Hafeez Khan Image

Hafeez Khan

Associate

Arnold & Porter

Hafeez Khan is an associate in Arnold & Porter’s Intellectual Property practice. Hafeez’s practice focuses on a range of intellectual property matters, including issues in trademark law, copyright law and false advertising. He also maintains an active pro bono practice, focusing on the area of prisoners’ rights.

In law school, Mr. Khan served as a staff editor for the UC Irvine Journal of International, Transnational, and Comparative Law. He received the Faculty Award for academic excellence in Patent Law, and the Dean’s Award for academic excellence in Lawyering Skills and UC Irvine’s Environmental Law Clinic. In 2020, Mr. Khan was selected as a Google Legal Summer Institute Scholar. In 2019, he served as a judicial extern to the Honorable James V. Selna.

Recent Articles by Hafeez Khan

Testing the Bounds of Copyright Protection in Choreographic Works: Hanagami v. Epic Games, Inc.

In a recently filed suit involving the popular videogame Fortnite, the Central District of California faces an important question regarding copyright law: does a copyright in a registered choreographic work extend protection to a smaller portion of the work when that portion is copied by a third party and implemented as a dance move in a video game? Owned and developed by Epic Games, Inc. (“Epic”), Fortnite is a “battle royale” style videogame where players fight to be the last person standing. Fortnite players can purchase “emotes,” which are dance moves or other gestures performed by their avatar. Plaintiff Kyle Hanagami owns a copyright registration for a choreographic work called “How Long Choreography.” Hanagami alleges that an emote called “It’s Complicated” copies “the heart” of his work, as it is the only section of the How Long Choreography that occurs ten times throughout the original.