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  • In a follow-up to their article in the October issue, David Barron and Alexandra Brodie examine how to enforce business method patents in Europe
  • A string of high-profile cases has raised the question of where the boundaries of trade mark protection should be drawn. In the first article in a series, a team of correspondents compare trade mark registrability in eight countries from China to Chile
  • James Nurton investigates how .info’s sunrise registration period is shaping up after its first month and, overleaf, examines how much registrars are charging for registrations in the two new top level domains
  • Singapore is the latest state to adapt its copyright law to improve protection for digital works.
  • Wasted opportunties The last few weeks have seen domain names take centre stage with a major WIPO report on the subject and the liberalization of the registration process. But, Ralph Cunningham discovers, not everybody is happy
  • Two years on from the Supreme Court’s decision in Holmes v Vornado, Elizabeth Stotland Weiswasser and Rekha Ramani look at the opportunities for disruption of patent uniformity in patent cases in the US
  • Standard setting organizations are in a state of flux in the US, thanks to recent setbacks to the FTC's efforts to police members, as well as a new statute. Stafford Matthews, Robert S Harrell, V Walter Bratic and Shirley Webster review the latest developments
  • A recent US ruling has saved accused infringers from the fear that by not having a legal opinion, courts would automatically infer that such an opinion would have contained unfavourable advice. But, says Scott M Alter, that does not mean that such opinions may no longer be crucial
  • David Barron and Alexandra Brodie examine how patent offices and the courts in Europe treat business method patents. They also compare European and US filing activity and ask whether European financial services companies are lagging behind their US counterparts
  • The Singapore Network Information Centre (SGNIC) will offer second level domain names (SLDs) from January 3 2005. Until now, Singapore has only allowed registration of third level domain names (TLDs) such as name.com.sg. SLDs are shorter domain names (name.sg) and their introduction gives the public greater choice and more avenues to register .sg domain names. The move mirrors that of Hong Kong, the US, China and Japan, which saw strong uptake for SLDs following their introduction.