Were you away last week and
missed the IPKat? Do not worry, because the 90th edition of Never Too
Late is here to rescue you!
Annsley reviews Sir
Robin Jacob's IP and Other Things, a 500-page collection of the famous Judge's essays
and lectures.
Katfriend
Shane
Smyth shares his thoughts on the second edition of Trade Marks Law, by Glen Gibbons, a book on trade mark law -- written from an Irish viewpoint.
The IPKat has surpassed 10,000 posts! And 10,000 more are coming…
Mark
pens of Taser International Inc. v SC Gate 4 Business SRL and Others (Case C-175/15),
a decision where the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) addressed the issue of whether
Article 24 of Brussels I Regulation applies in cases where one party is domiciled in a
non-EU Member State.
David reviews
another David's (Stone) European Design Law:
A Practitioner's Guide, which
he describes as "an indispensable reference work" for those fond of
design law. Mark takes a look at another text (in German), the latter being Sebastian
Fuchs' dissertation Das Europäische Patent im Wandel - Ein
Rechtsvergleich des EP-Systems und des EU-Patentsystems (ie, "The
Changing European Patent - A comparison of the EP system and the EU patent
package").
"It is that time of year again when IP's great and
good pool together at Fordham
Law School near Columbus Circle in Manhattan to debate, learn and have fun",
says the AmeriKat in her first kat-post from the Fordham Conference 2016. In this
one, Annsley reports about the speeches of Maria Martin-Prat (Head of Unit -
Copyright, DG Connect at the European Commission), Michele Woods (Director,
Copyright Law Division, WIPO), Maria Pallante (Register of Copyrights, US
Copyright Office), and many others IP-enthusiasts about the role of copyright and trade marks
in the new, digital, multisensory IP world.
From trade marks and copyright to patents. "There seems to be more problems to resolve following reform
in the US and Europe", the AmeriKat thinks after hearing the speeches of (among
others) Margot Fröhlinger (Principal Director, Patent Law and Multilateral
Affairs, EPO), John Alty (Chief Executive and Comptroller
general, UK IPO), and Judge Kathleen O'Malley (US Court of Appeals for the
Federal Circuit).
In this third post of the series, Annsley reports of
Robin Jacob (UCL), Mr Justice Birss (High
Court of Justice, UK), Mr Justice Carr (High Court of Justice, UK), Judge Klaus Grabinski (Federal Supreme Court),
and many other IP Judges telling how it is (or was) life on the other side of the fence.
Remedies,
trade secrets and patents were at stake of Fordham's Sunday afternoon, when a
number of professionals took the floor.
The
IPKat goes paw-blic. Get ready,
says Nicola.
Kat friend Kim
Poh NG, a partner at Christopher & Lee Ong, provides this timely guest post about a recent decision of the Federal Court of Malaysia
addressing geographical indications, Swiss chocolate, and not-at-all-Swiss
chocolate pretending to be Swiss in Malaysia.
**********
PREVIOUSLY, ON NEVER
TOO LATE
Never too late 89 [week ending on Sunday 27
March] – Cricket and copyright in England And
Wales Cricket Board Ltd & Anor v Tixdaq Ltd & Anor | Are
business models simply jargon? | Singapore's IPOS ADR | Trunki case: the AIPPI's version | Goodbye OHIM, welcome EUIPO! | Actavis v Lilly | EU public consultation
on neighbouring rights | Life as an IP Lawyer in San Francisco | Copyright in
chess games | Trade surplus and IP | Fujifilm Kyowa Biologics v AbbVie
Biotechnology.
Never too late 88 [week ending on
Sunday 20 March] – CoA’s decision in Design
& Display Limited v OOO Abbott & another | AG in McFadden C-484/14
on WiFi providers’ liability | Twitter on “Dronie” trade mark | Rationale and
possible abuse of new US Trade Secret Law | CJEU in Liffers on
moral rights | product placements | Sci-Hub IP saga.
Never too late 87 [week ending on
Sunday 13 March] – UPC negotiations:
Neil Feinson's version | Open Source Dogs | Myth, metaphor as drivers of
innovation in IP | The Trunki case, i.e. PMS International Limited v
Magmatic Limited | Loubutin case referred to the CJEU | German court
refuses amendments filed on appeal | Italian Sharing Economy Bill | EPO
Performance | IP in culinary recipes | Where has the patent troll gone? | Napp
v Dr Reddy's and Sandoz.
Never too late 86 [week ending on
Sunday 6 March] – Comic Enterprises Ltd
v Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation [2016] EWCA Civ 41 |
The IPKat team: news, new arrivals and farewells | CJEU in Shoe
Branding Europe BVBA v Adidas and OHIM | World IP day | Advocate
General's opinion in Henrik Saugmandsgaard Øe in Austro-Mechana |
EPO v trade union | OLG Munich on YouTube liability | UPC judges' salary | The
UK implements Unitary Patent | CJEU in Daimler AG Együd Garage Gépjárműjavító
és Értékesítő Kft | Monsanto and tech-transfer in India | French ancillary
right over on-line images | Stockholm District Court refuses to issue blocking
injunction against access provider | CJEU on GIs in Viiniverla Oy V
Sosiaali- ja terveysalan lupa- ja valvontavirasto | Trinidad’s
Carnival and copyright | Again on Article 28 and trade-mark portfolios.
Never too late: if you missed the IPKat last week
Reviewed by Alberto Bellan
on
Monday, April 04, 2016
Rating:
No comments:
All comments must be moderated by a member of the IPKat team before they appear on the blog. Comments will not be allowed if the contravene the IPKat policy that readers' comments should not be obscene or defamatory; they should not consist of ad hominem attacks on members of the blog team or other comment-posters and they should make a constructive contribution to the discussion of the post on which they purport to comment.
It is also the IPKat policy that comments should not be made completely anonymously, and users should use a consistent name or pseudonym (which should not itself be defamatory or obscene, or that of another real person), either in the "identity" field, or at the beginning of the comment. Current practice is to, however, allow a limited number of comments that contravene this policy, provided that the comment has a high degree of relevance and the comment chain does not become too difficult to follow.
Learn more here: http://ipkitten.blogspot.com/p/want-to-complain.html