Engelberg Center Live!

This season of Engelberg Center Live! contains audio from Engelberg Center events. Previous seasons of Engelberg Center Live! included a deep dive into the datasets used to train AI with Knowing Machines, an oral history of the unionization effort at Kickstarter, and (of course) audio from a range of Engelberg Center events. To learn more about Knowing Machines, please visit https://knowingmachines.org/ To learn more about the Engelberg Center, please visit https://www.nyuengelberg.org/

Bad Landlords And The Movement To Take Back Our Rights

TimelineHow Much Does Obama's Summer Reading List Cost Your Library?E-Books for UsDPLA Introduces E-Books Libraries Can OwnBRIETReaders First, an organization “dedicated to ensuring access to free and easy-to-use eBook content”For more on how publishers have tried to control library access to information, see The Publisher Play Book: A TimelineRobin HastingsReferences

06-25
15:45

Ebooks, Meet Libraries; Libraries, Meet Ebooks

TimelineWhy DRM Doesn’t Work, or How to Download an Audiobook from the Cleveland Public LibraryEreaders, Overdrive Compatibility, Libraries as Digital Ghost Towns by Rochelle HartmanRobin HastingsMichael BlackwellReferences

06-18
16:11

So What Is An Ebook, Anyway?

TimelineOverlooked No More: Ángela Ruiz Robles, Inventor of an Early E-Reader - The New York TimesDorothea SaloReferences

06-11
27:25

Trailer: Introducing A Podcast About Ebooks from Library Futures

TimelineHow to Destroy the Book, by Cory Doctorow – The Varsity

06-04
02:28

Public Domain Cabaret: WNYC Public Song Project Players & Necromancers of the Public Domain

The Engelberg Center on Innovation Law & Policy, Library Futures, Theater of the Apes, and the Information Law Institute bring you this very special Public Domain Day presentation of Necromancers of the Public Domain.Performers skilled in the art of necromancy transformed the book An Hour With The Movies And The Talkies (plucked from the shelves of the New York Society Library's public domain class of 2025) into a one-night-only variety show. We also featured performers from WNYC's Public Song Project.WNYC Public Song Project Players include:Nikhil DasguptaHammer CountyKat LewisSibyl (Chloe and Lily Holgate)Kal TeauxNecromancers include:Emilio Cuesta (I Am Nobody / QUESTA)Jordan FeitConnor Kalista (The Neo-Futurists / Independent Film Editor)Pearl RheinNecromancers lead by Ayun Halliday (Creative, Not Famous / The East Village Inky)With Special Guest:Saw Lady a.k.a. Natalia ParuzEvent photos: https://www.nyuengelberg.org/events/public-domain-celebration-with-necromancers-and-friends/ 

02-24
01:13:28

Health Care at Reasonable Cost: What’s Next?

Donald Beers, Office of Chief Counsel of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) (retired)Alfred B. EngelbergAbbe Gluck, Yale Law SchoolArti Rai, Duke University School of LawAmeet Sarpatwari, Harvard Medical SchoolMichael Weinberg, Engelberg Center on Innovation Law & Policy, NYU School of Law (moderator)

10-17
01:08:10

Health Care at Reasonable Cost: March-in Rights and § 1498

David J. Kappos, Cravath, Swaine, & Moore LLPAaron Kesselheim, Brigham and Women’s Hospital/Harvard Medical SchoolRochelle Dreyfuss, Engelberg Center on Innovation Law & Policy, NYU School of Law (moderator)

10-16
53:44

Health Care at Reasonable Cost: Drug Price Negotiations

Richard Epstein, NYU School of LawErika Lietzan, University of Missouri School of LawLisa Larrimore Ouellette, Stanford Law SchoolSteve Pearson, Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER)Rachel Sachs, Washington University in St. Louis School of LawDaniel Hemel, NYU School of Law (moderator)

10-15
01:26:32

Health Care at Reasonable Cost: The Neglected Hatch-Waxman Act Goal of Data Transparency

Rebecca Eisenberg, The University of Michigan Law SchoolRichard F. Kingham, Covington & Burling LLPReshma Ramachandran, Yale School of MedicineChris Morten, Columbia Law School (moderator)

10-14
01:28:14

Health Care at Reasonable Cost: Protecting the Hatch-Waxman Act from Anticompetitive Gaming

Anisha Dasgupta, Federal Trade CommissionHenry Hadad, Bristol-Myers SquibbSteve Shadowen, Hilliard Shadowen LLPEric Stock, Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLPScott Hemphill, Engelberg Center on Innovation Law & Policy, NYU School of Law (moderator)

10-11
01:36:29

Health Care at Reasonable Cost: Commissioner Slaughter Fireside Chat

Commissioner Rebecca Kelly Slaughter, Federal Trade CommissionDaniel Francis, NYU School of Law

10-10
47:42

Health Care at Reasonable Cost: Extending the Hatch-Waxman Act Model

Michael Frakes, Duke University School of LawEmily Marden, Sidley Austin LLPNicholson Price, The University of Michigan Law SchoolS. Sean Tu, West Virginia University College of LawMelissa Wasserman, The University of Texas School of LawBruce Wexler, Paul Hastings LLP (moderator)

10-09
01:18:58

Health Care at Reasonable Cost: An Empirical Evaluation of the Hatch-Waxman Act

Scott Hemphill, Engelberg Center on Innovation Law & Policy, NYU School of LawBhaven Sampat, Arizona State UniversityMargaret K. Kyle, MINES ParisTech (Ecole des Mines) (commentator)

10-08
53:46

Health Care at Reasonable Cost: The Goals of the Hatch-Waxman Act as Seen from 2024

Bob Armitage, Intellectual Property ConsultantAlfred B. EngelbergKatherine Strandburg, Engelberg Center on Innovation Law & Policy, NYU School of Law (moderator)

10-07
38:50

FUNTIME BOOK PARTY: Feminist Cyberlaw

Feminist Cyberlaw reimagines the field of cyberlaw through a feminist lens, bringing together emerging and established scholars and practitioners to explore how gender, race, sexuality, disability, class, and the intersections of these identities affect cyberspace and the laws that govern it. It is available as a free, open-access volume.

10-03
01:06:44

Rethinking Patent Prosecution: Solutions and Alternative Paths

Panel Four: Solutions and Alternative PathsMichael Weinberg (moderator), Engelberg Center on Innovation Law & PolicyDave Kappos, Cravath, Swaine & MooreArti Rai, The Center for Innovation Policy - Duke Law SchoolMichael Frakes, Duke Law School & Melissa Wasserman, The University of Texas at Austin School of Law

04-16
53:53

Rethinking Patent Prosecution: IPR Today

Panel Three: IPR TodayRochelle Dreyfuss (moderator), NYU School of Law and Engelberg Center on Innovation Law & PolicyGabrielle Higgins, Desmarais LLPScott McKeown, Wolf GreenfieldNaveen Modi, Paul Hastings

04-15
57:14

Rethinking Patent Prosecution: Incentives Shaping the Current Prosecution Process

Panel Two: Incentives Shaping the Current Prosecution ProcessBruce Wexler (moderator), Paul Hastings and NYU School of LawBob Stoll, Faegre Drinker Biddle & Reath LLPMark Vallone, IBM

04-12
48:47

Rethinking Patent Prosecution: State of Play in District Courts

Panel One: The State of Play in District CourtsJohn Desmarais (moderator), Desmarais LLPJudge Raymond Chen, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal CircuitNicholas Groombridge, Groombridge, Wu, Baughman & Stone LLPJudge Maryellen Noreika, U.S. District Court for the District of DelawareSaurabh Vishnubhakat, Cardozo Law

04-11
43:59

Rethinking Patent Prosecution: Judge Chen Introduction

This episode is audio of Judge Raymond Chen's introductory remarks from the Engelberg Center's Rethinking Patent Prosecution, Review, and Litigation event. It was recorded on March 28, 2024.

04-10
18:12

Recommend Channels