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Are there better ways to train a TM examiner? |
Pressing prospect. This Kat is delighted to learn that the UK Intellectual Property Office is currently recruiting for a
Around the weblogs. The IP Draughts weblog is never short of entertainingly informative material to read, so this Kat was not surprised to find Mark Anderson's recent post on royalty-stacking clauses well worth the effort to peruse. Elsewhere, on the 1709 Blog the increasingly-productive Marie-Andrée Weiss writes up a French Cour de Cassation ruling that a corporation cannot be the author of a copyright work. There's also a new blog on the block this week, Italian IP enthusiast Claudia Roggero's DANDI.MEDIA, which promises to address Claudia's favourite topics: film, product placement and copyright infringements. "It is basically an Italian blog", she explains, adding that she has posted some articles in English too. Good luck, Claudia!
The sweater's fine: the name's the issue. Via this Kat's old friend Steve Preece, now a son of the soil in England but a Canadian through and through, comes this link to "Nordstrom removes Cowichan name from sweaters", a CBC News item from British Columbia about how A call from the CBC prompted the US-based Nordstrom department store chain to remove the name Cowichan from an item in its online clothing range. The item in question, described as a Cowichan sweater, was not made by weavers from the Cowichan First Nation on Vancouver Island. A quick skim of the web suggests to this Kat that the Cowichan First Nation will be keeping the legal profession busy for quite a while since there is more than one large country beginning with the letter "C" in which the name Cowichan appears to be in commercial use in relation to knitwear ...