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  • The Taiwan Intellectual Property Office is considering adding criminal liability, along with other changes, to the Trade Secret Act
  • Semiconductor companies have been the victim in several cases of trade secret theft in recent years. The introduction of criminal liability and wire tapping could help, though damages will remain low
  • When The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company released its BIG FOOT TIRE, it didn’t realize that another, smaller company, Big O Tire, was already marketing a tire by the same name.
  • An INTA Annual Meeting panel today will discuss the best strategies for protecting your marks in Africa, as James Nurton discovers.
  • Scott Paintin is in charge of protecting intellectual property for Western Union, including the Washington D.C.-based Travelex Global Business Payments. James Nurton spoke to him.
  • The Trademark Reporter authors John Welch of Lando & Anastasi and Theodore Davis of Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton will highlight some of the key matters in a number of areas that are shaping trademark law today. Eileen McDermott reports.
  • There are signs that it is becoming easier to register nontraditional trademarks. But how useful are they for brand owners? A session at today's INTA Annual Meeting compares practice in China, Europe and the United States, reports Emma Barraclough.
  • For now, ambush marketing is winning. Not because the law isn’t strong enough to prevent brands from hijacking physical events, but because the media by which consumers watch those events has broadened so much.
  • Lawyers whose clients want to extend their brand need to ask themselves four key questions, said John Joseph Cheek, Caterpillar Inc., at a session during the INTA Annual Meeting yesterday.
  • “We now hand over to Paola Gelato of Studio Legale Jacobacci to talk about geographical indications in Italy. And I warn you, anyone that skipped lunch is going to find this difficult,” said chair Jaroslaw Kulikowski of Kulikowska & Kulikowski in Poland in yesterday’s session, Appellations d’Origine: Made in Europe. And so it proved.