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Popular Articles:
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Oh Cannabis!
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Cocktail lovers – watch out! Are alcoholic drinks similar to non-alcoholic ones (and if only for trademark purposes)?
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Geographical Indications: India’s PGI application for ‘Basmati’
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No monopoly on blue and silver for Red Bull
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All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others. Time to rethink the EUTM “unitary character”.
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Trademark case: ACT 898 Products Inc. v. WS Industries Inc., USA
Recent Articles:
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Registration of the protected designation of origin “HALLOUMI” in the EU – The General Court comes to the rescue of the European Commission and of the Republic of Cyprus
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‘Don’t fence me in’: what if your locally used trade name is in between one proprietor’s earlier trade name and a corresponding younger trade mark? – the finale of the Classic Coach Company case
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Samsung v Swatch: the UK Court of Appeal departs from the EU approach to the E-Commerce Directive ‘safe harbour defence’
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Healthy things and Paris Bar – two new GC decisions on “weak marks”
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Anti- Counterfeiting, Czech Republic, EU trade mark law, Exhaustion of rights, Grey online sales, Parallel imports, Trademark
Information claim the Czech way: smell of partial victory for Chanel against online retailer
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UK trade mark law post-Brexit: the UK Court of Appeal diverges from the CJEU in statutory acquiescence
Random Articles:
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Not all trees are magic: Julius Sämann loses before the General Court
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USA: In re DDMB, Inc, United States Court of Appeals, Federal Circuit, No. 2016-2037, 8 March 2017
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UK: “Plumbing” the issue of Honest Concurrent Use & AdWords
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Top 3 Posts from January and February from our IP Law blogs
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Quandoque bonus dormitat Homerus” [even Homer nods]. So why shouldn’t the GC?
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Case law, Confusion, Germany, Likelihood of confusion, National law, National marks, Similarity of marks, Unfair advantage
MARBO RED – A case of likelihood of confusion or exploitation of reputation?
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When do figurative marks represent the appearance of the goods?
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The INTA Annual Meeting and a year in the life of a trademark practitioner
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Norway: Ridicule as a response to claims of trade mark infringement
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Brexit: When two become one