As the relationship between copyright and the internet continues to develop and technical distinctions are increasingly cast aside for more practical perspectives, new licensing opportunities are becoming available for content owners and creators. Two recent developments concerning online service providers' use of so-called "inline linking" and those providers' potential liability for publicly displaying unlicensed content from third-party websites open the way for this new vein of potential income.

In a recent article for IP Watchdog, counsel Ross Bagley explores the licensing opportunities and risks for content providers in the new era of "inline linking."

About Pryor Cashman's Copyright Practice

Pryor Cashman has been nationally renowned for its expertise in copyright law for over 50 years. The firm's litigators have argued so many seminal copyright cases they could fill a law school textbook. From prosecuting the landmark "My Sweet Lord" plagiarism suit against George Harrison, to defending infringement claims against box office hits such as "Raiders of the Lost Ark", "Ghostbusters," "Driving Miss Daisy," "Groundhog Day" and "The Expendables," Pryor Cashman attorneys have been involved in the cases that make both the law and the news.

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