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| After renaming the Patents County Court the Intellectual Property Enterprise Court, we now have a new name for the Court of Appeal |
Latest SCRIPTed now available. The latest issue of online IP/IT journal SCRIPTed is now available. You can check out its contents here. This issue has a special focus on collaborative open source projects, copyright management and licensing. It also contains a discussion of "The European Unified Patent Court: Assessment and Implications of the Federalisation of the Patent System in Europe" by Dimitris Xenos, which makes uncomfortable reading for anyone who thinks that the European Union did its homework properly before pushing forward with its new and highly controversial patent litigation structure.
JIPLP-GRUR event. Are you a devotee of the common law remedy of passing off? Or do you prefer the civil law delict of unfair competition? In either case, or even if you are neutral, why not sign up to attend the third in a series of joint events hosted by the Journal of Intellectual Property Law & Practice, published by Oxford University Press, in conjunction with leading German intellectual property journal GRUR Int? Speakers are Ben Allgrove, a partner in the London office of Baker & McKenzie LLP which is kindly hosting the event, and JIPLP editorial board member Gert Wuertenberger (Wuertenberger Kunze, Munich). Panellists are Mr Justice Arnold, Chris Wadlow, Phillip Johnson and Birgit Clark. The date? 23 January 2014. For programme details and registration click here.Art & Artifice event. The Art & Artifice weblog's Redbus art-and-copyright event on 24 October now has over 100 registrants. The delights of Michael Edenborough QC's talk and the subsequent panel discussion are being augmented by the prospect of guided tours of the contemporary art exhibition of host firm Simmons & Simmons. If you've not yet registered but propose to do so, you'll find all the necessary details here.
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| Will David be wearing his new Cravath ...? |
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| For those who ever wondered where China is, it's the yellow bit that lies between Bhutan and Mongolia ... |
"Work started on this set of amendments over seven years ago. The text of the amendments as adopted is not yet available, but a notice of the adoption was posted on the website of the NPC. The Amended version of the Trade Mark Law will go into effect May 1, 2014. Some of the features are that applications to register a trade mark must be made in good faith; improved protection for well-known marks; and changes to the opposition system".If you don't believe Paul, just check it out for yourself: the NPC's announcement (in Chinese) can be perused here.
Around the weblogs. IP Finance's Mike Mireles clashes with our fellow feline Neil over the worth of the World Intellectual Property Organization's (and Cornell's and INSEAD's) Global Innovation Index here. Barbara Cookson (SOLO IP here) offers a little soliloquy on the joys of an almost-empty library. If you've never heard the expression "lean performance" [as at least one fictional Kat is too embarrassed to confess], you can find out from Laetitia Lagarde on Class 46 here why it is that the Office for Harmonisation in the Internal Market is happy to allow registration of LEAN PERFORMANCE INDEX for goods and services in Nice Classes 9,16 and 42 but not for services in Class 35. Finally, the jiplp weblog posts a note on the results of its "What does Greek Yoghurt mean to you?" survey here.
"More than 1,700 applications have now moved to the next steps in the program.
... Out of the 1,930 new gTLD applications submitted, a total of 1,745 applications passed Initial Evaluation, 32 have gone into Extended Evaluation, and 121 were withdrawn from the program.
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| But is ICANN counting? |
... Applications that passed IE will proceed through the program based on their complexity. Some may move straight to the Transition to Delegation phase, while others may have to go through additional steps, such as dispute resolution and string contention. As another indicator of the progression of the New gTLD Program, 12 additional registry agreements have just been signed, 11 of which are the first English character TLDs. The contracts govern the registry and administration of a dozen new gTLD’s. ICANN’s new gTLD program is the result of 8-years of study, 47 public comment periods, which produced over 2,400 comments, 55 explanatory memoranda [this Kat wonders whether, if something demands the production of no fewer than 55 explanatory memoranda, it might just be a little over-complicated] and 7 versions of the new gTLD Applicant guidebook [Merpel notes with some concern that no figures have been given for the number of apoplexies, nervous breakdowns and early retirements inflicted on the brand-owning communities during this period]".For more information. just click here.













