[Bitte nach "english" übersetzen:] Dr. Moritz Sutterer. Foto: Tina Weber
Award  |  03/19/2025

Moritz Sutterer Awarded the Heinrich Hubmann Prize 2024

Moritz Sutterer receives the Heinrich Hubmann Prize 2024 of VG WORT for his dissertation Das Kollisionsrecht der kollektiven Rechtewahrnehmung (The Conflict of Laws of Collective Rights Management), supervised by Josef Drexl. The work was primarily written at the Institute, where Moritz Sutter worked as a Research Fellow in Josef Drexl's department from 2016 to 2022.

[Bitte nach "english" übersetzen:] Dr. Moritz Sutterer. Foto: Tina Weber
[Bitte nach "english" übersetzen:] Dr. Moritz Sutterer. Foto: Tina Weber
[Bitte nach "english" übersetzen:] Dr. Moritz Sutterer (2.v.l) eingerahmt vom Laudator Prof. Dr. Michael Grünberger, LL.M. (NYU) (1.v.l.), Prof. Dr. Josef Drexl, LL.M. (UC Berkeley) und Dr. Robert Staats, Vorstand VG WORT. Foto: Tina Weber
[Bitte nach "english" übersetzen:] Dr. Moritz Sutterer (2.v.l) eingerahmt vom Laudator Prof. Dr. Michael Grünberger, LL.M. (NYU) (1.v.l.), Prof. Dr. Josef Drexl, LL.M. (UC Berkeley) und Dr. Robert Staats, Vorstand VG WORT. Foto: Tina Weber

In his work, Moritz Sutterer develops a conflict of laws concept for the cross-border activities of performing rights societies. Until now, this has been regulated by a large number of reciprocal agreements between the individual collective management organizations. In its statement, the jury emphasized that the work is innovative and future-oriented. Sutterer’s work is particularly important in view of the increasing internationalization of the activities of collective management organizations.


During his time at the Institute, Moritz Sutterer’s research focused on copyright law, antitrust law and private international law. He contributed his knowledge of conflict of laws to the drafting of the International Law Association’s “Kyoto Guidelines” on private international law in the field of intellectual property law. He received his doctorate from the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität in 2022. Today he works as a lawyer in Munich.


The Heinrich Hubmann Prize is endowed with 5,000 euros and is awarded every two years by VG WORT. The award ceremony on 14 March 2025 took place as part of the symposium of the Institute for Copyright and Media Law on “Media and Copyright Challenges of Artificial Intelligence” in Munich. In awarding the prize, VG WORT commemorates its long-standing board member Professor Dr. Heinrich Hubmann (1915–1989), who, as a university lecturer and author of numerous works, advocated the “law of the creative mind”. He is regarded as an outstanding scholar of German copyright law in the second half of the 20th century.



Sutterer, Moritz
Das Kollisionsrecht der kollektiven Rechtewahrnehmung
Abhandlungen zum Urheber- und Kommunikationsrecht, 65, Nomos; Stämpfli Verlag; C.H. Beck, Baden-Baden; Bern; München 2024, 555 S.
doi.org/10.5771/9783748943228

Dr. Rudolf Leška congratulates Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. Adolf Dietz on being awarded the Jan Löwenbach Prize.
Award  |  03/17/2025

ALAI honors Adolf Dietz with the Jan Löwenbach Prize

On 14 March 2025, Adolf Dietz was awarded the Jan Löwenbach Prize of the Czech ALAI regional group for his great services to the German-Czech copyright dialog. He is the first laureate of this newly established prize.

Dr. Rudolf Leška congratulates Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. Adolf Dietz on being awarded the Jan Löwenbach Prize.
Dr. Rudolf Leška congratulates Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. Adolf Dietz on being awarded the Jan Löwenbach Prize.
Dr. Rudolf Leška congratulates Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. Adolf Dietz on being awarded the Jan Löwenbach Prize.
Dr. Rudolf Leška congratulates Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. Adolf Dietz on being awarded the Jan Löwenbach Prize.

In his laudatory speech, Dr. Rudolf Leška, President of the Czech ALAI, emphasized the great importance of Adolf Dietz’s research for the development of copyright law, particularly in what was then Czechoslovakia and later the Czech Republic. Dietz expressed his gratitude by pointing out that he had described the new Czech copyright law as a “top European product” in a commemorative publication for Rehbinder.


After studying law in Munich and Paris, Adolf Dietz obtained his doctorate in 1966 at the Ludwig-Maximilians- Universität in Munich, where he also passed his second state examination in law in 1967. From 1966, Adolf Dietz worked as a research assistant at the Institute (then the Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Patent, Copyright and Competition Law). From 1972 to 1978, he was head of the department and then research group leader in the copyright department until his retirement in 2001. As an expert on German, European and international copyright law and on intellectual property in the countries of Central and Eastern Europe and the People's Republic of China, he published numerous books and journal articles in these fields. After his retirement, he remained associated with the Institute as an Affiliated Research Fellow. In addition to numerous other honors, Adolf Dietz received an honorary doctorate from the Catholic University of Brussels in 1996 and the Grand Cross of Merit of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany in 2002.


With the Jan Löwenbach Award, the ALAI Czech National Group commemorates the founder of the first Czechoslovak ALAI group. The copyright lawyer Jan Löwenbach was himself a music composer and also a creative artist. The group he founded in 1926 was dissolved by the German occupying forces in 1939. The ALAI Czech Republic national group was founded in 2013. The sculpture for the Jan Löwenbach Award was created by Czech designer and glass artist Jakub Berdych.

Bronwyn H. Hall being honored as Distinguished Fellow 2024 by the American Economic Association.
Award  |  01/24/2025

The American Economic Association Honors Bronwyn H. Hall

Bronwyn H. Hall, Affiliated Research Fellow of the Institute and in close collaboration with the economics department, has been named Distinguished Fellow 2024 by the American Economic Association (AEA).

Bronwyn H. Hall being honored as Distinguished Fellow 2024 by the American Economic Association.
Bronwyn H. Hall being honored as Distinguished Fellow 2024 by the American Economic Association. Photo: AEA

Hall is Emerita Professor of Economics at the University of California, Berkeley, and a Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER). In addition to her outstanding contributions to innovation economics, the AEA also recognizes her achievements as a policy advisor and mentor.


More information directly in the American Economic Association’s laudatory statement.

Portrait photo of Dominik Asam
Award  |  01/16/2025

Special Award of the Deutsche Bundesbank for Outstanding Theses Goes to Dominik Asam

On 16 January 2025, Dominik Asam was honored with a special award from the Deutsche Bundesbank Regional Office in Bavaria for his thesis, which examines the effects of technological shocks on early-stage startup funding dynamics using the example of Generative AI (GenAI).

Portrait photo of Dominik Asam
Award winner Dominik Asam
Reinhold Vollbracht, President of the Deutsche Bundesbank Regional Office in Bavaria with awardee Dominik Asam
Reinhold Vollbracht, President of the Deutsche Bundesbank Regional Office in Bavaria, and Dominik Asam

Since October 2024, Dominik Asam has been a Junior Research Fellow and doctoral candidate in the Economics Department of the Institute. He completed his award-winning master’s thesis at the Chair for Economics of Innovation at the Technical University of Munich under the supervision of Professor Hanna Hottenrott. He continues his research on this topic at the Institute in a joint project with David Heller, Assistant Professor at Politecnico di Milano and Affiliated Research Fellow at the Institute.


Asam and Heller provide novel insights into how technological change impacts firm-level productivity. They highlight the potential of new general-purpose technologies to fundamentally change the dynamics of entrepreneurial firms. Their study focuses on the impact of Generative AI (GenAI) on startup funding dynamics, finding that GenAI significantly increases startup productivity. This is evidenced by a 20% reduction in the average time to funding compared to startups not benefiting from the new technology.


The authors argue that valuable but non-exclusive technological innovations can serve as a source of competitive advantage when entrepreneurs strategically leverage them as complementary assets to their existing skill sets. The effects are particularly pronounced in startups led by founders with greater technological or managerial experience. This underscores the importance of complementary human resources in fully harnessing the value of Generative AI.


The special award from the Deutsche Bundesbank Regional Office in Bavaria recognizes outstanding theses from selected Bavarian universities in areas such as monetary policy, banking regulation, cash and non-cash payment systems, and financial stability. The award ceremony took place at the premises of the Deutsche Bundesbank in Munich and was presented by Reinhold Vollbracht, President of the Regional Office in Bavaria.


More at SSRN:

Asam, Dominik; Heller, David (2024). Generative AI and Firm-level Productivity: Evidence from Startup Funding Dynamics. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4877505

Niccolò Galli during his acceptance speech on 9 November 2024 at the annual conference of the LIDC in London.
Award  |  11/29/2024

Niccolò Galli Receives the Jacques Lassier Prize 2024

On 9 November, Niccolò Galli was awarded the prestigious Jacques Lassier Prize 2024 for his dissertation Patent Aggregation, Innovation and EU Competition Law at the annual conference of the International League of Competition Law (LIDC) in London.

Niccolò Galli during his acceptance speech on 9 November 2024 at the annual conference of the LIDC in London.
Niccolò Galli during his acceptance speech on 9 November 2024 at the annual conference of the LIDC in London.
Niccolò Galli during his acceptance speech on 9 November 2024 at the annual conference of the LIDC in London.
Niccolò Galli during his acceptance speech on 9 November 2024 at the annual conference of the LIDC in London.

Niccolò Galli worked on his doctoral thesis at the Institute between 2017 and 2020 as part of the EIPIN Joint Doctorate Program , under the supervision of Prof. Dr. Josef Drexl and Dr. Beatriz Conde Gallego. Seine Dissertation wurde im April 2023 gemeinsam an den Universitäten Augsburg und Maastricht verteidigt. A detailed description of the doctoral thesis can be found in the Activity Report 2018–2020. Currently, Niccolò Galli is a postdoctoral researcher at the European University Institute and a lecturer in Intellectual Property Law at the University of Florence.


Jacques Lassier Prize


Established in 1982, the Jacques Lassier Prize is dedicated to the legacy of the former chairman of the LIDC and honors outstanding dissertations in the field of competition law. The 2024 jury was composed of distinguished scholars and practitioners, including Jules Stuyck, Florian Bien, Muriel Chagny, Pinar Akman, and Pranvera Këllezi.
 

Founded in 1930, the LIDC is a worldwide association with 18 national sections and over 800 members working in academia and the legal profession. It is dedicated to promoting research in the areas of competition law, intellectual property law and unfair competition law.

For more information about the Jacques Lassier Prize and the LIDC's activities, please visit the official website: LIDC Jacques-Lassier-Preis.



Go directly to the doctoral thesis:

Galli, N. (2023). Patent aggregation, innovation and eu competition law. [Doctoral Thesis, Maastricht University, University of Augsburg]. Maastricht University / University of Ausburg.
 https://doi.org/10.26481/dis.20230420ng 

Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. Annette Kur
Award  |  05/14/2024

Annette Kur inducted into the IP Hall of Fame

Together with Jenny Lukander (Nokia), Shira Perlmutter (U.S. Copyright Office) and Klaus Grabinski (German Federal Supreme Court, Unified Patent Court), Annette Kur has been inducted into the IP Hall of Fame. This award is only presented to four people worldwide each year.

Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. Annette Kur
Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. Annette Kur

The prize, which has been awarded by the IP Hall of Fame Academy since 2006 and was developed by the IAM platform, honors personalities who have made a special contribution to establishing intellectual property as one of the most important economic factors of the 21st century. Award winners include the former directors of the Institute, Friedrich Karl Beier and Joseph Straus.


The IP Hall of Fame Academy is made up of former, living members of the IP Hall of Fame and individuals who have been nominated for membership based on their recognized expertise in international intellectual property issues.


Annette Kur was a Research Fellow at the Institute from 1980 to 2021 and has remained closely associated with the Institute as an Affiliated Research Fellow since 2021. Her research focuses on European and international trademark and design law, overlap issues, and the interface between intellectual property and private international law. In 2023, she played a leading role in the Institute's Statement on the EU-Design Package.


See also World Trademark Review

Timmy Pielmeier in the atrium of the LMU with the Faculty Award
Award  |  11/02/2023

Timmy Pielmeier Receives Faculty Prize for his Dissertation

Following the GRUR Dissertation Prize, Timmy Pielmeier has now also been awarded the Faculty Prize of the LMU’s Faculty of Law for his dissertation on Die Konkurrenz von Urheberrecht und Lauterkeitsrecht im Binnenmarkt (The Competition between Copyright Law and Fair Trading Law in the Single Market). The prizewinner wrote a significant part of his work during his time as a scholarship holder at the Institute.

Timmy Pielmeier in the atrium of the LMU with the Faculty Award
Timmy Pielmeier in the atrium of the LMU with the Faculty Award. Photo: fotomuc.de
Timmy Pielmeier (1st from right) at the faculty award ceremony with the Chairman of the Alumni Association of the Faculty of Law at LMU Prof. Dr. Hans-Georg Hermann (1st from left) and his supervisor Dean Prof. Dr. Ansgar Ohly. Photo: fotomuc.de
Timmy Pielmeier (1st from right) at the faculty award ceremony with the Chairman of the Alumni Association of the Faculty of Law at LMU Prof. Dr. Hans-Georg Hermann (1st from left) and his supervisor Dean Prof. Dr. Ansgar Ohly. Photo: fotomuc.de

The Faculty Prize is awarded by the Faculty of Law to all doctoral theses that were consistently awarded the highest grade summa cum laude in all four assessment units. The award is presented in the form of a certificate, which is ceremoniously presented by the Dean during the academic doctoral and graduation ceremony together with the doctoral certificate.


In addition to the certificate, since 2013 doctoral students have also received a trophy specially made for them by the Alumni and Sponsors’ Association. This is presented by the Chairman of the Alumni and Sponsors’ Association at the academic doctoral and graduation ceremony. The trophy consists of a fine silver coin with a purity of 99%. (silver 999). The faculty seal, which differs slightly from the LMU seal, is embossed on the coin.


Report on the Award of the GRUR Dissertation Prize

Adepi – Associación para el dessarollo de propriedad intellectual
Award  |  06/30/2023

Law Department of the Institute receives the Adepi Award 2023

The Spanish Association for the Development of Intellectual Property (Adepi – Associación para el dessarollo de propriedad intellectual) honors the Institute with its prize this year. The award ceremony will take place on 5 July at the Palacete de los Duques de Pastrana in Madrid. It will be chaired by the Minister of Culture and Sports, Miquel Iceta.

Adepi – Associación para el dessarollo de propriedad intellectual
Adepi – Associación para el dessarollo de propriedad intellectual
Adepi – Associación para el dessarollo de propriedad intellectual
Adepi – Associación para el dessarollo de propriedad intellectual
Dr. Begoña Gonzalez Otero with the writer and other laureate Orlando Figes (left) and the Spanish Minister of Culture and Sports, Miquel Iceta.
Dr. Begoña Gonzalez Otero with the writer and other laureate Orlando Figes (left) and the Spanish Minister of Culture and Sports, Miquel Iceta.

In the statement of reasons for the award, the Adepi cites that the Department of Intellectual Property and Competition Law is “one of the most prestigious and important research centers in the world in this field”.


Since 2019, the Adepi Award recognizes the work of individuals and institutions that work for the protection and development of intellectual property in general and the collective management of rights in particular, from fields such as politics, education, business or law, contributing to the creation of culture in a fair and sustainable way.


Notification on the Adepi website


Update:
At the festive award ceremony on 5 July at the Palacete de los Duques de Pastrana in Madrid, Begoña Gonzalez Otero received the award on behalf of the Institute's Intellectual Property and Competition Law Department from the Spanish Minister of Culture and Sport, Miquel Iceta.

Artha Dermawan
Award  |  04/24/2023

Artha Dermawan ranks 2nd in the ATRIP Essay Competition 2022

Artha Dermawan, doctoral student at the Institute achieves second place in the ATRIP Essay Competition 2022 with his paper “Text and Data Mining Exceptions in the Development of Generative AI Models: What the EU Member States Could Learn from the Japanese ‘Non-Enjoyment’ Purposes”. This paper is a response to the rapid development of generative AI models such as ChatGPT-4, DALL-E 2, and more, and discusses copyright issues by comparing the relevant regulations of Japan, Germany, and the European Union in general.

Artha Dermawan
Artha Dermawan
Artha Dermawan
Artha Dermawan

The article forthcoming in the Journal of World Intellectual Property Journal of World Intellectual Property (probably the November 2023 edition).


Full text of the essay as pdf


More information about all award winners can be found at the ATRIP website.

Anja Geller
Award  |  03/20/2023

Anja Geller to receive the Dieter Rampacher Prize of the Max Planck Society

Lawyer Anja Geller is awarded the Dieter Rampacher Prize 2022 for her early doctorate. She completed her dissertation at the age of 26. The title of her dissertation thesis is “Social Scoring by States: Legitimacy under European Law - with References to China”.

Anja Geller
The lawyer Anja Geller receives the Max Rampacher Prize of the Max Planck Society.

In her work, Anja Geller shows, in particular, that social scoring is by no means only - as is commonly assumed - a concept that is widespread mainly in China. In this context, she discusses how the legal framework can be designed to minimize constitutionally critical aspects while at the same time maximizing the benefits for the common good.  Reto M. Hilty supervised the thesis as doctoral advisor; its development was supported by the Institute and it was accepted by the LMU Munich. In the meantime, it has been published as an electronic university publication and is available online free of charge.


Anja Geller is already the fourth of the 39 award winners to receive the prize for her dissertation at our Institute. Christoph Cordes (1993), Loretta Würtenberger (1997) and Matthias Leistner (1999) received the prize for their doctorates at the Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Patent, Copyright and Competition Law, as the Institute was then called.


With the Dieter Rampacher Award, the Max Planck Society annually honors its youngest doctoral student for his or her outstanding doctoral degree, in order to provide an incentive for an early doctorate. The prize was endowed in 1985 by Hermann Rampacher, sustaining member of the Max Planck Society; it is in memory of his brother Dieter Rampacher, a physics student at the TH Stuttgart who was killed in action in 1945 at the age of twenty. In 2011, Carsten A. Rampacher, the founder's son, and his consulting firm, which is also a sustaining member of the Max Planck Society, took over the funding of the prize. The Dieter Rampacher Prize 2022 will be awarded during the Annual General Meeting of the Max Planck Society in Göttingen in June 2023 and carries a prize money of € 2,400.