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DrewADesignyesterday at 10:54 PM1 replyview on HN

But it means that the appellate decision will retain precedence, no? Wouldn’t losing precedence be the primary legal effect of overturning that decision? All case law that hasn’t touched the Supreme Court could theoretically be challenged, but most of it isn’t, and it’s considered the law until it isn’t anymore, right? How would this be any different?


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semiquaveryesterday at 11:48 PM

The decision is binding only within the jurisdiction of the Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit.

So it’s not correct to say “because SCOTUS denied cert, Thaler is now binding national copyright law.”

Practically speaking, it is binding on the US Copyright office (one of the parties in the case) in CADC. And that’s important. But copyright litigation happens all across the country, while this ruling only directly constrains the relatively small number of cases within CADC.

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