Careers
    • Copyright
    • Diversity & Inclusion
    • Events Videos
    • Law firm news
    • Trade secrets
  • In-house
  • Patents
  • Trademarks
  • Jurisdictions
    • Europe
    • Americas
    • Asia
    • Australasia
    • Africa
    • Unified Patent Court
  • Rankings
    • About Rankings
    • Practice Area Rankings
    • Diversity & Inclusion Top 100 2025
    • Leaders 2025
    • Directory
  • WIPR Insights
    • Magazines
    • IP services: Product walk-throughs
    • Whitepapers
    • Webinars
  • Events
    • Events schedule
  • About
  • Contact
  • Newsletter
  • Login
  • Subscribe
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Newsletter
  • Login


Request Trial
  • Home
  • Copyright
  • CITMA Conference: AI ownership will divide courts globally, say lawyers
shutterstock_678583375_peshkova
10 November 2020CopyrightMuireann Bolger

CITMA Conference: AI ownership will divide courts globally, say lawyers

The question of who owns works generated by artificial intelligence (AI) is set to divide the courts worldwide but is unlikely to lead to AI being granted a “legal personality”, leading lawyers have said.

Already registered?

Login to your account


If you don't have a login or your access has expired, you will need to purchase a subscription to gain access to this article, including all our online content.

For more information on individual annual subscriptions for full paid access and corporate subscription options please contact us.

To request a FREE 2-week trial subscription, please signup.
NOTE - this can take up to 48hrs to be approved.

Two Weeks Free Trial

For multi-user price options, or to check if your company has an existing subscription that we can add you to for FREE, please email Adrian Tapping at atapping@newtonmedia.co.uk


More on this story

Trademarks
CITMA 2019: EU directive brings big national changes
15 March 2019   The European Trademark Directive is set to ring major changes in some jurisdictions, while others are already more aligned with the new provisions, according to lawyers.
Trademarks
CITMA 2019: AI use in retail has implications for TMs
15 March 2019   The rise of artificial intelligence could remove human interaction from the retail process and create trademark law issues, the head of IP at US technology company International Business Machines has said.


Editor's picks

Who owns a name? Katy Perry, Estée Lauder and Jo Malone test rights
Trademarks
Who owns a name? Katy Perry, Estée Lauder and Jo Malone test rights
16 March 2026

Editor's picks

Trademarks
Who owns a name? Katy Perry, Estée Lauder and Jo Malone test rights
16 March 2026
Trademarks
INTA: ‘New normal’ for in-house counsel as budgets fall
13 March 2026
Patents
Market turbulence and AI tops agenda at Chicago event
6 March 2026
Trademarks
Louis Vuitton loses ‘Frankenstein products’ battle
26 February 2026
Trademarks
UK trademark filings leap but lawyers may not be celebrating
23 February 2026
Trademarks
Exclusive interview: ‘Oatly decision is an aid to brands, not a challenge’
18 February 2026

More articles

Britannica sues OpenAI over ‘cannibalising’ traffic
Who owns a name? Katy Perry, Estée Lauder and Jo Malone test rights
Murgitroyd appoints patents MD as it targets next phase of growth
Taylor Wessing boosts London practice with another RPC alumnus
INTA: ‘New normal’ for in-house counsel as budgets fall
All in a name: Why ‘George Orwell’ cannot be registered as a trademark
IP Europe appoints ex-Walt Disney policy and advocacy expert
When AI chooses: Trademarks and brand control in the agentic age

  • Home
  • News
  • Directory
  • About us
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Terms of Subscription

WIPR
Newton Media Ltd
Kingfisher House
21-23 Elmfield Road
BR1 1LT
United Kingdom

  • Twitter
  • Linkedin