IP and Human Creativity in the AI Age: A Global Conversation – November 14, 2025

 

The UC Berkeley Korea Law Center is pleased to co-host the 2025 Asia IP & Competition Law Conference, presented by the Asia IP & Competition Law Center and co-hosted with the Robbins Collection Research Center.

Professor Laurent Mayali, Director of the Korea Law Center, will moderate Panel III. The following Korean speakers and panel participants will join the discussion:

  • Panel I: AI’s Challenge to Inventorship    Yong woo Shin, Jipyong LLC
  • Panel IV: AI’s Challenge to Authorship    Hon. Kwangnam Kim, Seoul High Court, IP Division
  • Panel V: Copyright Infringement and the Fair Use Defense  Sangchul Park, Seoul National University

 

IP and Human Creativity in the AI Age: A Global Conversation

Friday, November 14, 2025 | 8:30 AM – 5:30 PM (PT)
Heyns Room, Faculty Club(opens in a new tab), UC Berkeley
Presented by Asia IP & Competition Law Center
Co-Hosted by Robbins Collection Research Center & UC Berkeley Korea Law Center

6.75 total General CLE Credit Available

Registration(opens in a new tab) | Agenda | Resources | Add to Calendar(opens in a new tab)

This conference—sharing the same title as our Berkeley course, IP and Human Creativity in the AI Age, launched in 2023—brings together leading scholars, practitioners, and judges from the United States, China (including mainland and Hong Kong), Japan, Korea, Singapore, Germany, the United Kingdom, and beyond to explore how intellectual property law should respond to the paradigm-shifting challenges of artificial intelligence.

What distinguishes this gathering is its human-creativity-centered lens: we will ask not only how AI challenges existing doctrines—such as inventorship, nonobviousness, disclosure, authorship, and fair use—but also how IP can be recalibrated to ensure that this **formidable machine—an unprecedentedly powerful double-edged sword, with equally profound potential to enhance or to displace human creativity—**is ultimately deployed in ways that strengthen, rather than undermine, the human creative spirit.

Hopefully, this conference can also offer a window into the convergence (or divergence) of common-law and civil-law traditions in addressing historical technological shifts, drawing inspiration from both comparative law and classroom dialogue. In this way, the event continues the intellectual journey begun with our Berkeley course in 2023, while fostering global conversations that cross disciplines, jurisdictions, and legal traditions.


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