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  • Lucien Enescu and Melania Radulescu, of Rominvent in Bucharest, analyze the latest amendments to the design law in Romania, which bring protection into line with international standards
  • Unlike its rival Arsenal, Tottenham Hotspur has won an important victory in defending its brand. Ingrid Hering examines the issues raised by the case
  • A new amendment to New Zealand's Patents Act excludes from patent infringement actions concerned with obtaining regulatory approval there or elsewhere. The change threatens the rights of patent owners and could achieve more than the government intended, warns Tim Jackson
  • The US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit has cleared Rambus of allegations that it withheld patent information whilst a member of JEDEC, the standards-setting body for semiconductor technology.
  • Enforcement continues to be a challenge for trade mark owners in Asia. While some have all the legislative help they can use, others are still labouring with old laws. Protection is just not the priority it needs to be. Ralph Cunningham reports
  • In Société de Produits Nestlé SA v Unilever plc (December 18 2002, Jacob J), Unilever applied to register two trade marks relating to Vienetta ice cream, one with white wavy structure on top (the white mark) and the other with dark wavy structure (the dark mark).
  • The IP Academy of Singapore
  • Due to the new criteria applied by the Supreme Court of Justice by means of the Thesis: P Lxxvii/99 International Treaties, international treaties are categorized above the federal laws, and placed immediately under the Constitution.
  • ? Japan: The US Polo Association has appointed Mitsubishi as its official trade mark licensee in Japan. Mitsubishi will concentrate on selling sportswear bearing the Association's trade marks.
  • The subject of inventors' rights has recently generated much debate in Japan, with developments indicating the possibility of a shift of power favouring inventors. The story, in its most basic form, may sound familiar. The workhorse engineer, employed by a faceless corporation, makes an important invention. The corporation files an application in its own name and when the patent issues, garners huge profits. The inventor is rewarded with a mere pat on the back and a pittance. Not exactly Upton Sinclair, but the sense of exploitation is there. Yet, in the heyday of the Japanese economic boom, the days of feudalistic worker loyalty and guaranteed lifetime employment, this practice was accepted without question.