Abstract
This paper addresses the main intellectual property consequences of practicing law and whether attorneys can prevent others from using their work-product. The article does not assume that the reader is an expert in intellectual property law; instead, it is designed to answer the types of questions practitioners have about their rights. There is one primary legal code that impacts attorneys’ rights to their work-product: the copyright law. As a broad statement, copyright law protects how an author expresses ideas. It is the system that is used to prevent others from copying a book, a movie, a musical composition, or even a computer program. It is almost exclusively a federal statutory remedy as comparable state protections have been preempted. As much of what an attorney does is expressing ideas in writing, the copyright system is the most important method of protecting an attorney’s work-product.
Recommended Citation
Clifford, Ralph D.
(2008)
"Intellectual Property Rights in an Attorney’s Work Product,"
University of Massachusetts Law Review: Vol. 3:
Iss.
1, Article 1.
Available at:
https://scholarship.law.umassd.edu/umlr/vol3/iss1/1