This Kat was thrilled to hear the news today that his friend Dr Galit Gonen, who heads up Teva's European litigation team, was voted ILO Global IP Counsel of the Year in New York last night. Recent readers of this weblog may not know that, having obtained her doctorate on linkages between legal and marketing theories regarding secondary patents for pharmaceuticals, Galit was kind enough to put her head on the chopping board and defend it all over again for an IPKat Seminar back in November 2011 -- a brave and courageous thing for anyone to do.
Around the weblogs. Cynics may laugh at the usefulness of geographical indication protection, but they work: here's a Class 46 blogpost by Miguel Angel Medina on how a Colombian GI for coffee was enforced in Spain against a speculative local trade mark applicant. Over in Africa, Chijioke Ifeoma Okorie -- who has now joined the Afro-IP blog team -- has made some good points about the relationship of copyright-based businesses to the increasingly popular concept of open educational resources. On the 1709 Blog, Asim Singh relates how the transfer of responsibility for graduated responses to online copyright abusers from HADOPI to the CSA has hit a speed bump.
Do you practise IP and speak Bulgarian? If so, you will be pleased to learn from Katfriend Ventsi Stoilov that Bulgaria's Council of Ministers has now said that all citizens of the European Economic Area and Switzerland can practise intellectual property law in that lovely country -- so long as they are registered with the local Patent Office [hang on there, says Merpel, shouldn't this have happened ages ago? What has taken so long?].
Around the weblogs. Cynics may laugh at the usefulness of geographical indication protection, but they work: here's a Class 46 blogpost by Miguel Angel Medina on how a Colombian GI for coffee was enforced in Spain against a speculative local trade mark applicant. Over in Africa, Chijioke Ifeoma Okorie -- who has now joined the Afro-IP blog team -- has made some good points about the relationship of copyright-based businesses to the increasingly popular concept of open educational resources. On the 1709 Blog, Asim Singh relates how the transfer of responsibility for graduated responses to online copyright abusers from HADOPI to the CSA has hit a speed bump.
Do you practise IP and speak Bulgarian? If so, you will be pleased to learn from Katfriend Ventsi Stoilov that Bulgaria's Council of Ministers has now said that all citizens of the European Economic Area and Switzerland can practise intellectual property law in that lovely country -- so long as they are registered with the local Patent Office [hang on there, says Merpel, shouldn't this have happened ages ago? What has taken so long?].
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It’s Friday – why not curl up and listen to a good podcast on patent trolls? |










