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  • While the Czech Republic, Hungary and Russia have all strengthened their IP laws, copyright and trade marks owners have major concerns about the lack of enforcement, reports James Nurton
  • Decision 486 of 2000, applicable since December 1 2000 in Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia, amplified the definition of products capable of being registered as industrial designs.
  • Legal changes and commercial needs have opened up new opportunities for trade mark owners in North America. Ingrid Hering reports on how the US and Canada are responding to demands for more novel trade marks
  • Mary Helen Sears In two relatively recent decisions, the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit has clarified and reaffirmed the well-established US legal doctrine of "first sale" and its corollaries regarding permissible repair and impermissible (and therefore infringing) reconstruction of patented articles and patented processes associated with them. Jazz Photo Corp v International Trade Commission, 59 USPQ 2d 1907 (Fed Cir August 21 2001) and Surfco Hawaii v Fin Control Systems Pty Ltd, 60 USPQ 2d 1056 (Fed Cir September 5 2001) both rest upon a fundamental of US personal property (or "chattel") law, whereby the purchaser within the United States of an article covered by a United States patent, or one that embodies a process covered by such a patent, has the same individual private property right to use and dispose of it as he or she enjoys with respect to a purchased article not covered by a viable US patent. These rights have been recognized by American courts since at least as early as the Supreme Court decision in Wilson v Simpson, 50 US (9 How) 109 (1850) and have been reiterated many times during the ensuing century and a half.
  • Persistent actions on the part of the Singapore police through the Intellectual Property Rights Branch have been extremely successful in smashing syndicates who have been dealing in pirated articles such as VCDs, DVDs, CD-ROMs, etc.
  • As the internet has expanded in recent years, it has become more and more important due to the fact that it has revolutionized the communications and now it is a significant marketing tool for large and small businesses.
  • Mexican IP law does not recognize certification marks (marks identifying products or services whose quality meets particular standards) as a different type of mark. Thus, certification marks are usually registered as service marks in international class 42. Such registration may not prevent third parties from registering the same mark in a different class and use it for non-certified products and services, potentially misleading the public, and thus jeopardizing the value of the certification mark. Under the current Mexican Industrial Property Institute (IMPI)'s examination procedures, it is unlikely that the examiner's prima facie analysis in a cross-class examination will lead him to deny registration based on likelihood of confusion between the certification mark and that of the application filed in a totally different class.
  • Heinz Bardehle, senior partner of German firm Bardehle Pagenberg Dost Altenburg Geissler Isenbruck was awarded the Bundersverdienstkreuz (Great Cross of Merit of the German Federal Republic) by Minister of Justice, Herta Dåubler-Gmelin, on October 24.
  • What is BABY-DRY - a trade mark for talcum powder, compact tumble-dryers, rain hoods for prams or nappies? Hub. J Harmeling looks into the complicated and changing world of descriptive marks in Europe
  • Ralph Cunningham, Hong Kong