Andrew Berger has extensive experience in intellectual property litigation, licensing and commercial litigation. His clients include publishers, content creators, illustrators, filmmakers, including a 2010 Academy Award winner, advertising agencies, software developers and new media companies. He helps his clients enforce their rights when others have infringed his clients' intellectual property without permission. Andrew also assists his clients to monetize their intellectual property through licensing, joint ventures, sales and related transactions.
Further, Andrew he has extensive commercial trial experience. His clients in complex commercial litigation have included a Latin American government, the Women's Professional Tennis Association and a Channel Islands investment company. Andrew has also been teaching trial practice at Hofstra Law School for the past 15 years.
Andrew serves as a co-chair of the Copyright Subcommittee of the IP Litigation Committee of the Litigation Section of the ABA. He is also a member of the Federal Courts Committee of the New York City Bar having completed a three-year term on the Copyright Committee. Andrew also serves a mediator in the federal and state courts.
Andrew is a graduate of Cornell University and Cornell Law School.
Cyber squatting is when someone uses a name that is the same or similar to your name and somehow they are able to register it, maybe not as a .com, but as a .net. It is so easy to register a domain name. It costs $10 or $15 and you can do it in 5 seconds. Cyber squatters are the kind of people th...(Full transcript available to logged in subscribers.).
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