German Police Used Trojan Horses In Investigations 10/10/2011 by Intellectual Property Watch Leave a Comment Europe’s biggest hacker organisation, the German Chaos Computer Club (CCC), has analysed trojan horse software used by the German police to spy on suspects in several cases. In its 20-page analysis, the club revealed that the software sent to the hackers for analysis allowed police to not only listen into Skype calls, but also to control and manipulate infected machines from a command server using IP address 207.158.22.134, sitting on a server of a commercial hosting provider in Columbus, Ohio, in the United States.
With WTO Stalled, GI Industry Proponents Move To Create Their Own Register 10/10/2011 by Catherine Saez, Intellectual Property Watch Leave a Comment An international private-sector network lobbying for the protection of geographical indications is set to establish a compilation of all GIs currently protected in the world in what could seem like a response to the repeated failure of governments to agree on the establishment of a GIs register at the World Trade Organization. The Organization for an International Geographical Indications Network (OriGIn), meeting for its fifth General Assembly, also voiced concerns about the lack of protection of GIs in cyberspace.
A US Look At The New Digital Diplomacy 06/10/2011 by William New, Intellectual Property Watch Leave a Comment Social media has changed the old-fashioned rules of diplomacy, a senior US State Department advisor on social media told aspiring diplomats in Geneva today. The established rules of decorum and etiquette are giving way to a more interactive, less hierarchical system.
ECJ Decision On Exclusive Broadcasting Licences Could Reach Beyond Sports 06/10/2011 by Dugie Standeford for Intellectual Property Watch Leave a Comment A European Court of Justice ruling this week outlawing exclusive broadcasting licences that prohibit the supply of decoder cards to TV viewers outside the EU countries for which the licences are granted will likely affect rights holders and broadcasters of content other than sports, observers said. The decision could also have implications for European Commission attempts to update rules for digital content distribution.
EPO, European Commission Renew Commitment To Unitary Patent 06/10/2011 by Intellectual Property Watch 1 Comment The head of the European Patent Office (EPO) and the European Commissioner for Internal Market and Services today renewed their commitment to introduce a unitary EU patent, which they say would significantly ease workloads and reduce costs for patent applicants.
South Africa: TK Legislation In The New Tradition 06/10/2011 by Intellectual Property Watch 2 Comments “Ex Africa semper aliquid novi”, which can be freely translated from Latin to mean “there is always something new coming out of Africa,” said Pliny, the ancient Roman writer and scholar. Presumably then, as is the case now, the concept of “new” included an expression of sarcasm and deprecation as in “absurd, nonsensical and ridiculous.” Well, Pliny has been proved right once again, writes Prof. Owen Dean.
Parliament Committee Urges EU Commission To Support Print Disabilities Treaty 05/10/2011 by William New, Intellectual Property Watch 1 Comment The European Parliament’s Petitions Committee this week issued a call for a binding treaty allowing persons with print disabilities to make accessible copies of published works and to send them across borders.
Nagoya Protocol On Biodiversity Benefit-Sharing Has 64 Signatories 04/10/2011 by Intellectual Property Watch 1 Comment The UN agreement struck last year to bolster access and benefit-sharing related to biodiversity has been gaining signatures rapidly and may on its way to an early approval, according to the UN Convention on Biological Diversity secretariat. However, while countries are signing, not one has yet had a chance to ratify it.
As Bilateral Trade Deals Proceed, WIPO Hears Warnings, Calls For Change 04/10/2011 by William New, Intellectual Property Watch 1 Comment As some developed countries prepared to ink a secret plurilateral trade agreement against rampant global piracy and counterfeiting in recent days, leading emerging economies and non-governmental groups warned the World Intellectual Property Organization that such outside agreements need to respect broader societal impacts of IP rights enforcement or risk abuses of international rules on trade and development.
White & Case Expanding WTO Practice In Geneva 03/10/2011 by Intellectual Property Watch Leave a Comment White & Case law firm is looking to hire two lawyers for its World Trade Organization (WTO) practice in Geneva, to work on trade areas including intellectual property rights.