
International News Service v. Associated Press
International News Service v. Associated Press, 248 U.S. 215 (1918), otherwise called INS v. AP or just the INS case, is a 1918 choice of the United States Supreme Court that articulated the misappropriation regulation of government protected innovation precedent-based law that a "semi property right" might be made against others by one's investment of exertion and cash in an immaterial thing, for example, data or an outline.
The INS choice perceived the tenet of U.S. copyright law that there is no copyright in certainties, which the Supreme Court later extraordinarily explained in the Feist case in 1991, however in any case INS expanded the earlier law of uncalled for rivalry to cover an extra sort of impedance with business desires: "misappropriation" of the result of "sweat of the fo...