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  • The last 12 months have seen several important IP initiatives in Thailand. Moreover, the country is readying itself for long-awaited accession to the Paris Convention, the Patent Cooperation Treaty and even the Madrid Protocol. Vipa Chuenjaipanich and Edward J Kelly consider the changes already in place and those on the drawing board
  • Ron Marchant was appointed chief executive of the UK Patent Office at the beginning of this year. James Nurton spoke to him about the role of national patent offices and patent protection in Europe
  • Emma Barraclough, Hong Kong
  • The approach of 2005 and TRIPs Agreement conformity has proved to be a great motivator in Asian jurisdictions. A flood of new patent legislation has entered the statute books. Some countries already comply with the agreement. Others have a bit more work to do, reports Ralph Cunningham
  • The approach of 2005 and TRIPs Agreement conformity has proved to be a great motivator in Asian jurisdictions. A flood of new patent legislation has entered the statute books. Some countries already comply with the agreement. Others have a bit more work to do, reports Ralph Cunningham
  • EU: On May 19 the European Council of Ministers adopted a compromise proposal by the EU Irish Presidency on the patenting of computer-implemented inventions with the adoption. The compromise restricts the scope of patent protection purely to computer-implemented inventions. EU: The European Commission outlined rules for the implementation and functions as well as the registration principles of the .eu top-level domain. The rules establish who can register a name, who can be an accredited registrar and the ADR service for the new domain. EU: During a May 17 and 18 meeting, the trade ministers of the 25 EU countries again failed to agree plans for a Community patent. The failure came after the leaders of more than 300 international companies signed a petition urging the European Council of Ministers to reach an agreement over the Community patent. The petition was organized by the European Association for Bioindustries (EuropaBio) with the support of several national biotechnology associations. EU: The European Council of Ministers adopted the Directive on measures and procedures to ensure the enforcement of intellectual property rights just six days before the EU's expansion to 25 countries, on April 26. The Directive strengthens the remedies available to rights holders, but not include controversial criminal sanctions provisions. UK: The UK amended its trade mark law on May 5, and now requires trade mark owners to prove use of earlier trade marks that are more than five years old in opposition and invalidation procedures. A streamlined opposition procedure has also been introduced, as has a new right for the PTO to give a preliminary indication on some opposition cases.
  • Many ccTLDs have now been opened up to international brand owners, but there is no uniformity in how disputes are handled. Lori Faye Fischler examines the rules, and how they are implemented, in the 10 most popular jurisdictions
  • 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
  • On May 1 the EU will open up to 10 new member states. Stéphanie Bodoni seeks answers to frequently asked questions about the impact enlargement will have on IP rights
  • Ralph Cunningham, Hong Kong