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  • Tony Samuel, in the third of three articles on intellectual property value issues, considers some of the questions arising from the enormous growth in the worth of media and sponsorship rights in sport
  • Patent infringement litigation involves a large number of uncertainties. Alexander I Poltorak and Paul J Lerner reveal how to calculate the risk involved
  • Jeremy Phillips looks again at the function of trade marks in the light of three cases which are heading towards the ECJ
  • BRAZIL: Merck slashed prices of two AIDS drugs, just days after threatening to take Brazil's state-owned pharmaceutical firm Far-Manguinhos to court for violating the patent on an AIDS drug. Brazil has agreed to halt its plans to challenge the patent. CHINA: Cable TV, the sole provider of pay-TV programmes in China, is urging the Chinese government to outlaw the possession of unauthorized decoders openly on sale in Shenzhen. The Broadcasting Ordinance forbids the manufacture and sale of decoders but does not forbid unauthorized viewing. CHINA: Philips Electronics is to invest $1 in a new assembly and test plant in China. CHINA: A senior manager of the Unilever group is in custody after being accused of helping a local firm to produce fake Unilever products. CHINA: The government is to pass legislation to extend copyright protection to cover the internet, and bring its legislation in to line with developed countries. CHINA: People in Hebei in China will be rewarded up to 10% of the amount of the fines imposed if they report the production or sale of fake or inferior goods to anti-counterfeiting departments. CZECH REPUBLIC: Czech brewer Budejovicky Budvar, which has a long-running trade mark dispute with Anheuser-Busch, has relinquished rights to the Budweiser name in the US. Budvar will adopt Czechvar as the brand name for its product in the American beer market. JAPAN: The first dispute over internet domain names in an Asian alphabet has ruled in favour of Japanese Pharmaceutical company Sankyo. WIPO ordered the immediate transfer of the two-character Japanese name which corresponds to sankyo.com. SWEDEN: From May 7, Skriptor, changs its name to Compu-Mark Nordic for its trade mark searching activities but will function under the Skriptor name for its name creation activities. UK: Three people were convicted for their part in a multi-million pound software counterfeit scam to defraud Microsoft. The fraudsters received jail sentences of 10 years. US: Abbott Laboratories plans to sell its two AIDS drugs at no profit in sub-Saharan Africa. The drugs will be sold for less than $1000 each. In the US they sell for $7,100. US: EMI and Bertelsmann joined together to launch a new subscription-based music service on the web called MusicNet. RealNetworks is bringing its internet media technology into the partnership. MusicNet will be available later this year. The companies will license the platform to companies wanting to sell music subscription services on the web including Napster. US: Mylan Laboratories and Watson Pharmaceuticals received approval from US regulators to market generic forms of the drug BuSpar, ending a four-month patent dispute with Bristol-Myers Squibb. US: Versign will keep the right to register dot-com names until 2007. It will give up control of dot-org after 2002 and submit dot-net for re-bidding in early 2006. The changes still need to be agreed by the US Commerce Department. US: Embattled song-swap company Napster has licensed revolutionary digital fingerprinting technology to help it filter out copyrighted songs from its service to comply with a federal court order. US: Federal antitrust enforcers are preparing civil charges against Schering-Plough and generic companies Upsher-Smith of Minneapolis, and the Lederle unit of American Home Products. Charges allege patent settlements between the companies including illegal payments of $90 million to delay a low-cost generic drug from reaching the market.
  • Has the European Court of Justice given the green light to parallel imports into Europe? Tesco says yes; Levi’s says no. Many lawyers say it is a bit more complicated than that. Tabitha Parker reports
  • Law and accountancy firms are coming under greater scrutiny in Hong Kong from April 1, under the new Intellectual Property (Miscellaneous Amendments) Ordinance intended to combat corporate piracy. Aimed at preventing bootlegging in places of public entertainment and combating corporate piracy, the new Ordinance targets those companies taking advantage of the loopholes in the law to avoid prosecution for copyright infringement.
  • ICANN is to set up a working group to make policy recommendations concerning the controversial multilingual domain (MLD) names.
  • US membership of the Madrid Protocol may be only a few months away according to Bruce MacPherson, director of external affairs of the International Trademark Association. Thanks to pressure from US companies and the INTA, the legislation to implement membership, first considered in 1989, is nearing the end of its journey through Congress. Attempts to implement the Protocol have not been easy. It has been dogged by conflict with the EU, and lately by complications over Cuba's role.
  • The past year has seen a greater degree of maturity in the processing of trade mark disputes and predictability in foreseeing their outcome. Jeremy Phillips reviews 10 decisions from across Europe which symbolize the trend
  • Nils V Montan, incoming president of the INTA, is a pragmatist, and believes that beating pirates requires a carrot as well as a stick. Tabitha Parker asked him about the challenges facing trade mark and copyright owners in the new millennium