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These are the slides of a presentation that I gave to Leeds Inventors Group in Leeds on the 15 Jan 2014 and IP North West in Accrington on 16 Jan 2014. As ever it is necessary to distinguish between "intellectual property" (the laws that protect investment in branding, design, technology and works of art and literature such trade marks, registered designs, unregistered design rights, patents and copyrights) from "intellectual assets" (the objects of such protection such as trade names, logos, designs, inventions, novels, films, computer programs and websites). Except for bootlegging, counterfeiting and piracy (certain infringements of rights in performances, trade marks and copyrights on an industrial scale) infringement of intellectual property rights is not an offence in this country. Thus it is up to each intellectual property owner to enforce his or her rights in the civil courts. Unfortunately civil litigation in England and Wales can be very expensive and the party that loses the litigation usually has to pay the party that succeeds, A survey by IPAC Ithe Intellectual Property Advisory Committee) in 2003 compared the cost of litigation in England and Wales with the cost in France, Germany, the Netherlands and the USA and found that the UK and the USA were the most expensive countries. Costs in France, Germany and the Netherlands ranged from 10,000 to 50,000 euros whereas in England it cost over £1 million to bring an action in the High Court and between £150,000 and £250,000 in the County Court. Costs in the USA were comparable but there the losing party did not usually have to pay the lawyers' fees of the successful party. Thus, the UK was the most expensive and risky country of the developed world to bring an enforcement action. This appears to have had a dampening effect on innovation in that the number of European patent applications from the UK has trailed not just the USA and Japan but also France, Germany and even the Netherlands and Switzerland which have much smaller populations. Over the last 10 years HM government has tried to reduce the cost of dispute resolution. The Patents Act 2004 enabled IPO examiners to give advisory opinions on whether a patent was valid and whether it has been infringed. In 2010 new rules were introduced to limit the recoverable costs of litigation in the Patents County Court to £50,000. In Oct 2012 a new small claims track was introduced in the Patents County Court. The costs of litigation in the UK for small and medium enterprises is now comparable to those in continental Europe. The final change came in Oct 2013 when the Patents County Court was replaced by IPEC (the Intellectual Property Enterprise Court). HM government has also negotiated an agreement with all the EU member states except Italy and Spain by which the EPO will issue a European patent for all their territories as though they were one country (unified patent) and for disputes to be decided by a single Unified Patent Court in Paris,
How to Enforce your Intellectual Property Rights without Going Bust
How to Enforce your Intellectual Property Rights without Going Bust
Jane Lambert
De volgende generatie corporate website. Presentatie gehouden tijdens de maandelijkse kennissessie van eFocus. Door Freek Bijl en Sebastiaan Bode. Zie www.efocus.nl/kennissessies
Kennissessie De volgende generatie corporate website
Kennissessie De volgende generatie corporate website
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Evgeny Zabavnikov
2013年8月18日に大阪大学で行われたデジタル教科書学会2013年次大会での角南の実践発表のスライド。
教師が主体的に扱える教材を目指して(デジタル教科書学会2013年度年次大会)
教師が主体的に扱える教材を目指して(デジタル教科書学会2013年度年次大会)
Sunami Hokuto
Intro to W3C and Linked Open Data Part of the Sunday opening ceremony presentation on October 7, 2012
W3C at KESW2012
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Presented at the Computers in Libraries 2014 conference in Washington, DC. Co-Presented with Chad Boeninger. My section of the talk focuses on how we moved the UNC Libraries website into Wordpress.
Rock your library’s content with Wordpress
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chaefele
I'll be presenting this next Monday (3/21) at 4:30 at Computers in Libraries 2011. It's a short presentation, just 15 minutes. Come see me!
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These are the slides of a presentation that I gave to Leeds Inventors Group in Leeds on the 15 Jan 2014 and IP North West in Accrington on 16 Jan 2014. As ever it is necessary to distinguish between "intellectual property" (the laws that protect investment in branding, design, technology and works of art and literature such trade marks, registered designs, unregistered design rights, patents and copyrights) from "intellectual assets" (the objects of such protection such as trade names, logos, designs, inventions, novels, films, computer programs and websites). Except for bootlegging, counterfeiting and piracy (certain infringements of rights in performances, trade marks and copyrights on an industrial scale) infringement of intellectual property rights is not an offence in this country. Thus it is up to each intellectual property owner to enforce his or her rights in the civil courts. Unfortunately civil litigation in England and Wales can be very expensive and the party that loses the litigation usually has to pay the party that succeeds, A survey by IPAC Ithe Intellectual Property Advisory Committee) in 2003 compared the cost of litigation in England and Wales with the cost in France, Germany, the Netherlands and the USA and found that the UK and the USA were the most expensive countries. Costs in France, Germany and the Netherlands ranged from 10,000 to 50,000 euros whereas in England it cost over £1 million to bring an action in the High Court and between £150,000 and £250,000 in the County Court. Costs in the USA were comparable but there the losing party did not usually have to pay the lawyers' fees of the successful party. Thus, the UK was the most expensive and risky country of the developed world to bring an enforcement action. This appears to have had a dampening effect on innovation in that the number of European patent applications from the UK has trailed not just the USA and Japan but also France, Germany and even the Netherlands and Switzerland which have much smaller populations. Over the last 10 years HM government has tried to reduce the cost of dispute resolution. The Patents Act 2004 enabled IPO examiners to give advisory opinions on whether a patent was valid and whether it has been infringed. In 2010 new rules were introduced to limit the recoverable costs of litigation in the Patents County Court to £50,000. In Oct 2012 a new small claims track was introduced in the Patents County Court. The costs of litigation in the UK for small and medium enterprises is now comparable to those in continental Europe. The final change came in Oct 2013 when the Patents County Court was replaced by IPEC (the Intellectual Property Enterprise Court). HM government has also negotiated an agreement with all the EU member states except Italy and Spain by which the EPO will issue a European patent for all their territories as though they were one country (unified patent) and for disputes to be decided by a single Unified Patent Court in Paris,
How to Enforce your Intellectual Property Rights without Going Bust
How to Enforce your Intellectual Property Rights without Going Bust
Jane Lambert
De volgende generatie corporate website. Presentatie gehouden tijdens de maandelijkse kennissessie van eFocus. Door Freek Bijl en Sebastiaan Bode. Zie www.efocus.nl/kennissessies
Kennissessie De volgende generatie corporate website
Kennissessie De volgende generatie corporate website
Sebastiaan Bode
День 2
День 2
Evgeny Zabavnikov
2013年8月18日に大阪大学で行われたデジタル教科書学会2013年次大会での角南の実践発表のスライド。
教師が主体的に扱える教材を目指して(デジタル教科書学会2013年度年次大会)
教師が主体的に扱える教材を目指して(デジタル教科書学会2013年度年次大会)
Sunami Hokuto
Intro to W3C and Linked Open Data Part of the Sunday opening ceremony presentation on October 7, 2012
W3C at KESW2012
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AI4BD GmbH
Presented at the Computers in Libraries 2014 conference in Washington, DC. Co-Presented with Chad Boeninger. My section of the talk focuses on how we moved the UNC Libraries website into Wordpress.
Rock your library’s content with Wordpress
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chaefele
I'll be presenting this next Monday (3/21) at 4:30 at Computers in Libraries 2011. It's a short presentation, just 15 minutes. Come see me!
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2013年7月27日の第14回リクリセミナー「Web制作の未来、あなたの未来」での、角南のライトニングトーク「地図を描けば未来は見える」のスライド。登場するリソースの一覧はこちら(https://gist.github.com/shokuto/6038945)
地図を描けば未来は見える
地図を描けば未来は見える
Sunami Hokuto
Michael Harrison's contribution to the Bmedia IP seminar of the 17 Nov 2009. Dr Harrison is principal of Harrison IP a firm of patent and trade mark attorneys and a former president of the CIPA.
Michael Harrison: Registrable Rights
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The Vacant Land Guide is the first and only of its type in the market today. The intent of the Guide is to equip the investor so that he or she may go out and become an independent and successful vacant land investor. Over 1000 hours have been poured into this one-of-a-kind manual.
Vacant Land Guide - How to Buy Vacant Land at Wholesale Prices
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These are the slides for my introduction to brands which I presented on the 25 September 2013 to an audience of 20 at 4-5 Gray's Inn Square. This talk follows on from my Introduction to IP in June 2013 and if you have not seen those slides or read the manual it is worth doing so. Brands are the handle by which businesses, goods and services are recognized by the market place. They include trade marks and trade names but are so much more. Investment in branding is protected in the UK by a set of legal rules: - the action for passing off; - trade mark registration; - geographical indications; and - domain names. The action for passing off is a judge-made doctrine that has evolved over centuries. Essentially it is a prohibition against misrepresenting one trader's goods, services or business as those of another by adopting the same or a similar sign. Essentially there are three probanda: - reputation or goodwill; - misrepresentation, and - damage. There are however two special types of passing off: - extended passing off where the goodwill is in the product rather than the producer; and - inverse passing off where the defendant claims the goods or services of the claimant as his or her own. Trade marks are signs that can distinguish one trader's goods or services from those of all others. They are registered for specified goods or services which are organized into classes in accordance with the Nice Agreement. The registration of a trade mark confers the exclusive right to use the mark in relation to the specified goods or services. A registered trade mark can be infringed by using: - a sign that is identical to the registered mark in respect of the specified goods or services; - a sign that is the same or similar to the registered mark in relation to the same or similar goods where because of such similarity there is a likelihood of confusion including a likelihood of association with the registered mark; and - a sign in relation to any goods or services that is similar to a mark with a reputation where the use without due cause takes unfair advantage of or is detrimental to the registered mark. There are a number of exceptions to the exclusive rights conferred by registration and a defendant to an infringement action will often counterclaim for the revocation or invalidation of the registered mark. There are two special types of trade mark: - collective marks; and - certification marks. Trade marks may not be registered if such registration is contrary to the public interest (absolute grounds) or conflicts with an earlier trade mark or other IP right. WTO member states have an obligation under TRIPS to protect the i
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What is the business of public radio? Final presentation for Evolution and Trends in Digital Media. Com 546 University of Washington Masters of Communications in Digital Media. Ross Reynolds March 3, 2009
Ross Reynolds Ev Trends Final Presentation
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Rossophonic
Drafting standard terms and conditions of business. What should be included. How they should be compiled.
Setting Your Terms
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OCR expo controlled assessment
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srenshaw
2013年7月27日の第14回リクリセミナー「Web制作の未来、あなたの未来」での、角南のライトニングトーク「地図を描けば未来は見える」のスライド。登場するリソースの一覧はこちら(https://gist.github.com/shokuto/6038945)
地図を描けば未来は見える
地図を描けば未来は見える
Sunami Hokuto
Michael Harrison's contribution to the Bmedia IP seminar of the 17 Nov 2009. Dr Harrison is principal of Harrison IP a firm of patent and trade mark attorneys and a former president of the CIPA.
Michael Harrison: Registrable Rights
Michael Harrison: Registrable Rights
Jane Lambert
The Vacant Land Guide is the first and only of its type in the market today. The intent of the Guide is to equip the investor so that he or she may go out and become an independent and successful vacant land investor. Over 1000 hours have been poured into this one-of-a-kind manual.
Vacant Land Guide - How to Buy Vacant Land at Wholesale Prices
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These are the slides for my introduction to brands which I presented on the 25 September 2013 to an audience of 20 at 4-5 Gray's Inn Square. This talk follows on from my Introduction to IP in June 2013 and if you have not seen those slides or read the manual it is worth doing so. Brands are the handle by which businesses, goods and services are recognized by the market place. They include trade marks and trade names but are so much more. Investment in branding is protected in the UK by a set of legal rules: - the action for passing off; - trade mark registration; - geographical indications; and - domain names. The action for passing off is a judge-made doctrine that has evolved over centuries. Essentially it is a prohibition against misrepresenting one trader's goods, services or business as those of another by adopting the same or a similar sign. Essentially there are three probanda: - reputation or goodwill; - misrepresentation, and - damage. There are however two special types of passing off: - extended passing off where the goodwill is in the product rather than the producer; and - inverse passing off where the defendant claims the goods or services of the claimant as his or her own. Trade marks are signs that can distinguish one trader's goods or services from those of all others. They are registered for specified goods or services which are organized into classes in accordance with the Nice Agreement. The registration of a trade mark confers the exclusive right to use the mark in relation to the specified goods or services. A registered trade mark can be infringed by using: - a sign that is identical to the registered mark in respect of the specified goods or services; - a sign that is the same or similar to the registered mark in relation to the same or similar goods where because of such similarity there is a likelihood of confusion including a likelihood of association with the registered mark; and - a sign in relation to any goods or services that is similar to a mark with a reputation where the use without due cause takes unfair advantage of or is detrimental to the registered mark. There are a number of exceptions to the exclusive rights conferred by registration and a defendant to an infringement action will often counterclaim for the revocation or invalidation of the registered mark. There are two special types of trade mark: - collective marks; and - certification marks. Trade marks may not be registered if such registration is contrary to the public interest (absolute grounds) or conflicts with an earlier trade mark or other IP right. WTO member states have an obligation under TRIPS to protect the i
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ученицы 8 класса Мамакова Людмила Владимировна Мубаракова Райхана Габдулхаевна
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