Managing IP is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Gardens, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2025

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Search results for

There are 21,740 results that match your search.21,740 results
  • Morality is subjective and divisive, and determining the acceptability of potentially offensive words as trade marks can be problematic. Mark Pearce and Catherine Lamb illustrate how the UK and continental Europe interpret the moral impact of words
  • Australia: The Advisory Council on Intellectual Property, an independent body appointed by the government, released its report on business method patenting. The Council said the country should remain in line with Japan, the US and New Zealand, where business methods are patentable, rather than adopt the restrictive practice in jurisdictions administered under the European Patent Convention. Australia: The Australian Law Reform Commission has urged federal and state governments to take a tougher line on monitoring gene patents. The Commission has made 40 proposals and asked for feedback before it delivers its final report to the federal Parliament later this year. Japan: After officials from the Japanese Fair Trade Commission raided Microsoft's Tokyo offices on Thursday, the company made public its decision to scrap a clause in its licensing contracts that forces computer makers to give up their rights to claim Microsoft has violated their patents. Malaysia: Butt Wai Choon, managing director of Microsoft Malaysia, said that Malaysia continues to pose a piracy problem for the software industry, despite government enforcement attempts. Butt said that educating the public is the best means to defeat the problem. Thailand: Health lobbyists urged the Thai government to exclude IP rights from talks on a free trade agreement with the US. The groups claimed that provisions in the agreement would delay the introduction of cheaper copies of patented drugs in poor countries.
  • Stéphanie Bodoni, London
  • Sam Mamudi, New York
  • Defendants in Hong Kong trade mark cases could find it harder to fight infringement actions after a ruling in the first court case to deal with internationally known marks under the new trade mark law.
  • One of India's biggest drugs companies is urging the government to change the rules on data exclusivity, saying the country needs to balance the interests of multinational pharmaceutical companies and India's home-grown drugs industry.
  • The entertainment industries are increasingly active in taking steps to combat the copyright dangers posed by the internet. Sam Mamudi investigates the strategies rights owners are developing, and asks whether copyright has a future
  • Malcolm Royal, former FICPI president, explains how the reformed innovation patent system works in Australia and, overleaf, compares similar procedures worldwide
  • As the EU is set to expand to include 10 more states in May, Jeremy Phillips analyzes the options available to rights owners who need to enforce their intellectual property and examines the systems being put in place by the European Commission