The 201st
edition of Never Too Late is here to bring you up to speed on the latest and
greatest of the IPKat world! Today’s highlights include no-deal Brexit
analysis, event reports, copyright in fireworks, logos and even football
trophies! And for Kat’s sake – what is ‘Fiverrization’?!
Never Too Late 197 [Week ending 10 June] The IPKat is turning 15 ... and is inviting you to the birthday party! | Prison labor: a boon to greater patenting? | DeepMind: First major AI patent filings revealed | An Apology to the Machine | Report: EPO conference - Patenting Artificial Intelligence | Respect of family life cannot be abused to trump copyright protection, says AG Szpunar | Dutch court rules that for-profit provision of links to unlicensed content is an infringement | CJEU confirms differential treatment of what amounts to unfair advantage for well-known trade marks in its KENZO Guest Post: NDAs & NNNs in China.ESTATE/KENZO judgment | Tails of a Cybersquat Claiming Grumpy Cat and an IP Licence | Never Too Late
Never Too Late 196 [week ending 3 June] European Commission proposes Regulation to limit SPC protection with "export manufacturing waiver" | Paparazzi & copyright: where are we and where should we be? | When Norway's oil giant Statoil announced a rebranding, it was not "horsing" around | Report on IPO’s 2018 European Practice Committee Conference (2/2) | Yes Virginia, there is IP practice outside of London: a special interview | Conceptualizing Copyright Exceptions in China and South Africa | Contentious Trade Mark Registry Proceedings | Friday Fantasies | Around the IP Blogs!
IPR Melting Pot
The UK Government has issued a number of technical
notices relating to IPR’s in a no-Brexit scenario. In UK copyright
in a no-deal Brexit scenario: what will happen?, Kat Eleonora Rosati reviews Copyright if
there’s no Brexit deal. GuestKat Rosie Burbidge sheds light onto the
exhaustion of rights (No deal Brexit
- what does it mean for exhaustion of rights?), patents (No deal Brexit
- what will happen to patents - particularly SPCs and the UPC?), and registered Community designs and trade marks (No deal Brexit
- what does it mean for registered Community designs and trade marks).
GuestKat Mathilde
Pavis provides her insights about a new phenomenon/business model-- ‘Fiverrization’
and what effect it might have on the creative industries: Will there be
a “Fiverrization” of the creative industries?
Kat Neil Wilkof provides a summary of
the First Plenary Session (“Anchoring Innovation: The Future of IP
Organisations”) of the 2018 edition of Singapore’s IPWeek @ SG: IP Offices
still searching for (the holy grail) of innovation and incentives: the view
from IPWeek @ SG
Cancun Kats |
Kat friend Richard Vary (Bird & Bird) provides
on hand reports from this year's AIPPI Congress is in Cancun, Mexico: AIPPI Congress
Report 1: Standard essential patents – maximizing value before enforcement; AIPPI Congress
Report 2: Out of term - provisional and post term patent enforcement; AIPPI Congress
Report 3: Hot topics in IP; and AIPPI Congress
Report 4: A balancing act - copyright versus other rights.
Patents
Kat friend Constance Leong describes
a fast-track patent scheme launched by the Intellectual Property Office of Singapore to accelerate innovation for finance sector inventions: How Singapore
Is Fast-Tracking FinTech Patent Applications (and making more "Crazy Rich
Asians"?)
Copyright
Guest contributor Akshat Agrawal analyses copyright protection in
fireworks displays. In particular, he considers the notion against a backdrop
of material expression, fixation and dramatic works, and raises questions of
unity, certainty, enforceability and public policy. Evolving
concepts of work and sustainability of copyright: the curious case of curated
fireworks displays.
GuestKat Nedim Malovic discusses a
recent refusal by the US Copyright Office Review Board to register Vodafone’s Speechmark logo on
the ground that it is not sufficiently original: US Copyright
Office Review Board denies registration of ‘Vodafone Speechmark’.
GuestKat Frantzeska Papadopolou reports on a
recent ruling issued by Swedish Patent and Market Court of Appeal. The decision
considers the protection of copyright-protected works when these are used as
evidence as part of a court proceeding: Using copyright-protected
material as evidence in a court proceeding.
The Paris Tribunal has considered a case
brought by the French Consumers’ Association against Twitter and declared ‘null
and void’ most of the Twitter’s T&C clauses, including the copyright
licensing provisions for user-generated content. GuestKat
Mathilde Pavis has more: Paris tribunal guts Twitter’s T&Cs… including the copyright clause
for user-generated content
Weekly
Roundups: Never Too Late; Around the IP Blogs!; and Never Too Late.
Image
Credits: Güldem Üstün and new-york-city
PREVIOUSLY ON NEVER TOO LATE
Never Too Late 200 [Week ending 16 Sep] | BREAKING: FCJ refers case
regarding YouTube’s liability for damages to the CJEU | Fashion, algorithms,
and copyright: is it all about what we want or rather what we didn't know we
want? | Time for a break - catching up with KitKat | Book review: The Economics
of Open Access – on the Future of Academic Publishing |
Never Too Late 199 [Week ending 9 Sep] What does a no deal Brexit mean for
trade marks and designs? | Copyright and tattoos: where are we now? | Swedish
Supreme Court to rule on damages relating to online copyright | CJEU back in
‘Hot Water’ – when are infringing goods being ‘offered’? | A bagel is a bagel
is a bagel, and a pita is a pita is a pita: but is a bialy a cebularz?
Never Too Late 198 BREAKING: CJEU rules that Louboutin red sole mark does NOT fall within absolute ground for refusal | The Broad's CRISPR patent: The curious case of the missing declaration | Kymouse's stay of execution | The AmeriKat's Top 3 upcoming IP summer events | BREAKING: UK Supreme Court rules that ISPs do NOT have to pay implementation costs in Cartier case | who should control the 1500-year old monastery manuscript of the Garima Gospels? | Mexican GIs and the registry of foreign GIs and AOs | Around the IP Blogs!
Never Too Late 198 BREAKING: CJEU rules that Louboutin red sole mark does NOT fall within absolute ground for refusal | The Broad's CRISPR patent: The curious case of the missing declaration | Kymouse's stay of execution | The AmeriKat's Top 3 upcoming IP summer events | BREAKING: UK Supreme Court rules that ISPs do NOT have to pay implementation costs in Cartier case | who should control the 1500-year old monastery manuscript of the Garima Gospels? | Mexican GIs and the registry of foreign GIs and AOs | Around the IP Blogs!
Never Too Late 197 [Week ending 10 June] The IPKat is turning 15 ... and is inviting you to the birthday party! | Prison labor: a boon to greater patenting? | DeepMind: First major AI patent filings revealed | An Apology to the Machine | Report: EPO conference - Patenting Artificial Intelligence | Respect of family life cannot be abused to trump copyright protection, says AG Szpunar | Dutch court rules that for-profit provision of links to unlicensed content is an infringement | CJEU confirms differential treatment of what amounts to unfair advantage for well-known trade marks in its KENZO Guest Post: NDAs & NNNs in China.ESTATE/KENZO judgment | Tails of a Cybersquat Claiming Grumpy Cat and an IP Licence | Never Too Late
Never Too Late 196 [week ending 3 June] European Commission proposes Regulation to limit SPC protection with "export manufacturing waiver" | Paparazzi & copyright: where are we and where should we be? | When Norway's oil giant Statoil announced a rebranding, it was not "horsing" around | Report on IPO’s 2018 European Practice Committee Conference (2/2) | Yes Virginia, there is IP practice outside of London: a special interview | Conceptualizing Copyright Exceptions in China and South Africa | Contentious Trade Mark Registry Proceedings | Friday Fantasies | Around the IP Blogs!
Never Too Late: if you missed the IPKat last week!
Reviewed by Ieva Giedrimaite
on
Tuesday, October 09, 2018
Rating:
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