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Book Launch:

Fashion and Intellectual Property

21 May 2026
IViR Lecture Series:

AI and Poverty
by Prof. Frederik Zuiderveen Borgesius


29 May 2026
PhD defence:

Enabling Contestation. The Right to an Explanation of Judicial AI
by Ljubiša Metikoš

3 June 2026

IViR Summer Courses:

International Copyright
Law & Policy
Privacy Law & Policy

European Platform Regulation

Latest News

19 May, 2026

Special issue Journal of Intellectual Property Law & Practice about music metadata

News

In the next upcoming special issue of the Journal of Intellectual Property Law & Practice six articles about music metadata written by IViR researchers will be published. These articles analyse music metadata issues through various, primarily legal lenses.

18 May, 2026

IViR at CPDP 2026

Conferences, News

Tomorrow the 19th international conference CPDP kicks off in Brussels. Researchers from IViR are well represented in different panels.

13 May, 2026

Vacancy at IViR: Coördinator bedrijfsvoering

Vacancy

Vind je het leuk te werken in een dynamische en internationale onderzoeks- en onderwijsomgeving? Ben je ondernemend met oog voor detail en beschik je over uitstekende organisatie- en communicatievaardigheden? Houd je van afwisseling en een breed pakket van taken en verantwoordelijkheden? Dan ben jij mogelijk de perfecte kandidaat om de nieuwe Coördinator Bedrijfsvoering te worden bij het IViR.

See all news

Upcoming events

May 21, 2026

Book launch: Fashion and Intellectual Property

  • Book Launch
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
May 21, 2026

Lecture Prof. Bernt Hugenholtz on copyright, contracts and creator’s protection across Europe

Groningen, The Netherlandshttps://www.rug.nl/rechten/agend…
May 29, 2026

IViR Lecture Series: AI and Poverty

Should socio-economic status be a protected ground in non-discrimination law?

  • IViR Lecture
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
May 29, 2026

European Copyright Society 10th Annual Conference

Copyright, Artificial Intelligence and Cultural Heritage Institutions

Versailles, Francehttps://www.ivir.nl/publicaties/…
June 3, 2026

PhD defence: Enabling Contestation. The Right to an Explanation of Judicial AI

  • PhD defence
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
June 4, 2026

IE Zomerforum: Deepfakes

Amsterdam, The Netherlandshttps://www.delex.nl/shop/opleid…
See all events

Latest publications

Comment of the European Copyright Society on the Request for Preliminary Ruling in Case C-250/25 (Like Company) external link

Mezei, P., Kretschmer, M., Margoni, T., Peukert, A. & Quintais, J.
IIC, 2026
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Abstract

The reference in Like Company v Google (Case C-250/25) is seen as a potential landmark case, giving the EU’s highest court the opportunity to define the scope and conditions of permitted artificial intelligence (AI) training and develop an infringement test for AI outputs. The European Copyright Society (ECS) urges the Court of Justice (sitting as a Grand Chamber) to exercise caution. While the reference stems from a plausible complaint by a press publisher against the provider of an AI powered chatbot reproducing and communicating its editorial content, the implications of this problematic reference could be far-reaching. 1. The reference is factually murky with respect to the technology and services at stake, conflating concepts of “chatbot”, “large language model”, and “search engine”. 2. The reference fails to identify consistently the subject matter at stake, which is the press publishers’ right under Art. 15 of the Copyright in the Digital Single Market Directive (2019/790/EU, hereinafter CDSMD), not authorial works. Specifically, the reference conflates questions relating to the training phase (Questions 2 and 3) with the legal characterisation of the use of press publications by an LLM-based chatbot (Question 4 but also Question 1, referring to the right of communication to the public and the right of reproduction under Directive 2001/29/EC, hereinafter the InfoSoc Directive). If the reference is found admissible, it is suggested that the Court of Justice should address jointly Questions 4 and 1, which relate to the legal characterisation of the use of press publications in the display. Here it is important to correctly understand next-token prediction in large language models, augmented retrieval technology (where the use of data does not generally form part of the learning process) as well as “online use”, defining the scope of the press publishers’ right under Art. 15 of the CDSMD. In the opinion of the ECS, the ambiguous characterisation of a fast-moving technology may result in the failure to realise the societal benefits of AI as a potential general-purpose technology. There are risks that a rash decision will push Europe towards a licensing economy in which AI systems are offered as a service by (non-European) multinationals, without solving issues of equity such as creator consent and distribution of revenues.

Links

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s40319-026-01717-6
  • https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40319-026-01717-6

Copyright

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Trademark Law and Political Expression: The Case of IKEA v. Vlaams Belang and Beyond external link

Izyumenko, E.
IIC, 2026
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Abstract

This article offers a comprehensive exploration of the evolving interface between trademark law and freedom of political expression in Europe, using the CJEU case IKEA v. Vlaams Belang as a focal but not exhaustive case study. It argues that the dispute exemplifies a much broader and increasingly urgent structural question: how EU trademark law – especially in its protection of reputed marks – can be reconciled with the constitutional commitments to political speech, artistic creativity, and democratic participation embedded in Article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) and Article 11 of the EU Charter. Against a backdrop of the expanding preliminary infringement criteria of “use in the course of trade” and “use in relation to goods or services”, as well as the uniquely far-reaching Benelux “super anti-dilution” regime, the article demonstrates that “due cause” has become the principal doctrinal locus for internalising freedom-of-expression concerns within trademark law. Drawing on Strasbourg jurisprudence, it develops a holistic framework for a free-speech-conforming interpretation of “due cause”, analysing both the criteria suggested by the Belgian referring court and additional factors central to the European Court of Human Rights’ proportionality review, including commerciality, the value of political speech and artistic expression, the reputation of the mark and the power of corporate symbols, availability of alternatives, tolerance for offensive expression, the limits imposed by hate speech, and the compelled speech doctrine. The article concludes that failing to interpret “due cause” in a speech-sensitive way would risk enabling trademark rights to override core democratic freedoms.

Links

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s40319-026-01719-4
  • https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=5783265
  • https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40319-026-01719-4

Freedom of expression, Political speech, Trademark law

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Streaming Without Copying: The CJEU Redefines Private Use in Stichting de Thuiskopie (C-496/24) external link

Quintais, J.
Kluwer Copyright Blog, 2026
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Links

  • https://legalblogs.wolterskluwer.com/copyright-blog/streaming-without-copying-the-cjeu-redefines-private-use-in-stichting-de-thuiskopie-c-49624/

Copyright, private use, streaming services

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Between Effectiveness and Fundamental Rights: Sports Piracy and the Privatization of Copyright Enforcement in the EU external link

Quintais, J. & Aznar, M.
2026
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Abstract

This article examines the adequacy of EU copyright law in addressing the unauthorized dissemination of live sporting events, with particular focus on the audiovisual exploitation of football. It advances two principal arguments. First, despite the absence of copyright protection for sporting events as such, EU intellectual property law provides a comprehensive framework for the protection of their audiovisual exploitation. Secondly, recent developments in enforcement practices, while enhancing effectiveness, give rise to significant risks, notably in relation to proportionality and the increasing privatization of enforcement.

Links

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.6674479
  • https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=6674479

Copyright, Fundamental rights, piracy

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Op-Ed: “Pelham II and the Notion of Pastiche in EU Copyright Law: Is the Court of Justice Finally Giving Creative Reuse Some Breathing Space?” external link

Izyumenko, E.
EU Law Live, 2026
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Links

  • https://eulawlive.com/op-ed-pelham-ii-and-the-notion-of-pastiche-in-eu-copyright-law-is-the-court-of-justice-finally-giving-creative-reuse-some-breathing-space/

Copyright, pastiche

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The Institute for Information Law (IViR) engages in cutting-edge research furthering the development of information law, and provides a forum for critical debate about the needs, interests, rights and freedoms of the information society

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