Read online - IPPro The Internet
Transcription
Read online - IPPro The Internet
EditorialComment Brain pains Editor: Mark Dugdale editor@ipprotheinternet.com Tel: +44 (0)203 750 6022 Reporter: Tammy Facey tammyfacey@blackknightmedialtd.com Tel: +44 (0)203 750 6017 Associate publisher: Carlos Northon carlosnorthon@ipprotheinternet.com Tel: +44 (0)203 750 6023 Account manager: Malkeet Mullay malkeetmullay@ipprolifesciences.com Tel: +44 (0)203 750 6026 Account manager: Kurtis Spencer Tel: +44 (0)203 750 6025 Publisher: Justin Lawson justinlawson@ipprotheinternet.com Tel: +44 (0)203 750 6028 Marketing executive: Amber Harty amberharty@blackknightmedialtd.com Tel: +44 (0)203 750 6020 Designer: John Savage johnsavage@ipprotheinternet.com Tel: +44 (0)203 750 6021 Science and innovation are making incredible leaps forward, so much so that scientists from Ohio State University claim to have grown a nearly complete human brain—in a dish. The brain, which equals the maturity of a five-week old fetus, is the size of a pencil eraser. It has an identifiable structure and contains 99 percent of the genes present in the human fetal brain, according to its ‘growers’. The brain has a spinal cord, all of the major regions, multiple cell types, signaling circuitry, and even a retina. Rene Anand, professor of biological chemistry and pharmacology at Ohio State University, converted adult skin cells into pluripotent cells, which are immature stem cells that can be programmed to become any tissue in the body, to grow the brain. He said: “We’ve struggled for a long time trying to solve complex brain disease problems that cause tremendous pain and suffering. The power of this brain model bodes very well for human health because it gives us better and more relevant options to test and develop therapeutics other than rodents.” Scientists hope that the system will enable ethical, rapid and accurate testing of experimental drugs before the clinical trial stage, and advance studies of genetic and environmental causes of central nervous system disorders. Anand is yet to have his method peer reviewed because he has filed an invention disclosure with Ohio State University, so until it is scrutinised by other scientists, it’s unclear whether this is an actual breakthrough. But the possibilities are intriguing—in a decade that has brought us further expansion of the internet, the exploration of Pluto, driverless cars and solar-powered planes, we would be forgiven for thinking we’ve had our lot. But a scientist just grew a human brain—in a dish. Innovation is showing no signs of slowing down, and just like Anand’s method for growing a human brain, it needs protecting more than ever. With that in mind, we present this year’s IPPro The Annual. It covers intellectual property topics such as online brand protection, new gTLDs, and pharmaceutical research and development in detail, and provides a bird’s eye view of key jurisdictions around the world. Office fax: +44 (0)20 8711 5985 As ever, we always welcome your feedback, so don’t hesitate to drop us a line. Published by Black Knight Media Ltd Provident House, 6-20 Burrell Row Beckenham, BR3 1AT, UK Mark Dugdale Editor Company reg: 0719464 Copyright © 2015 Black Knight Media Ltd. All rights reserved. 3 Latin America is waiting AIPPI president Felipe Claro discusses issues the association has faced in the last 12 months, and what it plans to do during its annual congress in October 2015 and beyond P8 Give and take: enforcement’s unintended consequences Platform and brand owners can take an unexpected hit from social media site takedown disputes, say Susan O’Neill and Janie Thompson on behalf of INTA Backing the profession CIPA’s Lee Davies recaps what was a very productive 12 months for the institute P10 P16 Dealing with digital identity theft Nathalie Dreyfus of Dreyfus explains the importance of owning a trademark to protect a brand’s rights on the internet, and the various methods for doing so P20 Top tips for TLDs Bart Mortelmans of bNamed.net offers advice for protecting trademarks online P28 Growing into its own The new gTLD programme continues to develop and mature, according to Anthony Beltran of 101domain P24 Protect your IP worldwide. The most comprehensive and innovative IP translation, foreign filing and search services solution. • Ensure top quality. • Cut costs and save resources. • Simplify and streamline. Patent translations PCT national stage entry Visit us at: inovia.com | rws.com Direct filing European validation Patent searches International patent database C M Y Deciding when to decide CM The lessons learned from the AIA aftershock prove that ongoing cooperation and partnership is the best way to achieve an organisation’s goals, says Matthew Sekac of Park IP Translations MY CY CMY P34 K Perfecting patents Experts discuss how best to translate a patent, and what to look for in a partner P38 One fell loophole: protecting clinical data There are evident loopholes in Mexican legislation regarding IP rights and clinical data protection framed in the scope of sanitary regulatory affairs. Soledad Betanzos-Lara of Goodrich, Riquelme y Asociados reports As queasy as 1, 2, 3 Obtaining supplementary protection certificates in Poland is not as simple as do re mi, says Magdalena Tagowska of Patpol P52 Innovation game: a new series Where are the next innovations going to come from? Experts take a look P46 P56 OAPI: effective trademark protection Vanessa Halle of Nico Halle & Co Law Firm offers some useful tips for brands protecting and enforcing their trademark rights in Africa P62 When only a wrecking ball will do The digital space can be a free-for-all for phony operators, so how do you catch the fake-happy counterfeiters? Experts from WebTMS and bNamed.net share how to limit the damage caused by online infringers P30 Closing borders to fakers and pirates Amaka Okafor of Stillwaters Law outlines the importance of an effective border control regime to fighting counterfeiting and piracy P64 Game-changing decisions on trademarks continue The Turkish Constitution and trademark law are at odds, but the courts are making attempts to clear up the disputes, says Oktay Simsek of Destek Patent The Kit Kat case: a break between the law and commercial reality? Experts from Christodoulos G. Vassiliades & Co. LLC examine the ways in which Europe and the UK have recently approached shape trademarks P58 P68 Service providers A selection of providers in intellectual property P73 AIPPI president Felipe Claro discusses issues the association has faced in the last 12 months, and what it plans to do during its annual congress in October 2015 and beyond. Tammy Facey reports What has taken place over the past 12 months for the AIPPI? What have your members been focusing on in terms of intellectual property? We have been following the trademark changes in Europe through the trademark package initiative and have been participating in patent harmonisation studies in different jurisdictions. We are closely following the plain packaging debate before the World Trade Organization (WTO), where AIPPI (the International Association for the Protection of Intellectual Property) will deliver a presentation on IP as a trade resource during the public forum in Geneva at the end of September 2015. As WTO director Fernando Azevêdo said: “Trade should provide a seat for everyone at the table”. AIPPI also recently participated in a multi-jurisdictional copyright book project that will be available soon. Our observer status before Office for Harmonization in the Internal Market (OHIM) has been both demanding and rewarding, and we plan to return to Alicante in the future. Given that your next congress is in Brazil, what can we expect on the agenda for your Latin American members? AIPPI is a global association that covers more than 120 jurisdictions. Our national groups, committees and individual members produce about 100 proposals for consideration in a given year. From those we identify four key topics that span the breadth of IP issues that are highly relevant for the IP community. These topics are chosen for detailed analysis and debate, leading to AIPPI resolutions. We also select a diverse range of topical panel sessions for our annual educational programme. This year, at our congress in Rio between 10 and 14 October 2015, we will debate trade secrets, free riding (trademarks), copyright exceptions and inventorship of multinational inventions. We are also taking into account several topics of interest proposed by the Brazilian group, so our panels will include sessions on plant variety protection and green technology. No one wants to be on the outside of green technology and climate change issues. Even the Pope is interested in climate change. How do you filter the proposals, to only end up with four IP issues? The first point is that in any given year there will always be more than four IP issues that AIPPI feels need to be addressed. As mentioned, the four issues selected annually form the basis of AIPPI’s resolutions. The power of these resolutions is that they represent the consensus view of AIPPI, having been studied by the national and regional groups, debated by experts and passed by vote at the executive committee. So the selection process is important. Topics of relevance to the IP issues facing the world today are proposed. Our programme committee meets to analyse all proposals and shortlists them for consideration by the reporter general team and ultimately approval by the bureau. This rigorous process ensures that relevant and diverse topics are selected for AIPPI’s resolutions. Similar rigour is applied to the selection of topics for the educational programme run at every congress, ensuring a balance of matters of global interest as well as topics of special interest for the region where the congress is held. We hope that this year we will attract more Latin American attendees keen to address IP issues they have in the region. We see that there is not much innovation protection in this part of America: only 2.5 percent of all patent applications come from Latin America. This number should rise in the future. We need to create more awareness of how to protect new technologies. Latin American people are innovating, but are not always ready or knowledgeable on how to protect their innovations. This needs to change. At the same time, there is a kind of anti-IP sentiment, especially among young people, who ask: “why should I pay for this?” This is particularly true in the virtual environment, because sometimes IP is reduced to just vibrations that travel through the air (books, games, apps, music, pictures, and movies). Even money is transformed into a fingerprint scan. So they ask: “Why it is so easy to get a file, but at the same time I am restricted from using it?” Would education practices raise awareness of IP and help Latin America become more innovative? Absolutely. IP awareness programmes are most welcome in the Latin America region. This should be done at all levels: schools, children, commerce, judiciary, and so on. Today, we no longer have local markets in the old sense. Even the smallest markets are affected by global IP rules and principles. In many cases the customer is the smartphone that dictates to its holder how and what to buy. How well positioned are IP systems in Latin America to encourage innovation in the life sciences? Culturally, innovation protection is a bit slow in Latin America. Only during the last few years are innovators realising they can protect their inventions with a patent or other means of protection. Typically, the order was to create and publish and do nothing. Innovators are now realising they can create, protect and then publish. Efforts are being made in this vein with universities taking the lead in developing innovation centres, shaping IP policies and spreading the message to create and protect. It is happening now and it will create an impact in the near future. I am optimistic about this. Latin American governments are also offering tax incentives for start-ups, so it would have a positive effect, even if it means there is more to comply with. IPPro “ There is a kind of anti-IP sentiment, especially among young people, who ask: ‘why should I pay for this?’ This is particularly true in the virtual environment ” Felipe Claro, President, AIPPI CIPA Backing the profession CIPA’s Lee Davies recaps what was a very productive 12 months for the institute The 12 months over 2014 and 2015 were the first in the Chartered Institute of Patent Attorneys’s (CIPA) history that the positions of president and vice president have both been held by women. While a mark of progress today, we hope that in the near future, the same will be completely unremarkable. Also remarkable this year has been CIPA’s lobbying efforts. We have lobbied at home and abroad on critical issues such as the drafting and implementation of the Intellectual Property Bill, the unitary patent and the Unified Patent Court (UPC) and the consequences for UK PLC of a patent litigation system that was potentially damaging to the UK profession and the UK’s business interests. We also built on our relationships with other key stakeholders such as the IP minister, Baroness Neville-Rolfe, the UK IP Office (IPO) and the EU Commission. The IP minister delivered the keynote speech at the CIPA Congress, spoke alongside our president at a policy roundtable on cyber crime and was guest speaker at the inaugural meeting of a CIPA initiative to make the IP professions more inclusive and accessible to all, regardless of background. Ahead of the UK General Election, we produced our first ever manifesto, An Economy of Ideas. Through our manifesto, we implored 10 all political parties to see the IP system as not only a mechanism for protecting innovation, but also a significant means through which businesses maximise the return on investment. Months later, we continue to lobby the government to maintain the virtuous circle through which investment in new ideas is protected, leading to profits that can be reinvested in new and exciting projects. To accompany the manifesto and further illustrate the virtuous IP circle, we produced an animated video, also called An Economy of Ideas, which we launched on World IP Day (the video can be viewed on our website on YouTube). Significant attention has also been paid to the internal workings of CIPA. Andrea Brewster, 2013 and 2014 vice president and newly elected president for 2014 and 2015, embarked on a meet-themembers campaign. Brewster visits CIPA members in their own offices around the UK, to find out how best CIPA can serve them. In the same vein, our officers were set the challenge of describing the unique benefits of being a member of CIPA in three to five words. And when dealing with patent attorneys, three to five words can only translate into four words! “Status, Influence, Learning and Community” (SILC) formed the core of our three-year strategic plan. Intellectual Property in an Innovative World CIPA These four SILC headings have helped CIPA to align and prioritise its activities with a clear focus on what the institute should be doing for the people it represents. We have already made significant strides in delivering its objectives. Internal changes throughout the past year have reflected the foremost importance of serving members as well as possible. The Informals (the trainee arm of CIPA) felt isolated and unsupported. We have brought it closer. Now a formal CIPA committee, it has access to all of the institute’s support mechanisms, but the trainee attorneys also retain independence to decide their own programmes and set their own budget. Similarly, IP administrators, so vital to CIPA’s work, also sat on the fringes of the institute, either as associates with few clear membership benefits, or not joining at all. A new committee has been set up to look after their interests, its aims being to provide them with a voice at CIPA, professional recognition and influence, and a clearer career development pathway. A review and update of the existing—widely respected—patent administrators’ course, and the introduction of advanced training modules, is being overseen by the new committee. compliance with Privy Council requirements for the format of byelaws for chartered bodies. The last 12 months have also been a busy year for CIPA’s many committees. An internal governance committee has been established to ensure that the institute has in place robust governance procedures and leads on all finance, employment and general legal matters. A new education and professional standards committee has also been set up, and is providing CIPA with additional focus on educational matters. It is tasked with developing a long overdue set of professional standards detailing the skills and knowledge required for a twentyfirst century patent attorney, out of which CIPA is building a vibrant education programme. The joint business practice committee spent much of its time focusing on the impact of IPReg’s new client account requirements on patent and trademark firms. It also spent considerable energy lobbying against IPReg’s determination that the Money Laundering Regulations 2007 apply to patent attorneys. “ CIPA sought to be as constructive as possible, however, the committee fears that the Nagoya Protocol has the capacity to cause severe difficulties for both academic and industrial researchers ” Lee Davies, Chief executive, CIPA Following the successful introduction of a course covering formalities skills, CIPA has set up the IP administrators group (IPAG), membership of which is open to all members of CIPA who have an interest in IP administration. IPAG runs CPD qualification lectures and holds social events. It also publishes a newsletter, The PAN, which is produced each month. Embracing better technology is also all part and parcel of the ‘improved service’ CIPA model. We have introduced live web broadcasts from the CIPA Hall and venues around the country to bring high quality debate and information to a wider audience of our members and the outside world. A resurgent trademark committee provided detailed comments to Office for Harmonization in the Internal Market in response to its strategic plan consultation. The committee conducted a survey of the CIPA membership to gain a better understanding of what support members who work in the trademark environment want from the institute. Some 457 members responded to the survey, a 20 percent response rate. The committee discussed the results and was encouraged that support from CIPA on trademark issues is still wanted by the membership. It wasn’t just CIPA’s technology that required modernisation. CIPA’s bye-laws were unfit for purpose and needed substantial updating. As a professional body incorporated by Royal Charter, the bye-laws describe how CIPA is governed, structured and organised to deliver the objects set out in the charter. The life sciences committee turned its attention to the European regulation to enforce the Nagoya Protocol, providing a consultation response which was well received by the Department of Food and Rural Affairs. The institute sought to be as constructive as possible, however, the committee fears that the Nagoya Protocol has the capacity to cause severe difficulties for both academic and industrial researchers. CIPA also published a position paper on the subject, which was well received by government and other major stakeholders. A working group was set up to consider possible amendments in greater detail and to prepare a draft set of bye-laws for discussion. After consulting members, the revised bye-laws will then be finalised after having been checked by specialist counsel for This year, the patents committee has had one big item to consider— the unitary patent and UPC. Here there is great crossover with one of CIPA’s busiest committees, the litigation committee. When the UK IPO issued a technical review and called for evidence concerning 12 CIPA secondary legislation to implement the Unitary Patent Regulation and UPC Agreement, a joint working group of the two committees prepared CIPA’s response. representatives of the China IP Society in October, and a group from the Department of Science and Technology and other technologybased institutions in Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region. The design and copyright committee led the institute’s work on examining the consequences of criminal sanctions for design infringement appearing in the IP Bill. The committee was central in determining CIPA’s lobbying position as we met with Lord Younger, Lord Clement-Jones and Lord Stevenson to set out our concerns. Members of the committee met members of the Japan Patent Attorneys Association during the Asian Patent Attorneys Association (APAA) Congress in Toronto. CIPA members attending the APAA’s meeting hosted a reception in Malaysia for members of the Institute of Patent and Trade Mark Attorneys of Australia and were invited to a lunch with members of the Taiwan Patent Attorneys Association. The international liaison committee has also had a very busy year. Members attended a reception hosted by Institute of Trade Mark Attorneys at the British Consulate-General in Hong Kong during International Trademark Association Annual Meeting, to which members of the All-China Patent Attorney Association (ACPAA) were also invited. A delegation visited Montreal in June 2014 at the invitation of the Intellectual Property Institute of Canada (IPIC,) to take part in discussions with IPIC council and to give a CPD seminar to IPIC members. CIPA’s charitable work also continued throughout 2014 and 2015. We co-founded Professions Week with several other leading professional bodies, helping young people to get the very best careers information, advice and guidance. Battle of the Bands made a welcome return to the CIPA social calendar. Hosted by Radio 1 DJ Scott Mills, the event saw patent attorneys perform their very best numbers in the aid of Generating Genius, which helps young people from disadvantaged backgrounds realise their potential by pursuing science, technology, engineering and mathematics subjects. In September 2014, a delegation from the ACPAA was welcomed by CIPA in Oxford, where they were treated to dinner at the Malmaison Hotel (formerly a prison!), followed the next day by a meeting with committee members and a CPD seminar, both held in beautiful autumnal surroundings at Worcester College. CIPA is determined to continue to transform itself into a modern organisation that, as well as providing first-class services to its members, amplifies its external voice and educates business and the wider world on the importance of protecting IP. Members also welcomed several different groups from China to London, including: a group of judges from Yunnan Province, a group from Anhui Provincial IP Office, representatives of the Work Safety Department of the China National Space Administration in September, With a new website due to go live later in 2015, a major public event planned in partnership with the Science Museum and other developments in the pipeline, the coming year will only see CIPA growing in status and influence. IPPro 14 Stillwaters Law Firm ADDRESS & CONTACT DETAILS 2nd Floor 11, Awolowo Road, Ikoyi P. O. Box 56161, Ikoyi 101008, Lagos, Nigeria Tel: +234 (0) 1 454 7179, +234 (0) 1 460 5471 Mobile: +234 (0) 803 324 8860 Fax: +234 (0) 1 460 5470 Email: info@stillwaterslaw.com www.stillwaterslaw.com STILLWATERS is an award winning law firm in Nigeria that specializes in intellectual property law, corporate and commercial, taxation and litigation. The firm operates from the commercial cities of Lagos and Abuja in Nigeria, with associate offices in Accra in Ghana and Douala in Cameroon. Professionalism, flexibility and innovation are the hallmark of our practice. We value professional excellence, outstanding result and realize they both require creativity and hard work. We strive to gain every legal advantage for our clients while upholding the principles behind the practice of law. Over the years, we have acquired considerable experience and an enviable reputation for rendering quality legal services in our areas of specialization. Practice representative clients include over 660 foreign multinationals, publicly-quoted companies, private companies, financial institutions, government institutions, industrial medium size businesses and individuals. Our practice is adequately equipped and well positioned to meet the challenges of legal practice in an ever-changing technological age. People . Integrity . Service • • • • Trademarks Patents Designs Copyright Anti-counterfeiting Border Enforcement Measures Domains Data Protection IP Litigation • • • • • IP Due Diligence Annuities Transfer of Technology Piracy Licensing Distributorship Franchising Customs Related Assistance Registrations Renewals Assignments INTA Give and take: enforcement’s unintended consequences Platform and brand owners can take an unexpected hit from social media site takedown disputes, say Susan O’Neill and Janie Thompson By now, social media takedown policies are no secret to most brand owners as they are an often-used tool for a trademark or copyright holder to request the removal of infringing content such as trademark misuses, posts, videos, images, handles, or other pages from social media platforms. Recent litigation, however, suggests that platform and brand owners should exercise caution in initiating takedown procedures as plaintiffs are now naming both in lawsuits, alleging unwarranted takedowns. Social media platforms have been accused of failing to follow their own policies and procedures and taking down content without cause. 16 In Barshack v Twitter (6 May 2013), for example, the Barshacks filed suit in the US District Court for the District of Idaho against Twitter after the Barshack handle “@SunValley” was revoked and given to the other defendant, Sun Valley Company. The Barshacks alleged that Twitter did not follow its own takedown policy because it did not give them an opportunity to defend themselves or clear up any misunderstandings before revoking the handle. Consequently, the Barshacks sued Twitter for breach of contract and breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, and sought an order to return their Twitter handle, an injunction INTA “ The Barshacks alleged that Twitter did not follow its own takedown policy because it did not give them an opportunity to defend themselves or clear up any misunderstandings before revoking the handle ” Susan O’Neill, Internet committee member and partner, INTA and Hanson Bridgett LLP prohibiting Sun Valley Company from using it, as well as attorneys’ fees, costs, and other expenses. Fortunately for platform owners, the court granted Twitter’s motion to dismiss on 19 September 2013, holding the breach of contract claim could not be sustained under the express language of Twitter’s service terms and “the implied covenant [of good faith and fair dealing] cannot be used to imply a contractual obligation that conflicts with the express terms of the contract”. Similar allegations against a social media platform were raised in Complexions v Complexions Day Spa and Wellness Center and Facebook (18 February 2011). In that case, plaintiff Complexions filed suit against Facebook in the District Court for the Northern District of New York because Facebook took down Complexions’s business page after Complexions Day Spa and Wellness Center sent a takedown notice. Among other claims, Complexions sought injunctive relief to restore its Facebook page, and alleged that the Facebook page was a valuable asset to its business and its loss resulted in sales and marketing potential losses that could not be fully remedied by money damages. The court, however, never reached the merits of the case, because Complexions voluntarily dismissed the action with prejudice. In both Barshack and Complexions, the brand owners that filed the takedown complaints at issue were also named as defendants and several other lawsuits have similarly been filed against brand owners that requested takedowns. In Elizabeth Ordonez v Icon Sky Holdings (30 August 2011), for example, the District Court for the Southern District of Florida granted damages and injunctive relief to dancer and choreographer Ordonez after Icon pursued unwarranted takedown requests. Ordonez, who used the stage name Elizabeth Sky, claimed that Icon committed acts of tortious interference with contractual relationships between herself and social media sites by making misleading complaints of trademark infringement over her use of the stage name Elizabeth Sky and related social media profiles. Additionally, Ordonez claimed that Icon engaged in deceptive and unfair trade practices by sending messages misrepresenting that she was committing fraud and by taking over her social media profiles and Twitter handle. After Icon failed to appear in the case, the court entered judgement in favour of Ordonez. The court held that she had contractual relationships with the social media sites based on the “terms of use” and Icon interfered with those relationships by making complaints that resulted in Ordonez’s accounts getting cancelled. Ultimately, the court granted injunctive relief, $81,000 in damages, and attorneys’ fees and costs. Failing to investigate before requesting a takedown may pose an additional risk for brand owners. In Kim v Coach, the plaintiffs, who were selling Coach merchandise on eBay, filed a class action in the District Court for the Western District of Washington against Coach for failing to perform a reasonable investigation to determine if products advertised on eBay were in fact counterfeit before initiating the takedown process. According to the plaintiffs, Coach’s complaints “ Brand owners should consider how best to deliver their message to the alleged infringer, particularly if the individual is a fan or supporter of the brand ” Janie Thompson, Associate, Hanson Bridgett LLP 17 INTA led to their ads being removed from eBay and their accounts being disabled. The plaintiffs further alleged that Coach sent letters to them claiming that they were infringing Coach’s trademarks and demanding payment to settle the issue. Based on these alleged facts, the plaintiffs filed claims for violations of the Washington Consumer Protection Act, misrepresentation of trademark infringement, defamation, and tortious interference with a business expectancy. Coach filed a counterclaim against the plaintiff’s attorneys for defamation, and the parties ultimately stipulated to dismissal of the case with prejudice. Brand owners may also be accused of bullying after initiating a takedown request or other litigation, as was the case in CrossFit v Alvies (22 January 2014). Plaintiff CrossFit filed a trademark infringement suit in the District Court for the Northern District of California alleging that defendant Jenni Alvies infringed its trademark through her use of a blog at crossfitmamas.blogspot.com and her use of a ‘CrossFit Mamas’ Facebook page. Alvies accused CrossFit of being a cyberbully and counterclaimed for declaratory judgment of non-infringement, as well as unfair competition and false advertising. One of the allegations stated that CrossFit improperly invoked the Digital Millennium Copyright Act in its takedown notice to Facebook because Crossfit’s claims were based on trademark rights and not copyright. 18 When CrossFit filed a motion to dismiss and argued that they similarly would have succeeded in a trademark takedown request, the court declined to “hypothesise about what Facebook would or would not have done if it had received a trademark takedown notice regarding Alvies’s Facebook page”. The court further declined to determine in a motion to dismiss that Alvies’s Facebook page constituted infringement. Alvies’s other claims were dismissed with leave to amend. Ultimately, the parties settled and stipulated to a final judgement. In light of this recent litigation, social media platforms may be more cautious in implementing their removal policies. Similarly, brand owners may be more cautious when evaluating an infringement accusation before requesting takedowns. In addition, brand owners may want to be more creative in approaching the issue, especially in less clear-cut cases. For example, brand owners should consider how best to deliver their message to the alleged infringer, particularly if the individual is a fan or supporter of the brand. In some cases, it may be helpful to see what can be done through direct communication with the individual or on a business-to-business level. Hopefully, with creativity and open dialogue, brand owners can resolve any issues in a way that works for all of the parties involved— without any unwanted litigation. IPPro Just as in the real world, distinctive signs have a major economic value on the internet. These signs are subject to numerous infringements on the web due to this economic value. Historically, on Web 1.0, infringements essentially related to domain names. Cybersquatting is one such example. This involves a third party, acting in bad faith, taking undue advantage of the “first-come, first-served’ principle, on which the registration of domain names is based, in order to register trademarks on which they have no right, with the intention of then reselling them to the actual trademark owners. With the creation of the Google AdWords advertising programme in the 2000s, a new type of trademark infringement developed on the internet. This programme gave rise to significant disputes due to certain websites using the trademarks of third parties as keywords to direct internet users to their webpages. With the emergence of Web 2.0, today, the infringement of trademark rights can also be seen on social networks. 20 Furthermore, on 26 June 2008, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) confirmed its decision to give to the public the possibility of creating new gTLDs. The opening up of new generic extensions involves high economic stakes. However, it also leads to an increase in cybersquatting risks. Fortunately, trademark ownership constitutes an effective tool to protect one’s rights on the internet. Trademarks and extrajudiciary resolution disputes relating to domain names for Extrajudiciary dispute resolution mechanisms are alternative methods for settling disputes available to trademark owners. Such alternative methods offer a number of advantages as they are transnational, quick, relatively cheap and are entirely conducted online. The most commonly used alternative resolution procedure is the Uniform Dispute Resolution Policy (UDRP). This procedure is only TrademarksOnline open to gTLDs, as well as to some country code TLDs. According to Paragraph 4 of the UDRP, the procedure is only available for disputes on the following conditions: (i) the domain name in dispute must be identical or confusingly similar to a trademark in which the complainant has rights; (ii) the third party must not have any right or legitimate interest in respect of the domain name; and (iii) the third party must be of bad faith. Being a rightful trademark owner is important as the UDRP procedure is only open to trademark owners. In this light, in a 2006 decision involving Geopack, the complainant invoked as the basis for the UDRP procedure its trade name Geopack and domain name geopackindustries.com, of which the respondent was aware. The complaint was dismissed because the complainant was unable to show that it was the rightful trademark owner. While the UDRP policy provides that the complainant must be the rightful trademark owner, it is however silent on what trademark ownership means. Must the trademark be registered? It has been held in several decisions that complainants do not have the obligation under the UDRP policy to base their complaints on a registered trademark. Complainants can therefore rely on trademarks that require no registration formalities, such as common law trademarks. To ensure equal treatment, according to case law, all complainants can rely on a common law trademark. The complainant must then show that the mark is connected to goods or services, ie, it fulfils its essential function of indicating the origin of the goods or services. In the 2000 Julia Roberts v Russell Boyd case, as well as that of Brad Pitt v Mircea Roibu in 2010, it was held that even though the trademark is not registered, a personality right can confer rights on a common law trademark due to sufficient connection with the complainants. To complement the UDRP procedure, ICANN set up the Uniform Rapid Suspension (URS) procedure in order to enhance the protection of rights with the advent of new gTLDs. This procedure adopts the same conditions as the UDRP procedure, but it is quicker and relatively cheaper. The URS procedure was set up to quickly assist rightful owners in cases of flagrant infringements. Indeed, URS complaints are much shorter than UDRP complaints (URS complaints are limited to 500 words while UDRP complaints are limited to 5,000 words). However, this procedure does not allow for the transfer or removal of the domain name but it only allows its suspension for the period of one year. Once again, the procedure is only available to trademark owners. The use of alternative dispute resolution methods does not in any way prevent trademark owners from going through the classical judicial route in order to protect their rights on the internet. Trademarks and Trademark Clearinghouse In light of the infringement risks brought on by the creation of new gTLDs, and in order to protect trademark owners, on 26 March 2013, ICANN set up the Trademark Clearinghouse (TMCH). The TMCH is a database of trademarks filed by their owners. Filing a trademark in the TMCH has two major benefits. Firstly, it allows the pre-registration of the trademark with the new gTLDs for a specific period, called sunrise. Indeed, when launching a new extension, the registry of the extension must provide a minimum period of 30 days during which a trademark owner that filed the trademark with the TCMH gets first priority to register a domain name bearing this extension. Secondly, once the sunrise period has elapsed, registering a trademark in the TMCH allows the trademark owner to be notified about third party attempts to register a domain name linked to the trademark. This notification service is called the Trademark Claims Service. The notification then allows the trademark owner to take action against the registration of the domain name through the URS and effectively protect its rights on the internet. It is necessary to show trademark ownership in order to have access to this system. The TMCH only accepts registered trademarks, courtvalidated trademarks and trademarks protected by applicable statutes and treaties. As such, unregistered trademarks, including common law trademarks, meet the eligibility requirements of the TMCH. Trademarks and Google AdWords advertising Trademark ownership can also come in very handy to protect one’s rights in case of infringements through fraudulent use of a distinctive sign as a keyword for referencing with Google ads. Since the Google AdWords case before the European Court of Justice on 23 March “ It is necessary to show trademark ownership in order to have access to this system. The TMCH only accepts registered trademarks, court-validated trademarks and trademarks protectedby applicable statutes and treaties ” Nathalie Dreyfus, Trademark attorney, Dreyfus 21 TrademarksOnline 2010, it is now established case law that Google cannot be held liable for trademark infringements as long as its role is only that of a passive technical service provider. However, trademark owners can sue the advertiser if it is impossible or difficult to distinguish the advertisements from the natural results, which creates a risk of confusion for the internet user. In this light, in a case dated 29 November 2011, the French Court of Cassation held the advertiser liable. The case centred on the issue of the reservation by a competitor of the trademarks ‘Heden’, ‘Max-In-Power’ and ‘PCA France as keywords in order to redirect, via a sponsored link, towards websites reselling electronic products marketed under another trademark. It was impossible or difficult for the internet user to know whether the products covered by the advertisement came from the owner of the trademarks used as keywords or from an economically affiliated company. It was consequently held that there was indeed a risk of confusion and a fortiori, an infringement of the purpose of indicating the origin of the trademark. However, the main advantage of trademark owners in protecting their rights against an infringement resulting from Google AdWords does not lie with the courts but rather, in the online mechanism set up by Google. Indeed, trademark owners can notify any infringement of their rights to Google by filling out a trademark complaint form. If the advertiser has no legitimate right, Google will remove the fraudulently used trademark as a keyword from the Google Adwords referencing system. In this way, the trademark owner benefits from a quick, simple and free mechanism to protect itself against such infringements on trademark rights. 22 Trademarks and social networks Lastly, being a trademark owner is essential in order to protect oneself in case of infringements on social networks. As these platforms now serve as vital tools for professionals, the usernames on social networks have acquired an economic value and so are often subject to infringement. While each social network has its own operating method and its own characteristics, they are all based on registration followed by the allocation of a user account. The username is allocated to the first person who requests it. With the reservation of a username being free, usurpation is easy. It is possible for a username to be unavailable for the legitimate trademark owner because it was unduly registered by a third party. This practice consisting of registering a username on which a third party has rights is generally termed as ‘username squatting’. Fortunately, social networks generally provide an online notification mechanism in case of trademark infringement. Article 1(a) of the Facebook Pages Terms states: “A page for a brand, entity, or public figure may be administered only by an authorised representative of that brand, entity or public figure.” In case of noncompliance with those terms and in particular in the case of username squatting, an online mechanism allows the trademark owner to report an infringement. In case of infringement, Facebook will cancel the username. To conclude, with the significant development of the internet, it is vital for brands to protect their digital identities. To this end, it is clear from the above that trademarks are an essential tool that can prove to be very effective against various types of infringements. IPPro Park IP Translations • • • • • • Protect Global Brands Minimize Risk Easy-To-Use Client Portal, Resources + Technology for Real-Time Information Streamlined Foreign Filing Process Expert Translation + Foreign Filling Services Increase in Quality Control The Leader in International Patent Prosecution and Litigation Language Services CONTACT US TODAY info@parkip.com parkip.com Growing into its own The New gTLD programme continues to develop and mature, says Anthony Beltran of 101domain It has been well publicised that the domain name industry, and the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) specifically, has missed the mark in the first year of its much lauded new gTLD programme. ICANN, the US-based organisation whose responsibility includes developing policy and ensuring the operational success of the global internet, estimated in early 2014 that its new gTLD programme would generate 33 million new domain registrations in extensions such as .guru, .club, .realtor, .nyc and more. ICANN revised its estimates downward a year later to 15 million names. my opinion of the success and long-term viability of the new gTLD programme. My job is to market the value of domain names and to promote and sell these names to customers around the world. But the fact is, the industry has a long way to go until new gTLDs become a fixture on the internet landscape. I’m going to break down some of the areas in which the industry has fallen short, and the changes I see happening today, which will help new gTLDs elevate to success. Where did we land? Six million names or so—not impressive by any measurement. It took six years of industry policymaking from 2008 to 2014 until the first new gTLDs under this programme were launched. The process was arduous and involved many stakeholders and many trying times of debate and negotiation. Once the green light was given, new gTLD applicants quickly shifted their attention to getting their registry As an executive of a domain name registrar that has invested heavily in the new gTLD programme, I am of course going to be optimistic in Public awareness agreements signed and their extensions launched. It seemed that actually marketing these hundreds of new products was an afterthought at first. Back then, the attitude of many of the new gTLD applicants was that if they put their TLD out, there was so much pent-up demand that people would buy them by the hundreds of thousands. Looking back, this was certainly not the case. What we saw was the launch of the first groups of new gTLDs with lukewarm results. It became quickly apparent that the only purchasers of these newly available, ‘highly demanded’ domain names were domain investors and to some extent brand and trademark holders, if only from a defensive registration position. This lukewarm response continued throughout 2014 with the release of hundreds of new domain extensions, albeit with a few bright spots, such as the great effort put forth by the .club registry, whose volume of active registrations has reached nearly 300,000. What happened? New gTLD registries pushed these new domain names through registrars, relying on them to advertise and market all of these new products through their normal channels. Once customers saw these new names, they would buy, right? The flaw in this reasoning was that registrars were primarily faced with the enormous burden of simply launching this onslaught of new domain names. Launch process were highly complex and filled with brand new legal, technical and policy processes. We didn’t see much active advertising or marketing through registrar channels as they were busy just keeping up. To put things in proper perspective, the domain industry has seen 21 gTLDs launched since the internet was created 30 years ago. In 2014, it saw 300 new gTLDs launched. At the time of writing, the total has increased to more than 600. Today, we are seeing registries approach their product launches in a much different way. Strategy has shifted from relying on the registrar channel to advertise and market all of these new products, to registries actively promoting and driving customers through the registrar channel. Registries are becoming much more aggressive in reaching their target audiences in new and creative ways. Let’s take these as examples: .Bank: at nearly $1,000 per year for a domain name, the .bank registry has successfully worked with the American Bankers Association (ABA) to generate a few thousand registrations. The registry generated interest in, and positioned the value of, the .bank extension across the banking industry, directing sales to accredited registrars. .Bank is a unique TLD because it has very specific requirements geared towards NewgTLDs banking institutions and security. I expect to see this TLD build a very nice and widely used space for itself over time. .Sucks: if you have anything to do with intellectual property, you know what this TLD is about. There has been a lot of controversy around .sucks and the registry has led some pretty high-profile marketing campaigns online and offline, making waves along the way. Whatever your thoughts on .sucks, you cannot deny that it did a good job in elevating the visibility of the TLD and the new gTLD programme in general. Brand owners should pay attention to this one. .Votel.voto: this TLD is an interesting one managed by the registry Afilias, operator of .info, .pro, and many more TLDs. The registry has managed to build key partnerships within political communities as well as sign up various US states to use their TLDs (for example, arizona.vote and alabama.vote) in high profile political awareness campaigns. With presidential elections starting to gain momentum in the US, political parties are starting to oil up their marketing machines. Using short, memorable domain names fit extremely well in these very public efforts. .Law: Mind + Machines, the registry behind the .law extension, recently announced a partnership with ALM Media, a leading international legal media company. As part of the partnership, ALM will roll out more than 100 domain names with the .law ending across its existing web properties and new product lines. It will also be marketing the .law TLD throughout its channels to raise awareness in the industry. The TLD is restricted to credentialed legal practitioners to provide a trusted space for the legal community to connect with its clients. Brand participation To this point, we have not seen a lot of participation from .brand new gTLD applicants. This has been by design for many of the 600 or so companies that applied for their own TLDs. Early on, ICANN granted an extension until 29 July 2015 for .brand applicants to sign their registry agreements, which has delayed .brand adoption and has allowed brands to defer costs and any decision making on their .brand new gTLD strategies. Many brands have been using a wait-and-see approach to determine what their next steps would be based on industry feedback and public adoption of new domain names in general. Now that the deadline is here, brands are being forced to make decisions. Once registry agreements are signed, operating costs start accruing for their TLDs. I expect to see much more activity in the .brand sector of the new gTLD programme through the rest of 2015. When we see larger consumer brands roll out their own domain extensions, new gTLDs will certainly start making their way into the mainstream. The best is yet to come We are approaching nearly 400 new gTLDs available to the general public, at the time of writing. More than half of these launches have secured fewer than 5,000 registrations. Just over 100 have secured more than 10,000 registrations. Some of the top TLDs in terms of registration volume, such as .xyz, .science, .party, and .top, have been sold for nothing, or next to nothing, and have generated very little usage. Many others, such as .link, .click, and .property, have been registered by the registries themselves so they don’t really count. This is not an indicator of the overall success of the new gTLD programme. As planned by ICANN, the domain extensions that have been widely anticipated, as well as many restricted TLDs that are sure to find their place in various industries across the globe, have yet to be released. TLDs such as .web, .shop, .music, .film and .app will be rolling out soon. You can bet that the companies that end up winning and operating these domain extensions have big plans to push them into the public mainstream. Launches to watch in the near future include regulated extensions such as .insurance and .film, which have the potential of gathering wide-ranging support in their respective industries. These regulated TLDs have the ability to reach consumers on a mass scale for specific purposes, which is what is needed to create a healthy and thriving domain space. In summary, we are still very much in the early stages of the ambitious new gTLD programme. The new gTLD programme continues to develop and gain momentum and has a long way to go to reach full maturity. Technology moves fast. Whether you are an IP practitioner or brand owner, it is still important that you stay informed about the developments in the space so that you may advise your clients or your stakeholders properly without being left behind. IPPro “ Whatever your thoughts on .sucks, you cannot deny that it did a good job in elevating the visibility of the TLD and the new gTLD programme in general. Brand owners should pay attention to this one ” Anthony Beltran, COO/CFO, 101domain 26 CHRISTODOULOS G. VASSILIADES & CO. LLC CGV Advocates - Legal Consultants LEGAL EXPERTISE INTERNATIONAL REACH AFFILIATED OFFICES IN 7 COUNTRIES INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY Corporate & Commercial | Migration Shipping | Contractual Drafting Mergers & Acquisitions | Banking & Finance Tax & International Tax Planning The vessel of freedom Cyprus Russia Greece Belize Malta Hungary Seychelles China 30 years of excellence 1984 -2014 Contact us: Email: cgv@vasslaw.net / iplaw@vasslaw.net | Tel.: +357 22 55 66 77 | Tel.: +357 22 55 66 77 www.vasslaw.com Bart Mortelmans of bNamed.net offers advice for protecting trademarks online DomainNames Managing a domain name registration programme is an unenviable task. Hundreds of extensions exist in various guises—country-codes, generics and the old bastions of the internet, including .com—and knowing which way to point your brand, or how to prioritise trademarks, can easily keep you up at night. Luckily, there are number of tips and tricks that you can learn that will make any registration programme easier to manage. spammer, who warns of a similar registration in an extension nobody has ever heard of via email. Do not be fooled by these—trademark owners don’t need registrations in these extensions, which are often very remote and sparingly used country code TLDs. Of course, as a trademark owner, you might be interested in launching in that particular market in the future, but in that case, close the spam email and seek out legitimate agents or registrars. The internet is full of phonies purporting to offer domain name registration services. First of all, plan extensively. There are many partners out there that will assist with registrations, but they do not know your products, markets or customers like you do, so put some thought into where you want to register your trademarks. It’s also worth remembering that, with the advent of new gTLDs, there are just too many extensions to make it possible to protect your trademarks across the board. In the past, many of our clients would register their trademarks in every TLD and countrycode TLD, but that is no longer a cost-effective solution but for a handful of trademark owners. If you notice that someone has actually registered your trademark under an extension that you do not care about, you should address this to them and let them know that they should not be doing it. A standard letter via registered mail will suffice. These instances are not worth an investment in dispute resolution. The minimum, a cease and desist letter, is all that is required, because registrations in extensions that no one uses should not keep you up at night. These domains are often dropped when they the time comes for them to be renewed, so you’ll be able to secure them anyway. The most important extensions will be the ones where your customers expect to find your brand. Many internet users, especially outside of the A more proactive course of action would be to block domain names. Donuts, the owner of almost 200 new gTLDs, offers the Domains “ A common pest of trademark owners is the spammer, who warns of a similar registration in an extension nobody has ever heard of via email. Do not be fooled by these ” Bart Mortelmans, Managing director and founder, bNamed.net US, expect a trademark to be available in the country code TLD that corresponds to his or her location. A Spanish internet user might expect to see the website hosted on a .es domain. You should prioritise your registrations that way—where you have customers, have a domain name, because representation wherever you are present is vital. Protected Marks List (DPML), which allows a single trademark to be blocked from registration across dozens of extensions, for a reasonably low fee. The DPML is particularly attractive if you want to employ a broad strategy, otherwise you should stick to the extensions that are important to your brand. Equally important is use. We encourage clients to make sure they use these domain names. Of course, a trademark owner can park a domain, but why not put them to better use? If your main website is under the .com banner, it makes sense to redirect your .fr domain to your .com address, because a lot of French internet users will expect to be able to access your website through their local, and most familiar, country code TLD. Finally, make sure that you are the actual owner of the domain name. Often, particularly with small businesses, the wrong person registers the domain name and the actual owner is not listed in Whois. Make sure that does not happen. We have seen many cases where a domain name is held for ransom when there is a dispute over invoices and payments between the web designer and the business, for example. Even though not directly related to the domain name, it can be used as a bargaining chip. Any registration programme becomes more complicated when new gTLDs are added to the mix. Today, extensions are no longer limited to country or memorable generic. Domains are available in hundreds of extensions, many of them market-specific. The trick is to pick new gTLDs that correspond to the markets in which you are active, much in the same way as country code TLDs. For example, it makes sense to register a domain in .bike if that is your main business, whereas a building company would not benefit from a .bike registration. When all is said and done, the most important trick is really the most obvious—check the availability of the domain name. You must not wait for your counsel to check whether a trademark is available before launching a new product or in a new market, for example. Our website has a search function that allows anyone to search for domain names across TLDs—it’s that simple. Also, don’t be worried if the .com is not available. A lot of .com domain names are reserved for sale. Domain name enforcement Managing a domain name enforcement programme is as daunting as proactive registrations. A common pest of trademark owners is the 29 That might not be ideal, having to pay extra money for that online real estate, but if you are going to go ahead with a product launch, then it might be worth the extra expense. IPPro When only a wrecking ball will do The digital space can be a free-for-all for phony operators, so how do you catch the fake-happy counterfeiters? Experts from WebTMS and bNamed.net share how to limit the damage caused by online infringers Bart Mortelmans Nick March Managing director and founder bNamed.net IP business development manager WebTMS Fakes are available online in increasingly large numbers—who is producing these goods, and how are they doing it on such a scale? Nick March: Fakes appearing in the marketplace is not a new problem. We’ve all seen market traders selling their fake shirts, jeans and designer handbags and more.This has happened for years on a smaller scale in the UK, and in much larger scales abroad, in countries such as Thailand, with a large concentration of fakes coming from Asia, in particular China. With the huge increase in the number of people across the globe getting connected to the internet, it’s no surprise that this has bought fake consumer goods to the masses. Organised crime syndicates are often behind the large-scale production and distribution of fake items. For them it is a means of creating large sums of money to be re-invested into illegal money making avenues, to grow their illicit empires. A large majority of fakes also originate from China, where labour is cheap and it is not uncommon for the authorities to look the other way. The internet plays a huge part in enabling these gangs to achieve such a wide reach, with auction sites, social media and private advert websites being top of the list. It’s not that these sites condone this behaviour, it’s simply such a large undertaking to effectively manage and track, although most well established websites have a protocol in place for reporting offending products, which hopefully leads to them being withdrawn from their respective marketplace. Counterfeiting is a global problem, particularly for international brands—how can legal counsel tackle fakes produced abroad? March: Depending on the budget available, there are a number of steps that can be taken to increase damage limitation that are beyond trademark, design and patent registration, which would be the foundation of your intellectual property protection. Some of the additional steps that can be taken are: • Customs recordals: lodge customs recordals with the local authorities. If you’re concerned that fakes are making their way into a particular jurisdiction, you could check to see if that particular country has a customs recordal system in place. This usually involves the formality of filling out forms that state which products you would like them to look out for (be it the design, brand name or both) and in some instances, the actual trademark protection you have in place related to these brands that you would like them to monitor. With the formality lodged with customs officials, you will increase the likelihood of fake products being questioned by officials, who will contact you to check the authenticity of the product. • Private investigations: there are many companies that specialise in the niche area of private investigations relating to IP and you should use one based locally to the problem. TrademarkProtection • Depending on your budget, they can provide different levels of data, including simply whether fakes exist, where are the fakes made and the name of the producer. At the higher end, they can also be quite cunning in their techniques and enquire about potential orders so you can gauge the size of the operation. Other information that can be acquired is how long the operation has been running and if there are any affiliated companies, which in all probability are also manufacturing fake products. Watching service providers: most of the well-known companies in this arena have already expanded their services and branched out into this area, which in itself is rather telling that a large problem exists in the first place. The services offered tend to range from company to company but in essence they will be able to perform a health check of your brand online, ie, how many sites were found selling your product, list all the sites and products, and so on. They can also continue to monitor the presence of new fake products appearing in any online marketplaces. As well as these channels, they can also check for and monitor new domain names coming into existence that are clearly infringing on the actual brand owner’s rights. If domain names registered to counterfeit manufacturers or indeed anyone else who is not the rightful owner are found, the domain names are reported to the brand owner. The brand owner will then have an opportunity to object via various dispute resolution systems currently in place. These were setup in order to help the rightful owners of trademarks take ownership of their related domain names and to ensure there are no other companies with similar domain names trying to pass themselves off as legitimate. How does online enforcement differ to offline enforcement, and how should brands tweak their strategies to suit each? March: When discussing tangible products, the source or origin of all counterfeits/fakes begins offline, ie, the manufacturing of the product has to exist for there to be something to pass off as something else. large amount of attempts with different cards before a payment is successful. If a couple of such ‘warning’ boxes are ticked, we will not simply process the request automatically but first carry out a manual verification. This means that a very small number of legitimate registrations are slightly delayed, but almost all registrations going through manual verification turn out to be clear attempts to a phishing website online. Next to that, there is not much a registrar can do before selling a domain name, but there is also lot that can be done afterwards and this is the difference between a trustworthy registrar and a rogue registrar. Because with most registrars, the registration process is fully automated, there is no easy way to verify trademark infringements up front. But if a registrar is known to instantly disable domain names that turn out to be phishing or spammers, then that registrar will be of no use to those criminals as the websites registered via such a registrar aren’t active long enough to actually use them. How should brands choose which domain names to register or block? Mortelmans: There is one golden rule: protect your brand under the country code TLDs where your clients are located. Since the introduction of the new gTLDs, for most brands it’s no longer possible to simply protect their names under every single TLD. Next to no more than a handful of large brands, such as Apple and Google, no-one is doing that any longer. If you’re selling bikes, for example, you’ll probably want your name under .bike, but you probably don’t want it under .dental. And then there are a large number of new gTLDs in between that, which only the brand holder can decide are important or not. What are the must-haves for any protection strategy? So in essence, the root of the problem has to be extinguished at source using people on the ground to physically see the problem, report on the problem, and hopefully be part of a team to secure the closure of the illicit locations that are producing large amounts of fakes. The online element is really just another avenue for the counterfeit products to be exploited. As mentioned, this can be monitored and managed to some degree of effectiveness, however, without eradicating the source, it’s highly likely that new fake sites trying to pass themselves off as legitimate will continue to reappear. Rogue domain name registrars have been pinpointed as a problem. What do they have to do before selling a domain? What can brands do? Bart Mortelmans: While it is not easy to catch criminal registration requests before they are activated in the automated registration process, we as a registrar have been able to successfully block most requests with some simple verifications. It mostly comes down to spotting strange behaviour in the order and payment process. That can be stuff such as the country from where the order is placed not corresponding with the country of the credit card, or seeing a 32 March: Brands must first establish the elements that require protection. They then need to set a realistic budget depending on the size and value of these elements, and prioritise their importance geographically. Brands can then set up tools to monitor their trademarks. They must also routinely re-asses in order to maintain their focus on what’s important. Mortelmans: Make sure you have a trusted partner for your domain name registrations that you can contact. You’ll know which regions and markets are important for your brand, but your registrar should be able to assist you with informing you about which extensions are important for that region or market. Pick a registrar that offers you all possibilities but doesn’t try to sell you domain names you don’t need. Make sure that the domain names you end up registering are registered in your name and try to put them to actual use. If you have the domain name, at least have it forwarded to your website. IPPro You’ve Built Your Business & Your Brand. Now How Do You Secure & Protect It? Corporate Brand Services We Offer... The success of an effective brand management strategy is finding a comprehensive brand protection partner who is flexible enough to meet your needs, offers worldwide coverage, and is available within your budget. Trademark Clearinghouse Services Corporate Domain Name Management • Sunrise & Landrush Services • Renewal & Consolidation Services • gTLDs, ccTLDs, and new gTLDs • Trustee/Local Presence Services • Robust Security Features Our Corporate Brand Protection Services do just that. 101domain has built its reputation on providing solid and tested corporate domain name management services and is a leading expert in the world of domain names. Monitoring Services • Global Domain Names • Social Media • Paid Advertising Flexible Billing Options Corporate Brand Services US 888.982.7940 © 2013 101domain, Inc. • Int ++1 760.448.2394 Dedicated Account Managers • w w w. c o r p o r a t e . 101d o m a i n . c o m Deciding when to decide The lessons learned from the AIA aftershock prove that ongoing cooperation and partnership is the best way to achieve an organisation’s goals, says Matthew Sekac of Park IP Translations As predicted, the first half of 2015 saw many in the patent industry preparing for a historic spike in US-originating patent applications that were due for Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT) national phase entry on or near 15 September 2015. This was the consequence of an industry-wide rush to get new applications on file before the rule changes in the America Invents Act (AIA) went into effect on 16 March 2013. In early 2014, Park 34 IP Translations began sharing and preparing for this phenomenon and its potential impact on the volumes of translation requests, which we entitled The AIA’s Foreign Filing Aftershock. The forecast received widespread attention across the industry, including patent practitioners, trade publications and other professional service providers. These historic circumstances introduced a potential risk for patent applicants and language PatentTranslations “ Planning in advance provides the opportunity to build in a comfortable buffer of time to ensure that unforeseen circumstances do not have damaging consequences. Extra lead-time makes it possible to implement a process with multiple checks that reduce risk ” Matthew Sekac, Senior director of strategy, Park IP Translations, a Welocalize company service providers around the world. Any provider that did not start to prepare well in advance would create unnecessary risk and potential financial losses for patent owners and legal practitioners. In a 2015 survey, Park IP Translations asked a large sample of patent professionals how much lead time they normally had to work with when doing a foreign filing. More than half of respondents reported that foreign filing decisions were made and instructions sent less than 30 days before the applicable deadline for any given application. A very small minority, only 2 percent of respondents, reported they had 90 days or more of lead time. The campaign to educate the market and clients started in 2014, however, it stands to have a lasting impact on the patent and patent translation industries. The bar has been set on how legal professionals and language service providers must work together to ensure that source of risk are identified early, requirements are understood, and potential roadblocks or challenges are communicated and prepared for well in advance. Constant communication, open feedback and trusted partner values do matter and can avert hazardous outcomes. An analysis of data on Park IP’s filing translation projects corroborates these findings. The data reveals that most patent professionals are instructed less than 30 days before the applicable filing deadline, and at least for our casework, roughly one third are instructed less than two weeks in advance. Findings based on experience Preparing for the inevitable Direct customer experiences and business intelligence obtained throughout the spike provided an enormous amount of valuable data about how our clients work and what their processes look like for making foreign filing decisions. Understanding the circumstances under which patent professionals operate is critical for patent service providers. Experience and data on timing and deadline requirements must be part of the basis for developing sustainable and effective service offerings that cater to the needs of the client. We were surprised at how widely approaches varied for both law firms and corporations. Some were rigidly organised, timely and efficient in their approach, while others were ad hoc, inconsistent and usually last-minute. When it comes to foreign patent filings, there is some cushion built into the system. It is helpful that most PCT countries have grace periods available for submitting translated applications after the initial filing deadline. For many organisations, utilisation of these extensions has become routine practice. What we also found, less surprisingly, was that while the first group of clients was readily able to take action and make adjustments, the second group, while receptive to the information and in agreement with our conclusions, struggled to alter or accelerate internal practices. When additional time is not available, scale from service providers is critical. As an example, Park IP Translations has the flexible capacity and the process expertise to organise and deploy large teams of resources capable of executing very large volumes in very short timetables. For example, in a discussion with a patent paralegal at a large patent filing organisation, there was natural agreement that the best course was to act quickly. Unfortunately, they also expressed scepticism that anything could be done to get filing decisions sooner. Scaling capability is essential for helping clients out of some tight spots. Park IP Translations has been able to deliver translated materials under extremely challenging conditions for filing around the world because of a robust, scalable operational infrastructure and extensive experience managing rush projects. Sometimes this The sentiment was that it made perfect sense to start early and they appreciated the guidance and education, but it’s just too hard to change the way things normally get done. 35 PatentTranslations requires imagination and will, as in one particular engagement where the final product was hand delivered to a patent professional about to board a plane bound for another continent, with a filing deadline mere hours after the flight’s scheduled landing. These situations are not unmanageable, but they are also not ideal. Once filing decisions are made, the process of foreign filing a patent application requires the contribution of multiple parties. The client initiates and oversees the process, often with the help of outside counsel or another service provider, and executes the required documentation. Translators prepare required translations. Then patent agents prepare the filing documents and submit them to the patent office with the support of their own staff. Almost everyone with a role to play in that filing process will be used to doing their part under pressure—and often routinely. That’s just how business gets done in many cases. Unfortunately, this also creates risk. Deadline pressure simply constrains the ability of all parties to perform their role with maximum care, and frequently generates additional expense. It negates the possibility of building in buffers of time to accommodate unforeseen circumstances. However adept we have all become at managing these unplanned circumstances, these conditions simply increase the likelihood of mistakes. And in this business, even small mistakes can be very costly. Plan ahead to get ahead There are any number of reasons why organisations start the foreign filing process close to the deadline. Foreign filing decisions often have significant budgetary impact, especially for organisations such as small biotechnology companies that might need to go out and raise more than $100,000 just to apply for patent protection in a half dozen foreign countries. Understanding the costs is part one of the planning process. The precise expenses over time may not be clear to decision makers, which can complicate the cost-benefit analysis and obstruct efforts to assess the relative priority of applications within a limited budget. These decisions also frequently require the participation of multiple stakeholders from different departments, or they might depend on the results of an incomplete study or other ongoing research. In many cases, the biggest reason is simply institutional inertia. Information collected by Park IP Translations in preparing clients for the AIA spike in 2015 suggests that frequently the only barrier to starting the foreign filing process early is the ‘get started’ meeting. At many organisations, the meeting does not usually happen until a month before the filing deadlines, and not for any particular reason. Most of the filing decisions are actually pretty straightforward. As one department head recently suggested: “The filing decisions on most of our applications that are already made, they’re just in peoples’ heads.” And the process cannot get started until what is ‘in peoples’ heads’ is formally discussed and put on paper. Why is it normal to wait until the last 30 days? The most common response from the groups we have talked to is simply that “they have always done it this way”. There are many patent professionals that are almost unfailingly diligent about instructing new foreign filings well ahead of the applicable deadlines. Perhaps they benefit 36 from some structural advantage. It should be noted that they come from organisations both big and small across a diverse array of industry sectors. Their real source of success is the series of proactive initiatives they have undertaken to improve internal procedures for managing their foreign patent filings. Decide now, wait later It’s as simple as it is daunting. Organisations that act in advance are predominantly the organisations that choose to act in advance—and then follow through. Make no mistake, they benefit from it. These organisations don’t rack-up late filing charges and they avoid fees for expedited services. By starting the conversation early, they can gather information from service providers and other partners to inform their budget impact assessments. Planning in advance provides the opportunity to build in a comfortable buffer of time to ensure that unforeseen circumstances do not have damaging consequences. Extra lead-time makes it possible to implement a process with multiple checks that reduce risk. These are also the organisations that have the easiest time avoiding risk from sudden spikes in volume requirements, whether the source is internal or exogenous. The lessons learned from the AIA aftershock prove that ongoing cooperation and partnership is the best way for all to achieve their respective goals—on time and in all languages. IPPro VOTED No. 1 You can access WebTMS anywhere you have an Internet connection and on any device, e.g. Laptop, Macbook, PC, Apple Mac, Tablet, Smartphone (all brands). The whole team is dedicated to the WebTMS software only, anyone who picks up the phone will be able to help. Unlimited technical support via telephone and email is part of the service. WebTMS is very intuitive and user friendly without sacrificing power or functionality. The WebTMS team have been creating, developing and supporting the WebTMS software for 17 years, including data migration and conversion. Perfecting patents Experts discuss how best to translate a patent, and what to look for in a partner Translations101 Caroline Chenique Matthew Sekac Group business development director RWS Group Senior director Park IP Translations Maria Nilova Ina Bjerre Larsen Managing partner Patentica LLP Partner Zacco Sergey Sokolov Mark Dugdale Key translation specialist Patentica LLP Editor IPPro The Internet and Life Sciences What is the demand like for patent translations compared to a decade ago? Caroline Chenique: The number of patent applications has increased over the last decade and with it the number of international filings requiring translations. Looking at European patent applications between 2005 and 2014, numbers have increased by 18 percent, climbing from 128,665 in 2005 to 151,981 in 2014. The figures from the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) show an even more dramatic increase with Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT) national phase entries in the world shooting up by 93 percent from 292,800 in 2003 to 565,500 in 2013. Today, the demand for translations remains strong. The number of US and European filings in Asia has increased vastly in the last 10 years, coupled with the soaring number of patent applications coming out of China. RWS Group has been active in China and Japan for many years with large teams of translators, checkers, project managers and business developers based in our Tokyo and Beijing offices catering for both foreign and domestic clients. But it is not only the numbers of patents being filed that is affecting demand, but also patent legislation. The America Invents Act (AIA) gave patent owners much to consider. The switch from first-toinvent to first-to-to file in March of 2013 is still a challenge felt by applicants as they rethink how to approach their filing strategies. At the moment, there is a spike in the demand for translations due to the very large number of cases filed before the AIA came into force and that are due to enter the PCT national phase. We are well equipped to deal with this increase, but obviously the earlier our clients place their orders the better. In Europe, upcoming changes associated with the unitary patent is the main topic concerning professionals. Once the agreement is officially implemented, a significant change in how to file throughout Europe will be felt. That said, we don’t anticipate such an immediate effect on translation demand as the London Agreement had in 2008, where in certain countries translation requirements were minimised or waived. 39 Maria Nilova: Based on our practice, demand for patent translations has grown exponentially. Nowadays, many companies, from small start-ups to multinational corporations, are becoming extremely concerned about cost efficiency while wanting high quality services, in particular for patent translations. Traditionally, an applicant keen to obtain patent protection in a foreign country would fully delegate all prosecution, including preparing a patent translation, to a local patent agent. While no-one doubts the quality of this approach, it is well known how expensive this could be, especially in cases of multi-country national entries, which are common not only for multinational businesses but also emerging and promising new technologies. In all of these cases, it is of primary importance to provide high quality, affordable patent translations. That is why in roughly 30 percent of cases, applicants opt for a translation agency rather than a patent firm. Matthew Sekac: Demand has grown considerably since 2005. Trends in demand for patent translations are driven predominantly by trends in international patent filings, and the trend over the past decade has been consistent growth. For example, statistics available from WIPO indicate that PCT national phase entries in non-English speaking jurisdictions grew by nearly 50 percent between 2005 and 2013 (the most recent year for which data is available). The data suggests an increasingly global economy with international organisations focused on developing and protecting their IP on an increasingly broad scale, with developing economies playing an increasingly important role in global IP strategies. Between 2005 and 2013, national phase filings in lower and upper middle-income countries grew by 80 percent. Filings grew by 59 percent in Asian countries and 57 percent in Latin America and the Caribbean. Trends such as these are major contributors to the growth in demand for patent translations. Another important trend in the market has involved an increasing level of attention being paid to patent translations, by Western patent practitioners in particular. Historically, translation fell within the (nearly) exclusive domain of foreign patent agents. This is an unavoidable peripheral expense—a single, off-the-radar line-item buried in a sea of invoices, which was just been part of the cost of Translations101 doing business. More and more organisations are now taking a hard look at line-items such as translation and realising how dramatically they can add up to growing expenses. Beyond cost analysis, the internet makes it possible to build a global network of qualified resources that were once accessible only to local patent firms in each country. This creates an opportunity for global organisations to consolidate their translation needs through dedicated service providers with centralised operations, legal expertise and uniform quality assurance systems. The result is improved international patent quality and reduced cost of ownership. Ina Bjerre Larsen: The overall volume of straightforward patent prosecution translations (such as application texts for national filing) has definitely decreased compared to a decade ago—and probably will in the future, too, due to the unitary patent and general harmonisation. However, since the market for IP translation services has changed immensely, the demand for IP-related translations continues to be high. this relates to IP litigation, opposition, and mergers and acquisitions and other transactional translations that originate in our clients’ respective business environments, including domain names and trademarks. What is the talent pool like in this area? Are more bodies needed? Sergey Sokolov: The market for patent translation in Russia and the Commonwealth of Independent States countries, including Ukraine, is immense. Based on our experience, workable high quality patent translations come from patent firms. General practice translation agencies in our region, even well renowned ones, generally cannot satisfactorily cope with patent translation, especially in languages other than English. Our translations are hand-made through a three-stage process, therefore developing a ripe product. We presume other patent firms follow the same routine. We suppose that translation agencies specialising in patent translations would create an excellent and 40 very sophisticated business niche in the coming years due to growing demand in professional patent translations. Unfortunately, there are few, if any, educational facilities for patent translation in Russia to teach the confluence of jurisprudence, linguistics, and a relevant applied science. Sekac: From a macro viewpoint, the talent pool in this area appears mostly adequate to accommodate demand. Generally speaking, the work is getting done. One important feature of this market niche is that the aggregate supply of patent translator man-hours is not as fixed as in other areas. To accurately render the complex technical material contained in patent applications, translators must have an advanced level of competency in their field. They need to be experts. Much of the work in other translation industry segments is done by professionals who are translators by trade. Many of the best patent translators are also researchers, technicians, technical or scientific consultants for patent firms, or work as patent examiners or even patent agents. The result is a certain flexibility in the overall supply that can help absorb fluctuations in demand. I should emphasise that while many patent translators do not dedicate their entire work day to translation, they are no less capable as a result. On the contrary, active professional activity within their field serves to strengthen, reinforce and maintain their ability to absorb and engage the material they translate. There is a trade-off. Skilled patent translators sometimes resist the use of technology or updated methodologies that require an initial investment of time to learn. If the worldwide pool of patent translators has any notable shortcoming, it would be defined as a certain reluctance to modernise. For patent translation organisations, technology will be increasingly important to quality and capacity management as demand continues to grow. This includes an evolving suite of CAT (computer-aided translation) tools, workflow management systems, and other productivity-enhancing technology that requires utilisation by translators to achieve its potential. THE BEST WAY TO PREDICT THE FUTURE IS TO INVENT IT. Alan Kay Whether a fledgling startup, established SME or multinational, whatever your invention, technology or brand, we will help you get and keep the best protection for it. +44 (0)20 7269 8550 mail@dyoung.com www.dyoung.com Translations101 We have made great progress on this front through proactive engagement, support, and well-funded training initiatives. We are prepared, equipped and excited about the future. Linguistic competency: a basic requirement for any type of translation. Patent translators must have advanced competency in at least two languages, and should only work into their native language. Larsen: Given the Zacco patent translation team’s history—we actually grew after the London Agreement in Denmark/Sweden and gained valuable experience in handling the same situation in Norway, while others downscaled their translation businesses considerably, or shut them down altogether. We are fortunate that, today, we employ the best IP translator pool in Scandinavia with a huge amount of combined experience and skill. Technical competency: in order to completely and accurately render the meaning and intent of a patent application in another language, it requires expertise in the technical field of the invention. They are a highly adaptive and resilient team and they work extremely efficiently with state-of-the-art tools. The resilience of the Zacco translators to changes in the IP services market enables us to cover current needs quite well—even to the extent that, in principle, we deliver from day-to-day or even on the same day for validation translations. Patent-specific competency: translators also require a firm grasp of the complex and nuanced language used by patent practitioners. Patent applications are extremely demanding legal instruments that are structured carefully in light of a specific set of rules and conventions governing the legal impact of particular terms and formulations. However, our business develops constantly—due to changes in the IP environment, but also due to changes in the businesses whose IP Zacco handles, so new talent is generally always in demand here. Chenique: We’re always on the lookout for new translators and there are frequently opportunities to join our in-house team as well as to become one of our freelance staff. We are quite unique in the patent translation business with a large team of translators based in our offices, in addition to a network of freelancers backed by our team of in-house linguists who are tasked with the word for word checking of translations. We certainly think that more patent translators and checkers are needed, but it’s tough to recruit the people who meet our exacting standards. The best patent translators often have additional experience working as lab technicians, researchers, engineers, patent attorneys, agents or patent examiners. It’s not sufficient to know the language and know the technology. Patent translators must also understand the nuanced language of patent law to accurately and completely render their source text. Larsen: First and foremost, the perfect patent translator must be acutely aware of his/her responsibilities as to the maintenance and safeguarding the IP rights of any Zacco client. This means that, apart from the obvious master’s degree in business languages, he/she must know IP well enough to provide exactly what the Zacco client needs at any point in time, be it translations for litigation, In China, for example, we’ve put a programme in place to work very closely with several local universities. We take on interns who receive onsite training and who, if they are successful, go on to join our team. It’s proving a very effective way to recruit and train our staff in China and to meet the high demand for translations into Chinese. “The law is reason unaffected by desire.” What skills must the perfect patent translator possess? Sekac: Patent translators are human beings, so none will ever be perfect. The best patent translators make the fewest mistakes. They also have the skills, credentials and specialised expertise necessary to avoid the worst kind of mistakes. For patents, these are mistakes that materially affect patentability, the scope of coverage, or the viability of enforcement. These errors are usually the result of a translator’s failure to fully grasp the nature of the technology or the application’s carefully structured language. The most successful patent translators have years of experience. We normally require at least six years of experience translating patents within a particular technical field. They are proficient users of an array of scientific information resources, such as technical dictionaries and glossaries. They should possess three distinct layers of advanced competency, which are critical to accurately translating patent language: 42 patents trademarks designs domains life sciences unfair competition data protection www.germus.hu Translations101 filing, or for information only, and he/she must always be acutely aware of reliability in delivery and quality. The application of a linguistic mindset in combination with business awareness is absolutely imperative to providing quality and creating value in an IP environment. Nilova: First and foremost, a technical background in at least one of the professional areas, such as mechanics, electronics, chemistry, pharmaceuticals and biotechnology. Secondly, a translator needs industry- or scientific-experience, as well as any practice that provides a general understanding of the professional language and its usage. Every professional area has its own jargon. Thirdly, a profound knowledge of patent terminology is needed, as is a good understanding of the general structure of both a patent application and legislative regulations in different countries, as well as patent language nuances. Chenique: The perfect patent translator is quite a rare bird as he or she must be a subject specialist, with a degree in engineering or in science in order to be able to understand and translate the technologies that our clients cover in chemistry and life sciences, electrical, electronics and physics, mechanical and engineering. In addition to their technical qualifications, our translators also obviously have to be linguists capable of translating a foreign language into their mother tongue. Trim: 92(W) x 120mm (H) The third prerequisite is to be able to translate the source text as drafted, to comply with the specificities of patent language, and most importantly, to translate without either broadening or narrowing the scope of the patent. Ultimately, though our translators are a key part of a team of professionals who ensure that our clients receive only the highest quality, we have the following systems in place to ensure quality: ISO 9001-certified procedures with proofing of all translations by a checker; project managers troubleshooting for any potentially unclear terms in the source text; and ensuring compliance of translations with the specifications of local patent attorney firms and the national patent offices. The quality of a translation can make or break a patent application—but how are you keeping costs down without compromising on quality? Sokolov: Our experience shows this can be achieved through our three-stage process. Firstly, by employing highly educated exindustry professionals with a profound knowledge of the profession, keeping in mind today’s inventions deal with cutting edge technologies. They do the primary translation. Secondly, by training professional patent agents having very good native language skills and possessing good knowledge of patent terminology. They do the proofreading of the primary translations. Thirdly, by having a patent attorney review the claims. As a result, we differentiate between industry knowledge and patent skills, combining them and taking the best of both worlds. Less work would definitely mean compromised quality. We realise that compromised quality cannot be permanently sold as a firstrate product. When under pressure we focus on vital parts of an application to still provide the best possible solution within the constrained budget or restricted timeframe. Larsen: Obviously, this aspect became increasingly important during the recent financial crisis—everybody was affected by this. Translation is now a commodity and it is consequently subject to fierce competition. However, it is imperative to keep in mind that the quality of a translation can make or break an IP right. It goes without saying that we cannot compromise on quality and delivery, but at Zacco we apply an overall very cost-conscious mindset that allows us to operate quite well in our segment, which is not a discount segment as we truly believe in the value created by our unique IP product and our unique IP competences. An example of this is that we find it very important to also give full attention to the source text and to report on anything that seems amiss—a service that is included in our translation fee and which will, obviously, save money in the long run. IP competence and translation skills combined may greatly reduce the costly fuss that might otherwise occur. We also do our utmost to ensure that Zacco clients get exactly the product they request—to allocate the correct resources staffwise and time-wise. A translation order is always analysed before embarking on the job, to identify the intended IP use and what 43 Translations101 resources are needed to reflect the value of the translation to our client and to safeguard the scope of its rights. If in doubt, we ask. Finally, Zacco’s internal handling and administration is at a minimum, since the Zacco team can deliver within all combinations of the official European patent and Scandinavian languages. Chenique: Having our own team of translators in combination with a network of tried and trusted freelancers who receive high volumes of work from RWS has been instrumental in ensuring we not only offer the highest quality, but also are cost-effective.Our inhouse tools and systems also boost productivity and quality. RWS Group’s own patent database, PatBase, for example, ensures that our translators use the most appropriate terminology for a particular applicant or field. In addition, streamlined work flows, centralised project management and leading edge translation technology are all factors that enable us to provide the top quality for which RWS Group is renowned, as well as competitive pricing. Our clients face relentless pressure on their costs and we have to constantly find new ways of guaranteeing quality and delivering additional economies. The end-to-end solution that we now offer for foreign filing, thanks to our acquisition of inovia, the world’s number one filing platform for PCT national phase entries, is an example. Together with inovia we bring our clients the best in patent translation combined with the best in filing, and all for a great price that is difficult to beat. Sekac: Scale is one of the straightforward ways to keep costs down without compromising quality. At Park IP Translations, we 44 have been very successful at leveraging our growth to build a lean and robust production infrastructure. We have established strong relationships with capable and reliable partners, affording us dedicated and flexible capacity with room to grow further. We have also negotiated competitive buy rates that reflect our volume without putting our partners in a compromising position. Ultimately, keeping costs down without compromising on quality means prioritising quality. Volume gives you leverage over your suppliers. They will go a long way to avoid losing your business, if they depend on it. We have found that the best partnerships are truly partnerships—mutually beneficial relationships that can be counted on to serve their purpose. Technology is also key, such as translation memory (TM). When used effectively, TMs can significantly boost translator productivity and generate escalating cost savings as the database of translated material is built up over time. Patents don’t offer the biggest opportunity for leveraging previously translated material, however, it does help in some cost savings. TMs can also improve quality by streamlining terminology management and improving the consistency of translated language. Technology drives every facet of our process. We have a talented team of full-time developers that allows us to really empower imagination. We have developed cutting-edge tools for measuring productivity, managing quality, forecasting, interacting with clientside users and systems, and automating production workflows. These tools make our services smarter, with lower costs, at higher quality levels, and with data to back it up. IPPro J. Varbanov & Partners European and Bulgarian Patent & Trademark Attorneys One of the oldest and leading IP companies in Bulgaria Professional, cost effective services and quality advices Areas of practice: *IP Protection *IP Enforcement *Anti-counterfeiting *Litigations *Domain name registrations *IP watches PO Box 1152, BG-1000 Sofia, Bulgaria South Park Complex, bl.1A, 2nd fl., BG-1421, Sofia, Bulgaria Tel.: (+359 2) 986 51 25, Fax: (+359 2) 980 32 47, e-mail: jvp@jvpatents.com www.jvpatents.com BigInterview Bob Stembridge Lawrence Liberti Senior analyst Thomson Reuters IP & Science Executive director, Centre for Innovation in Regulatory Science Thomson Reuters Dr Kirk Gallagher Mark Dugdale Partner D Young & Co Editor IPPro The Internet and Life Sciences Who will be developing the next new drugs and therapies, and in what areas will these innovations happen? Bob Stembridge: We do have quantitative ways of showing which new drugs and therapies will be making a big impact on the market. Our recent 2015 Drugs to Watch report highlights 11 potential blockbuster drugs that we forecast to earn more than $1 billion by 2019. It’s set to be a massive year with eight more blockbuster drugs expected than in 2014. It’s leading some commentators to raise the question of whether we are seeing a renaissance in big pharma. According to the figures from earlier in 2015, drugs predicted to pass the $3 billion mark with 2019 sales forecasts include: Bristol-Myers Squibb and Ono Pharmaceutical’s melanoma drug Opdivo (nivolumab) at $5.68 billion; Regeneron Pharmaceuticals and Sanofi’s Praluent (alirocumab) for hypercholesterolemia at $4.41 billion; and Novartis’s Entresto (LCZ696) for chronic heart failure at $3.73 billion. In terms of innovative areas, new advances are happening in immuno-oncology, a rapidly evolving field for drug development. The aforementioned Entresto from Novartis represents a first-inclass heart failure drug that has recently received Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval. Other trends include innovation in treating cholesterol and the entry of more convenient all-oral regimes for hepatitis C virus. Simultaneous to all this is the rise of biosimilars. Although it is not an exact copy, a biosimilar is highly similar to an approved biologic and is developed on a designated biosimilar regulatory path. While the world’s first official biosimilar was approved by the EU back in 2006, it has taken up until March 2015 for a biosimilar to receive regulatory approval in the US. There are many players innovating in this area, with Pfizer, Eli Lilly, GlaxoSmithKline, Amgen, Biogen Idec, Merck and Sanofi among those entering the biosimilar space. A few are doing it on their own, some are partnering, and others are investing in joint ventures or biosimilar developers. They see biosimilars as a new revenue stream to help offset losses for blockbuster drugs and biologics that recently have come off patent. Another advantage is that biosimilars are offered at lower prices than the original. Remsima, an infliximab biosimilar, is famously almost 70 percent cheaper in Norway. Reduced pricing means that biosimilars can be available to more patients than the original, expensive biologics ever could and is a great benefit to healthcare providers in many countries that are under ever-increasing financial strain. 47 Kirk Gallagher: For some time now, big pharmaceutical companies have been increasingly looking to smaller biotechs, start-ups and academic departments to provide innovation in the life sciences. The smaller organisations are often better positioned to undertake highly specialised, higher risk research that may prove disruptive in a particular field. However, they are less well financed and remain reliant on the larger, more established pharma companies to fund the later stages of drug development and clinical trials. This dynamic environment has resulted in an increasing number of collaborations and licensing deals, with many acquisitions taking place around particularly promising technologies. Hot areas for innovation at the moment include immune-based therapies, where the body’s own immune system is harnessed to fight diseases such as cancer (immuno-oncology) and which may prove to be curative for previously intractable fatal or chronic diseases. In addition, gene therapy is beginning to fulfil its promise despite significant early setbacks that many thought would completely undermine the field. Gene therapy is a powerful therapeutic approach that enables, for example, the editing or deletion of defective genes in an organism, or the introduction of new genes to provide a targeted effect. High-profile recent developments include the restoration of vision in patients with previously incurable hereditary diseases. Cell-based therapies, such as stem cell therapy and autologous cell therapy, are also becoming more prevalent. Autologous approaches are advantageous, because a patient’s own cells are removed, treated and then transplanted back, which avoids the risk of provoking an immune response. Notably, these cell-based methods often draw heavily on gene therapy approaches and may find utility in treating neurodegenerative diseases such as Parkinson’s, or spinal cord injury. Significant breakthroughs have also been made in gene editing techniques, which further increase the power of gene therapy as a whole. Using new editing technologies, DNA may be precisely inserted, replaced or removed from a genome using artificially engineered nucleases such as transcription activator-like effector nucleases (TALENs) and the CRISPR/Cas system. These approaches show promise for the treatment of diseases such as HIV and sickle cell disease, and prevention of mitochondrial disease by destroying mutant mitochondria. How well positioned are IP systems around the world to encourage innovation in these areas? Stembridge: Pharmaceutical research has always been a costly and risky business. A Tufts Center for the Study of Drug Development report, issued in November 2014, indicates that after discovery and BigInterview development of a drug, it now often takes more than a decade to gain marketing approval at an estimated cost of over $2.5 million. But that is but a fraction of the overall average cost of getting a drug from labtop to patient at an eye-watering estimated $359 million, according to the California Biomedical Research Association. Add to this that only 10 percent of candidates make it to human testing, and only one in five of these are ever approved for human usage, and the business risk is clear. Global intellectual property systems are designed to address this risk by enabling sufficient protection to provide opportunity to realise suitable returns over the lifetime of the protection before drugs come off patent and generic competition ensues. As in all areas of the law, this is a difficult balance to achieve and in practice has led to some imperfections, which are in a continual process of review and adjustment to correct each swing of the pendulum. Conventional IP systems provide for patent protection of 20 years from the date of filing. Given that the total time for development and approval of a new drug is now somewhere north of 12 to 15 years, there is scant time to left realise realistic returns on investment. In recognition of this, various systems exist globally to compensate for regulatory delay and provide additional protection after expiry of the patent. In Europe, this is known as a supplementary protection certificate (SPC). An SPC normally has a maximum lifetime of five years, but that can be extended to five-and-a-half years in certain specific circumstances. SPC protection is available in all EU countries, although there is no Europe-wide registration system and application has to be made in each individual country. Equivalent systems are also available in the US (patent term restoration, providing from one to five years), Japan (five years), South Korea (up to five years) and other countries. Notably, patent term extensions for regulatory delay are not available in China and much of South America (Chile being the exception). In the area of genetic medicine, there was a period during which protection for specific genes from the human genome was available in the US, but this has effectively now been reversed by the 2013 US Supreme Court ruling in the Molecular Pathology Association v Myriad Genetics case that human genes cannot be patented. IP systems around the world continue to evolve to ensure the balance between incentivising and rewarding innovation and providing costeffective treatments for diseases globally is maintained. Gallagher: The European Patent Office (EPO) has a well-developed and relatively positive approach to innovation in these fields. As a result, it is generally possible to obtain useful patent protection covering these highly innovative technologies in Europe. Controversy does remain, however, particularly in fields that are seen by some as interfering with the fundamental mechanisms of life. Developments in jurisprudence are continually working towards balancing support of the industry, and the associated worldwide health benefits that this may bring, with potential moral and ethical concerns. A prime example relates to the patenting of stem cells. Current EPO guidelines follow the approach of the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) in the Brüstle case: to be patentable in Europe, a stem cell invention should not be directed to a human embryo, nor should the subject matter of the patent have required the prior destruction of a 48 human embryo at any time in the past. However, inventions relating to adult stem cells or human induced pluripotent stem cells (where adult cells are ‘reprogrammed’ to take on pluripotent capabilities so they can be used as a source of stem cells for therapeutic use) are still patentable. A more recent decision from the CJEU has clarified that parthenotes (activated unfertilised oocytes that may be used for the production of human stem cell lines) are not excluded from patentability. Although a parthenote is capable of developing into a blastocyst-like structure, it cannot develop into a human being because it lacks paternal DNA, and is therefore not considered to be a “human embryo” under European law. This decision has been welcomed by those working in the field as providing clarity on the patentability of certain stem cell types and may extend the scope of patentability in the field of stem cell research. Although not without fault, European patent practice is generally supportive of developments in the life sciences and provides reasonable certainty to applicants. In stark contrast, the US patent system is currently going through a very challenging period for life sciences applicants in the wake of the Myriad and Mayo Supreme Court decisions. The Myriad decision (June 2013), which concerned the patenting of human genes, is particularly relevant. In Myriad, the Supreme Court held that human genomic DNA is not patent eligible, because the same gene occurs in nature. However, non-naturally occurring cDNA sequences were held to be patent-eligible matter. The US Patent and Trade Office’s (USPTO) interpretation of this decision went further than this seemingly narrow finding, with the office issuing a set of guidelines in March 2014 that truly changed the fundamentals of what is patentable in the biotechnology field. The guidelines essentially excluded from patentability any naturallyoccurring substance, regardless of its isolation, purification or utility, unless it was “significantly different” to what was found in nature. After receiving a great deal of criticism, the USPTO issued revised guidance in January 2015, which somewhat reversed its position, and provides a more lenient test for patent eligibility. The new USPTO guidance first asks whether a claim is “markedly different” from a natural product. Under this test, a difference based on function, or a chemical, physical or biological property can lead to patent eligibility. Even if a claim fails this test, it may still be patent eligible if, under a second test, the claimed subject matter provides “significantly more” than a naturally occurring product. From the specific examples given in the guidance, it is clear that “significantly more” will be assessed more leniently than the approach stipulated in the previous guidance. Further guidance has just been issued (July 2015) that will hopefully provide further clarity. However, there is a still a great deal of uncertainty as to how best to obtain US patent protection for innovation in the biotechnology field, and applicants are facing serious difficulties in the prosecution of currently pending cases. This can only be seen as detrimental to technologies with the potential to revolutionise healthcare. Patent practice is developing quickly in China. However, there is generally a high burden set for life sciences applicants in providing data in patent applications at the filing stage. The Chinese patent office often requires granted claims to be limited to the reported working examples and as a consequence it can be difficult to achieve a commercially useful scope of protection based on early data. With reference to the state of BigInterview the industry discussed above, this can prove particularly problematic for small biotechs and academic applicants who may file early and in very new technologies with the aim of securing investment. Some success can be achieved by providing later data to support broader claims, however, this is an area where a more open-minded support of earlystage innovation would be beneficial. How can regulations be strengthened/relaxed to encourage innovation in new drugs and therapies? Lawrence Liberti: Timely access to safe and effective new medicines of societal value is a goal of medicine developers, regulators and payers. More flexible regulatory approaches, prompted by the need to accelerate reviews of novel HIV therapies in the 1980s, have been formalised in many jurisdictions, providing options to accelerate the regulatory review process, particularly in response to unmet medical needs. These streamlined yet robust pathways form an important part of accelerating pharmaceutical innovation. We characterise these priority and accelerated approaches as facilitated regulatory pathways (FRPs), ie, those designed to facilitate the availability, review and/or approval of medicines where there is an unmet medical need by providing alternatives to standard regulatory review routes. FRPs are increasingly commonly used in the US (for example, breakthrough therapy designation, or accelerated approvals) and growing in Japan and to some extent Europe. In this manner, drug development is expedited, and in best cases, patient access to medicines. Most recently, in the US, the 21st Century Cures Act has been designed to provide for a variety of procedures to stimulate innovation, tied in part to expedited access to important new medicines. Initiatives to investigate adaptive licensing schemes are being piloted by the European Medicines Agency (EMA) and others to characterise best practices in expediting patient access to medicines. FRPs may increase the communication and level of commitment between the developer and the agency, can give a larger role to effects on surrogate end points, and may move some of the burden of evidence generation from the pre- to the post-authorisation phase. Effective use of these modalities can improve the efficiency of the innovative medicine development process. We reviewed approvals of new active substances (NASs) by the FDA, EMA, and Japanese Pharmaceuticals and Medical Devices Agency (PMDA) between 2005 and 2014 in order to evaluate companies’ use of the different FRPs available and the role they play in expediting the approval of new medicines. Data for 825 NAS approvals between 2005 and 2014 were collected from the public domain. The number of NASs approved was 281, 242 and 302 for the FDA, EMA and PMDA, respectively. Priority reviews made up 47, 7 and 28 percent of the NASs approved by the FDA, EMA and PMDA. Comparing priority with standard review approval speed, FDA priority reviews were faster (243 days) compared to the standard (456 days) in 2014. EMA priority reviews were faster (264 versus 432 days), as were PMDA priority reviews (275 versus 359 days). Therefore, in 2014, the median approval times for priority reviews were very similar across the agencies. Over the last decade FRPs have played an important role, particularly at the FDA and PMDA in accelerating the approval of innovative medicines, thereby enabling treatments for diseases to be made available to 50 patients in a timely manner, including orphan diseases, where little or no effective treatment options exist. The continued refinement of FRPs will contribute to innovative ways of accelerating the development of safe and effective medicines. Gallagher: As previously discussed, smaller life sciences businesses are increasingly relied on as the ‘engine houses’ of innovation. The emergence of governments that want to build science/tech hubs should be encouraged, and innovation can be strengthened by increasing tax breaks and funding opportunities for innovative businesses. The provision of improved financial support will allow small life sciences businesses to survive longer on their own before needing to find a commercial partner. This will provide vital time for the companies to develop their ideas to a sufficient extent to convince potential investors. With the increasing complexity of many modern therapeutics, more time is often vital to optimise technologies to a satisfactory level. In addition, governments and regulatory bodies need to continue to keep up with the fast pace of developments in the life sciences field. The technologies under development show vast potential, but at the same time are highly complex and may present significant safety, moral and ethical issues. Mis-regulation may result in the premature implementation of developments with adverse consequences, which may erode public trust. These complexities should not be avoided, but need to be tackled promptly and decisively. By way of example, cell-based therapies present many regulatory challenges. Despite a rich pipeline of autologous cell therapies in clinical development, to date few have made it onto the market. This may partly be because the technology faces substantial regulatory challenges. Cell therapies are highly complex products and accordingly it is difficult to assure quality and apply the same requirements as applied to a typical biologic. Furthermore, the risk of the therapies is more akin to surgeries, such as transplantations, than to a typical drug. New regulatory frameworks are urgently needed to support and ensure safety in these areas. Although not strictly regulatory, improved education of academics and small businesses in the importance of their IP would also be desirable. For example, although many academics are often keen to publish ground-breaking results as quickly as possible, if patent filings are not made in time these publications will likely jeopardise patent protection. As a result, new technologies may be neglected because investors will likely not wish to back them if others can later freely enter the market without undertaking any of the costly development work. Grace periods of a limited time frame are provided in some countries that provide a safety net against such damaging disclosures by inventors. However, these provisions are not uniform worldwide and are notably absent in Europe. Although discussions are taking place regarding the introduction of a grace period in Europe, no agreement has currently been reached. Progress in harmonising the application of grace periods would provide welcome certainty to applicants and reduce the loss of rights caused by the assumption of this safety net being available everywhere. IPPro b Named.net www.bNamed.net Easy domain name portfolio management Pr ur brand on li b ne t yo c e ot Domain name specialist since 1999 Competitive pricing Personal support Every possible TLD For brand owners and TM offices T: +44 20 3393 4858 T: +32 3 400 43 43 info@bNamed.net www.bNamed.net PolandSPCs The pharmaceutical industry is a very important element of Polish economy. In 2013, the Polish pharmaceutical market was placed as the sixth among the largest markets in Europe with the annual turnover amounting to approximately €4.4 billion (IMS Health 2013). Poland has also been named as one of the ‘pharmerging’ markets, which by 2017 is expected to exhibit significantly higher growth rate than mature markets, such as the US, Japan, France, Germany and Spain (IMS Pharmerging White Paper, 2013), even though the pharmaceutical market value, per capita, did not exceed €115 in 2013. This economic importance of the pharmaceutical sector has also been reflected in intellectual property rights prosecution and their enforcement in Poland. Patent term extension has become one of the most important aspects of IP right protection for pharmaceuticals in Poland. Patent protection guarantees 20 years of market exclusivity for a medicinal product, covered by a patent, starting from the filing date of the patent application. The only way to extend patent protection 52 for a medicinal product is to apply for the grant of a supplementary protection certificate (SPC). The idea of patent term extension is relatively new in the Polish patent law system. The SPC is a protection right granted in all EU member states, including Poland, for medicinal and plant protection products based on the following EU regulations: • Regulation (EC) No 469/2009 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 6 May 2009 concerning the SPC for medicinal products, which has replaced Council Regulation (EEC) No 1768/92; and • Regulation (EC) No 1610/96 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 23 July 1996 concerning the creation of an SPC for plant protection products. This specific form of protection was also implemented in the Act of 30 June 2000 on Industrial Property Law (Journal of Laws, No 119, item 1117, 2003 with later amendments) in 2002 and became a part of the Polish legal system after Poland’s accession to the EU in 2004. PolandSPCs The SPC was introduced for medicinal and plant protection products due to the fact that the length of time of effective patent protection for these products is shorter, since they cannot be introduced into the market directly. These products can only be sold after a marketing authorisation is obtained. In order to obtain such a regulatory approval, time-consuming studies and long administrative procedures are required. These procedures significantly limit the duration of the monopoly resulting from the patent protection alone. Therefore, the SPC aims to compensate the patent owner for the lost time of patent protection. The introduction of the SPC has increased IP protection of medicinal products by awarding additional protection, which begins after patent expiry. This extra protection lasts up to five years. The protection for medicinal products resulting from the SPC can be extended even further for an additional six months (ie, paediatric extension of the SPC), however, only if specific requirements indicated in Regulation No 469/2009 and related to paediatric clinical trials are fulfilled. Many interpretational issues regarding the SPC requirements defined in Regulation No 469/2009 has been raised by different courts and authorities in EU member states. These issues resulted in abundant judgements of the Court of Justice of the EU (CJEU), whose aim has been to clarify the requirements for SPC grant and ensure their uniform application throughout the EU. Although the CJEU judgements have, in general, settled many questionable issues, they have often raised further questions regarding the 53 SPC and its grant conditions. This demonstrates that matters concerning the SPC are not always very straight forward and require additional explanation to accommodate new types of medications that have been recently developed. A lot of different questions are raised at the national level during the prosecution of the SPC applications by the national authorities. The Patent Office of Republic of Poland (PORP), which is the competent industrial property office for the examination of SPC applications, as well as SPC paediatric extension applications, in Poland, has developed quite an overzealous substantive examination procedure. One of the most problematic issues in Poland is the requirement of protection of the product, ie, the protection of the active ingredient of the medicinal product, by a patent in force. Of course, many aspects of this problem have already been addressed in judgements of the CJEU. However, the PORP still, somehow, manages to find new obstacles relating the scope of patent protection and thus the SPC itself. For example, in one of the recent cases, an SPC application was rejected because the basic patent, ie, the patent selected as the basis for the SPC application, referred to a chemical compound as such (without making a reference to any physical form of the compound of the invention), whereas the first marketing authorisation referred to a specific physical form of that very chemical compound. PolandSPCs In particular, the summary of product characteristics (SmPC), a legal document approved as part of the marketing authorisation of every medicinal product, which contains information for health professionals on how to use the medicinal product safely and effectively, mentioned a specific crystalline form of the compound covered by the basic patent. Since the specification of the basic patent did not comprise any information with respect to that crystalline form of the compound of the invention, the SPC application was rejected. For the assessment of the SPC requirements, the PORP did not consider the fact that the basic patent conveyed protection for the active ingredient in any form, since it contained a product claim for the new chemical entity. However, the case has not been yet finally resolved, as an appeal has been lodged against this rejecting decision. Another issue that arises from time to time during examination of SPC applications before the PORP is the issue of the first marketing authorisation. According to current practice, the SPC application can be rejected if a similar medicinal product is already on the market, even though the PORP is unable to present the marketing authorisation for the product it juxtaposes as allegedly similar and already placed on the market. The SPC application can also be rejected if the product comprises a combination of active ingredients (A+B), and an earlier marketing authorisation for one of the products was obtained (A) with the SmPC indicating that it is possible to use this product (A) in a combination therapy with the other product (B). In this case, the PORP has indicated that a mere fact that a combination therapy is mentioned in the SmPC of an earlier marketing authoriation is enough to question the marketing authorisation for the product comprising both active ingredients A and B. However, this decision of the PORP was reversed by the Regional Administrative Court. In general, during SPC examination the PORP seems to examine criteria that do not correspond to those named in Regulation No 469/2009. The PORP often refers to patentability criteria, such as sufficient support and obviousness, which should not be examined at all during prosecution of an SPC application. The problems also arise during examination of the request for paediatric extension of the SPC. Frequently, the PORP reexamines validity of the already granted SPC before it makes a decision with respect to paediatric extension. In one of the cases, a request for paediatric extension was rejected, because, according to the examiner, the SPC did not meet the transitional provisions governing the SPC grant. The PORP did not take into consideration the fact that in order to raise such an objection, the SPC should be invalidated, whereas the paediatric extension should be granted since all of the requirements for such an extension were fulfilled. Another significant problem is the requirement for too much documentation when the paediatric extension is to be granted, based on a mutual recognition procedure instead of a central EU procedure. The PORP requires copies of all marketing authorisations from all member states, including the SmPC. Moreover, the PORP can raise an objection with respect to a national marketing authorisation, if the PORP suspects that it is not the current marketing authorisation. At the same time, the PORP is not familiar with the practice of local authorities that issue the marketing authorisations in every EU member state. It is also very difficult to convince the PORP’s examiner that in the mutual recognition procedure, the statement indicating compliance with an agreed completed paediatric investigation plan will not necessarily be issued by the European Medicines Agency. Therefore, obtaining an SPC extension is much easier based on the marketing authorisation granted in the centralised procedure. Finally, it needs to be emphasised that the practice developed by the PORP with respect to SPCs has also influenced the examination of patent applications. Nowadays, the PORP very often refers to the judgements of the CJEU related to SPCs while examining the patentability of pharmaceutical inventions. Moreover, the PORP also often refers to the preamble of the SPC regulation, wherein it is indicated that all the interests at stake, including those of public health, in a sector as complex and sensitive as the pharmaceutical sector, should be taken into account. This argument is very often used to restrict the scope of protection of pharmaceutical patents. Therefore, in addition to the problematic issue that result from the SPC regulation itself, in Poland we have to deal with additional problems that are very surprising and don’t result from ambiguity these regulations, but rather from the PORP’s viewpoint that it is an authority responsible for keeping the balance between the interests of all parties, including public health and the pharmaceutical sector. However, it should be underlined that this alleged responsibility does not result from any regulations and so makes SPC and patent prosecution in Poland quite challenging. IPPro “ During SPC examination the PORP seems to examine criteria that do not correspond to those named in Regulation No 469/2009. The PORP often refers to patentability criteria, such as sufficient support and obviousness, which should not be examined at all ” Magdalena Tagowska, Patent attorney, Patpol 54 MexicoData One fell loophole: protecting clinical data There are evident loopholes in Mexican legislation regarding IP rights and clinical data protection framed in the scope of sanitary regulatory affairs. Soledad Betanzos-Lara of Goodrich, Riquelme y Asociados reports “So, here I am. A brand new drug molecule, thoroughly researched and developed, for more than 10 years. Many monetary expenses and time investment have been put together to push me forward. I have been thoroughly clinical-trialled and proven to be safe and effective and a bunch of clinical-related data has been generated in the process. I have been named ‘the innovator’.” “Naturally, now is the time to market me, in order to reach the target patient population that I was developed for, and so, help to improve people’s health. But hang-on: before this happens, I need to go through strict sanitary regulatory approvals, qualify for intellectual property protection, and somehow secure the clinical data generated.” “Only that one thing concerns me. I’ve heard that at some point, others will try to supersede my identity with the aim of also improving people’s health, but at a lower cost than mine. And that maybe, for being approved, they will be authorised to use my clinical data. I know they call themselves ‘generics’.” “What is then out there that will secure IP and sanitary protection for me, while guarding my clinical data for the longest possible time before the entry of these generics?” This stream of consciousness, pondered by a new and innovative drug molecule—if indeed this was possible—probably depicts the fears that all innovative pharmaceutical companies have. So, how do jurisdictions protect both an innovator’s IP rights and clinical data, and maintain a sanitary regulation intelligibly linked with these, while still providing affordable and high-quality medications for the population? This is not an easy question to answer and the approaches can be diverse. The regulatory frameworks needed for intertwining IP rights, clinical data protection, sanitary regulatory affairs and access to medicines, do not exist everywhere in the world. Mexico has achieved much in this respect, although some areas of opportunity are still to be covered. IP rights protection, enabled by 56 the Mexican Institute of Industrial Property (Instituto Mexicano de la Propiedad Industrial, IMPI), is linked to the sanitary regulatory affairs of the Federal Commission for Protection against Sanitary Risk (Comisión Federal para la Protección contra Riesgos Sanitarios, COFEPRIS), via the so-called Linkage Gazette: a biannual publication from IMPI in which patents in-force covering allopathic medicines, second-medical uses, and formulations thereof, are disclosed. Seeking IP protection for a new molecule via patenting is standard in Mexico, as long as the patentability requirements set out by IMPI are met. Via this procedure, the innovator will benefit from 20 years of protection for the active ingredient, during which, no other party can exploit the same molecule for any given purpose, being this a second medical use, a pharmaceutical composition, or a process. Simultaneously (but not always), the innovator may apply for a marketing authorisation for its drug, through the local sanitary authority. In Mexico, if the application is successful, a renewable five-year marketing authorisation for the drug will be issued. In this context, under the current Mexican legislation, a generic company may apply to COFEPRIS for a marketing authorisation for a product that falls within the scope of a patent listed in IMPI’s Linkage Gazette, within three years (for allopathic drugs and up to eight years for biocomparables) prior to the expiration date of the corresponding Mexican patent, according to the Bolar exception. It is worth noting that the marketing authorisation will not be issued by COFEPRIS until the Mexican patent in question expires. Curiously enough, the timeframes for both procedures do not always match. The timeframe for obtaining a marketing authorisation normally lasts between three to six months and up to one year, whereas a patent application will normally take longer, approximately four years, on average. Therefore, there is a mismatch between the time that the innovator can benefit from having an active ingredient monopoly and the time during which it can generate revenue from the monopoly. MexicoData “ These guidelines were drafted with the intention to be in line with the minimum time term set by NAFTA and advise that a marketing authorisation holder will have a five-year exclusive right ” Soledad Betanzos-Lara, Lawyer, Goodrich, Riquelme y Asociados So far, so good. However, since 2008, the Mexican regulation was amended to include a requirement for the approval of generic drugs before COFEPRIS on the sole basis of interchangeability tests. That is, generic companies may obtain marketing authorisation for a generic product by merely providing dissolution profiles or bioavailability studies. As the reader might infer, this intrinsically means that a generic product applicant indirectly benefits from the safety and efficacy studies already carried out by the innovator, which, in part, might explain why generic products are almost always cheaper than their innovator counterparts. These facts uncover a clear disconnect between IP rights, sanitary regulatory affairs, and clinical data protection, not in the sense that there is a breakage in the confidentiality of clinical data, but in the lack of observance to international related treaties to which Mexico is bound. Considering that the Mexican Constitution positions a hierarchy of international treaties approved by the Mexican Senate over Federal Laws, clinical data protection in Mexico should in theory be strictly subject to either of the following two legal international dispositions: the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and Trade-Related Aspects of IP Rights (TRIPS) Agreement. Indeed, these are back by further local legislation, including the Mexican IP Law, Mexican Health Law, Mexican Health Products Regulations, and the Mexican General Health Law Regulations for Health Researching. On the one hand, while the Mexican IP Law establishes that undisclosed information in an application for marketing authorisation shall be regarded as a trade secret, it also states that information submitted in order to obtain an authorisation to produce or market chemical products shall be protected according to the international treaties to which Mexico is a signatory. On the other hand, as part of these two treaties, a minimum fiveyear term of indirect reliance on data protection/exclusivity would be expected to circumvent prejudicial commercial use of the confidential information made available by the innovator to the local sanitary regulatory authority, COFEPRIS. However, there are no provisions in any of the local Mexican regulations containing a ‘non-reliance’ period as established in international treaties such as NAFTA and TRIPS. This means that during a data exclusivity period, the innovator’s pre-clinical and clinical trials data should not be referenced in the regulatory filings 57 of another company (typically a generic company) for the same drug substance. This period, according to Article 1711 of NAFTA, shall begin from the date on which the marketing authorisation is granted to the requesting party. NAFTA’s wording is subject to interpretation as regards to a reliance on the product safety and efficacy data contained in the dossier, because Section 6 of Article 1711 reads: “Each party shall provide that for data subject to Paragraph 5 that are submitted to the party after the date of entry into force of this agreement, no person other than the person that submitted them may, without the latter’s permission, rely on such data in support of an application for product approval during a reasonable period of time after their submission. For this purpose, a reasonable period shall normally mean no less than five years from the date on which the party granted approval to the person that produced the data for approval to market its product, taking account of the nature of the data and the person’s efforts and expenditures in producing them. Subject to this provision, there shall be no limitation on any party to implement abbreviated approval procedures for such products on the basis of bioequivalence and bioavailability studies.” In an attempt to provide for this missing link, in 2012, COFEPRIS published on its website a memorandum providing guidelines for observing the absent regulatory data package exclusivity agreement. These guidelines were drafted with the intention to be in line with the minimum time term set by NAFTA and advise that a marketing authorisation holder will have a five-year exclusive right, during which its clinical-related information cannot benefit or be used to support a third-party application for registration of a generic drug. Nevertheless, generic companies are invited to provide their own standard clinical trials to obtain the corresponding marketing authorisation if they so wish. Theoretically, this sounds very promising. Practically, not much has been achieved: not a single relevant case in Mexico entreating international data protection treaties has been filed as of today. Mexico has accomplished enormous advances in this respect, although there are still some evident loopholes in the Mexican legislation regarding IP rights and clinical data protection framed in the scope of sanitary regulatory affairs. Considering the imminent global tendency towards stronger and harmonised IP protection, Mexico will have to make its legislation fit. IPPro a break between the law and commercial reality? Experts from Christodoulos G. Vassiliades & Co. LLC examine the ways in which Europe and the UK have recently approached shape trademarks ShapeMarks But following a series of decisions, beginning with the one from the UK IPO and leading up to a referral by Justice Richard Arnold to the Court of Justice of the EU (CJEU), it seems that this is more than a mere feud between chocolate giants. The courts seem be making a bold statement about registering shapes as trademarks, thereby clarifying that although the same criteria apply, the extent of their application differs. This is in line with a more general trend towards giving applicants of shape trademarks a “harder time” when applying for such registrations. Indeed, it can be argued that the decisions reached so far were taken (as far as distinctiveness is concerned) because of Nestlé’s inability to present palpable evidence that the Kit Kat’s shape (without the word mark) has been sufficiently branded, advertised and recognised among the relevant public. Nonetheless, it seems that the landmark principle that this case establishes is the extension of Article 3(1)(e)(ii), specifically the term ‘technical result’, beyond the function of the goods to the manner in which they are manufactured. On 8 July 2010, Nestlé submitted an application to the UK IPO for the registration of its four-finger shape as a trademark. The application, which was only considered on absolute grounds, was accepted ex-officio. Cadbury opposed the decision of the UK IPO by arguing the following, which may be divided into two main grounds: • Ground one: Article 3 (1) (b), (c) and (d) of the Directive 2008/95/EC; and a lack of acquired distinctiveness as per Article 3(3). • Ground two: Article 3(1)(e)(i); and/or Article 3(1) (e) (ii). Both parties presented expert evidence in support of their arguments. Seemingly, the most contributive of these experts were: the senior project engineer for Cadbury, Mark Robertson, and Philip Malivoire for Nestlé, who was responsible for the two surveys conducted in 2007 and 2012, respectively, on behalf of Nestlé. Robertson said there are two main means of producing confectionary: enrobing and moulding. He rejected enrobing as a means of achieving Kit Kat’s shape on the basis that it “does not provide a sufficiently strong base or attachments between the individual fingers”. He then proceeded to explain that the release of chocolate moulded products required sloping sides with minimum angle of 8 to 10 degrees (Kit Kat having a 14 degrees angle). He also explained that the grooves indicated to the consumer where to break the bars. It was, nonetheless, submitted on cross-examination that the initial concept of a new product is produced by the marketing team. Robertson was found by the IPO as a credible and honest witness, with the latter adding considerable substance to his submissions. 59 The fact that almost the entire shape of Kit Kat was explained in simple technical terms was a blow on Kit Kat’s case, at least in relation to the second ground. As far as the first ground is concerned, the blow came from Nestlé itself. Malivoire conducted two surveys for Nestlé; one in 2007 and the other in 2012. The first survey was found as non-compliant with the criteria set out by the court in recognising such surveys. The most important factor for non-compliance was the high degree of speculation in which the person answering the question embarked upon. The second survey was accepted as evidence. It showed at least half of the respondents recognised Kit Kat’s shape. However, neither this nor the fact that Nestlé heavily invested in promoting the product, assisted Nestlé’s case, and justifiably so. “ The ground of acquired distinctiveness suffered a big blow, which Nestlé could have avoided in commercial terms, if the commercialisation and the branding and marketing strategy for Kit Kat was more consistent throughout the years and more in line with their ultimate purpose, namely that of the registration of Kit Kat as a shape mark ” Christodoulos Vassiliades, Managing partner, Christodoulos G. Vassiliades & Co. LLC Cadbury’s opposition to the decision of the UK Intellectual Property Office (IPO) to accept the registration of Kit Kat’s shape as a trademark was seen, by many, as the cherry on top of a war without a herald, especially following the opposition by Nestlé of Cadbury’s application to register its Dairy Milk colour, purple, back in 2014. ShapeMarks Especially as far as Kit Kat’s branding is concerned (in relation to the four-finger shape), the same could not be proved in numbers. Nestlé was only able to provide that between the years of 1996 and 2007, it spent between £3 and £11 million per annum promoting the Kit Kat product in the UK alone—most of which was directed toward the four-finger version. However, presented with the relevant evidence, the examiner could not identify the shape mark that was the subject of the application. Further, between 2008 and 2010, Nestlé spent between £850,000 and £4.4 million in promoting the products, again without being able to determine the percentage of that expenditure dedicated in the promotion of the shape in question (2010 being the year in which Nestlé applied for registration of the shape trademark). Although it remained indisputable that the market share of Kit Kat was between 1 and 2 percent of the chocolate market during that period (a percentage, which, if taken in context, is considerably high), the ground of acquired distinctiveness suffered a big blow, which Nestlé could have avoided in commercial terms, if the commercialisation and the branding and marketing strategy for Kit Kat was more consistent throughout the years and more in line with their ultimate purpose, namely that of the registration of Kit Kat as a shape mark. The UK IPO based its decision on the strict letter of the law, therefore deciding that Kit Kat’s shape could not be registered due to both grounds: the first, because acquired distinctiveness could not be proved; and the second, because the shape of Kit Kat was dictated by the natural shape of the goods and by the technical results it produced (although the registration for the shape mark in relation to cakes and pastries was accepted). 60 Justice Arnold, although clearly in favour of the decision of the UK IPO, seemed eager to clarify three main questions, which he referred to the CJEU: • In order to establish that a trademark has acquired a distinctive character following the use that had been made of it within the meaning of Article 3(3) of the directive, is it sufficient for the applicant for registration to prove that at the relevant date, a significant proportion of the relevant class of persons recognise the mark and associate it with the applicant’s goods in the sense that, if they were to be asked who marketed the goods bearing that mark, they would identify the applicant; or must the applicant provide that a significant proportion of the relevant class of persons rely upon the mark (as opposed to any other trademarks that may also be present) as indicating the origin of the goods? • Where a shape consists of three essential features, one of which results from the nature of the goods themselves and two of which are necessary to obtain a technical result, is registration of that shape as a trademark precluded by Article 3(1)(e)(i) and/or (ii) of the directive? • Should Article 3(1)(e)(ii) of the directive be interpreted as precluding registration of shapes that are necessary to obtain a technical result with regard to the manner in which the goods are manufactured as opposed to the manner in which the goods function? As with the previous decisions on this matter the advocate general’s opinion on the first question was clear: “The function of a trademark is an essential element of its distinctive character.” Therefore, it is not enough to associate a shape mark with another trademark of the same trade origin. The shape mark needs to be able to function as a trademark, ie, lead the consumer straight to ShapeMarks the trade origin and not to another trademark (in this case, to the word mark Kit Kat). This, as the very essence of trademark law, seems to have been applied in a very firm manner. The advocate general’s application of this principle to combined trademarks and to trademarks existing in conjunction with other trademarks was stated as follows: trademarks that are used in combination or in conjunction with other trademarks—and have acquired distinctiveness as a result— may be individually registered, provided that they are capable of functioning as a trademark (individually), ie, are capable of distinguishing the goods of one undertaking from those of another and therefore used as a batch of origin (which was essentially a reinstatement of advocate general Juliane Kokott’s opinion in Nestlé (C-353/03)). After all, the decision does not deviate from the common standard practices, namely that despite the many functions of a trademark, the only function that is officially recognised is the denotation of origin. Nonetheless, in a commercial context applied specifically to the merits of this case, one could argue differently. The overall impression drawn by the decisions mentioned above is that the shape mark was or could easily be associated with Kit Kat, albeit not directly with Nestlé. However, for a chocolate giant such as Nestlé, which holds 1 to 2 percent of the chocolate market in the UK, the association of Kit Kat with Nestlé, and as a result, the shape mark with Nestlé, cannot be but a simple mathematical equation. In light of the above, one would wonder whether the strict application of the letter of the law was intentional or due to a number of contributing factors: the first being the lack of supporting evidence in relation to distinctiveness, and the second, the need to make sure that shapes are limited to design protection (which, after all, is only limited to 25 years of protection). If the first ground is taken in isolation, and considering the bold example of the Coca-Cola bottle, one could argue that commercial considerations do step in, or are at least considered along with legal as well as policy considerations in finding distinctiveness (provided that such commercial considerations are well supported, which was not the case here). But if this case is perceived in its real context, Article 3(1) (e)(i) and (ii) seem to have been the main factors used to determine the outcome. The advocate general here found that two grounds, namely shapes dictated by the nature of the goods and shapes that are necessary to obtain a technical result, cannot be applied cumulatively, although they can be applied separately to the same mark. As far as the nature of the goods is concerned, the advocate general clarified that Article 3(1)(e)(ii) is not and should not be limited to the Lego (C-48/09) and Philips v Remington cases (C-299/99). Rather, the interpretation approach adopted was purposive rather than literal meaning that the public interest behind this provision dictates that a technical result could result from both: the function of the goods as well as the manner in which these are manufactured. So long as any one of these is applied, the shape mark should not be registered. As a result of the application of both grounds: • The basic rectangular slab was held to fall within Article 3(1(e)(i); • The presence of breaking grooves was held to fall within Article 3(1)(e)(ii); • An angle of more than 8 to 10 degrees fell within Article 3(1) (e)(i) and the depth of the same within Article 3(1)(e)(ii); and • The number of breaking grooves and fingers was held as been determined by the desired portion size. Therefore, in contrast to the acquired distinctiveness ground, the first ground serves as an important public interest function. It prohibits the protection of technical solutions or functional characteristics, which would and should normally be protected under patents or designs, and for whatever reason they cannot, from being protected as trademarks (exclusively and permanently). Further, it provides a ‘fair trade’ defence to competitors in the sense that it protects competitors from being deprived of technical solutions that the consumer may seek or demand to see in their products. Admittedly, the opinion of the advocate general was expected and, as with the rest of the decisions on this matter, is well supported. Now it remains to be seen whether or not the CJEU will follow the leads of the preceding judgements, although it is highly unlikely that the EU’s highest court or the national court will rule to the contrary. IPPro “ It provides a ‘fair trade’ defence to competitors in the sense that it protects them from being deprived of technical solutions that the consumer may seek or demand to see in their products ” Ourania Vrondou, Advocate and head of intellectual property department, Christodoulos G. Vassiliades & Co. LLC 61 AfricaTrademarks OAPI: effective trademark protection Vanessa Halle of Nico Halle & Co Law Firm offers some useful tips for brands protecting and enforcing their trademark rights in Africa With the marked increase in trademark registrations at the African Intellectual Property Organization (commonly known by its French acronym OAPI), one can assume that most brand owners are aware of the importance of protecting their trademarks. OAPI is an organisation comprised of 17 member states: Benin, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, the Central African Republic, Chad, Comoros Islands, Congo Brazzaville, Cote d’Ivoire, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Guinea Bissau, Guinea Conakry, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Senegal, and Togo. An application filed at OAPI is protected in all 17 member states. Once filed at OAPI, a brand owner has the exclusive right to exploit its trademark, as well as prevent third parties from making use of identical or similar trademarks for similar goods or services without authorisation. The maintenance and protection of a trademark can take multiple forms. through a process known as ‘restoration’. This procedure must be brought within six months of the grace period elapsing, and no later than two years of the renewal date. As per Article 21(6) of Annex 3 of the Revised Bangui Agreement (RBA), where a mark has not been renewed, it can only be registered for the benefit of a third party in respect of identical or similar goods or services when three years from the renewal date have elapsed. However, note Article 25(4) of Annex 3 of the RBA, which further states that third parties that start to use the mark after it has not been renewed will have the right to continue doing so. With these two seemingly paradoxical articles, brand owners are encouraged to renew their trademarks within the deadline, rather than delay and renew during the grace period or via restoration. This is because allowing the trademark to lapse creates loopholes for infringers to exploit, as they have the option to simply use the trademark, rather than register. Renewals and related procedures The main form of maintaining a trademark is by renewal. A trademark is valid for 10 years from the filing date, and is preserved indefinitely through successive renewals done every 10 years. When the trademark is not renewed within the 10-year deadline, it can be renewed within a six-month grace period. If this six-month period elapses and the trademark has still not been renewed as a result of circumstances beyond the control of the brand owner, there is a final opportunity to restore the trademark, 62 Opposition actions Upon registration of a trademark, it is published in the OAPI official bulletin. An opposition action must be brought within six months of this date. This option allows a brand owner to oppose the registration of a mark that is similar or identical to its own and relates to the same goods or services, where such a similarity is liable to mislead or confuse the public. AfricaTrademarks This could be seen by some as an average means of protection at OAPI because it does not reject trademarks on grounds of similarity—an interested party must oppose the trademark. Furthermore, an applicant can commence commercialisation of a trademark immediately upon filing at OAPI. When the timeframe from filing, registration, and eventual publication is taken into account, a period of at least two years can be envisaged. Also, during an opposition proceeding, the applicant of the allegedly infringing trademark has the right to continue exploitation until a decision is issued by OAPI cancelling the disputed trademark. It could be validly argued that the allegedly infringing party will have had at least two years to exploit the disputed trademark, to the detriment of the brand owner. Cancellation action Cancellation actions can be brought before the civil court, when a registered mark has not been used on the territory of at least one OAPI member state for an uninterrupted period of five years. One important aspect of the OAPI system is that use of a brand in at least one OAPI member state satisfies the requirement of use. Brand owners are therefore not compelled to exploit their brands in all the 17 member states. The burden of proof regarding use of a mark rests with the owner of a mark, and use by another person shall be recognised as use, subject to endorsement by the owner. Note that for use by another party to be enforceable in OAPI, it has to be recorded in the special register of marks. Invalidity action Invalidity actions are brought before the civil courts at the request either of the Office of Public Prosecution, or any interested party. The grounds for bringing this action are the same as that required for an opposition action (before OAPI). The only difference seems to be the absence of the requirement to bring the action within six months of the publication date in the OAPI official bulletin. The presumption of lengthy trials before the civil courts of the member states sometimes deters brand owners from using this route. It is therefore advised that in order to avoid going through the courts, brand owners should use a professional monitoring service to reliably and promptly inform them when a similar or identical trademark is published, so that an action can be brought before OAPI (as an opposition action), which though lengthy is relatively faster than court. Infringement action Infringement proceedings are brought by the brand owner before the civil courts and judged as summary proceedings. Note that for infringement seizure, security is always required of foreigners. 63 In order for an infringement seizure to be effective, brand owners are advised to seize at the port of entry, ie, before the articles are disseminated into the market. Once the infringing products are circulated further in the territory or sent to other member states, it becomes more complicated and costly to monitor and bring infringement actions in several member states. It is therefore important to deal with these matters in a timely and prompt manner, as well as retain a reliable and diligent lawyer in the relevant member state to guide and assist during the seizure proceedings. IPPro “ One important aspect of the OAPI system is that use of a brand in at least one OAPI member state satisfies the requirement of use. Brand owners are therefore not compelled to exploit their brands in all the 17 member states ” Vanessa Halle, Director, intellectual property, Nico Halle & Co Law Firm Any brand owner wishing to effectively protect its trademark using this route should retain a reliable and professional watch service to monitor the registry and inform on any similar and or identical trademarks. NigeriaPerspective Closing borders to fakers and pirates Amaka Okafor of Stillwaters Law outlines the importance of an effective border control regime to fighting counterfeiting and piracy Counterfeiting and piracy are presently acknowledged as great global threats to creativity. Counterfeiting is the act of unlawfully imitating or reproducing items/works protected by the law of trademarks, patents, or copyright, while portraying them as originals. This is usually represented in goods illegally bearing registered/wellknown trademarks. Piracy, on the other hand, is the unauthorised reproduction and distribution of such protected items/works without necessarily representing them as original. This is more common in copyrighted works, for example, the reproduction and sale of books or CDs containing video recordings. 64 Nigeria, like many other states, has various laws and regulatory measures against counterfeiting. Nevertheless, this illegal trade has not only grown over the years but has metamorphosed into a formidable, sophisticated, and largely ignored sector. For instance in Nigeria, pirated items are presently being sold openly on the streets. The International Federation of Phonographic Industry (IFPI), upon research conducted in 10 individual music markets including the UK, Germany, and the US, reported that approximately 20 billion songs were illegally downloaded in 2005. On 19 and 21 March 2015, it NigeriaPerspective Due to the transnational nature of counterfeiting, one of the most effective ways to control it is to employ an effective border control measure to prevent the importation and circulation of these counterfeits. Enforcement of IP at Nigeria’s international borders is undertaken by several regulatory bodies which include: the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), Nigerian Customs Service (NCS), Standards Organization of Nigeria and the Nigerian Copyright Commission. These bodies are governed by various national and international laws/treaties and they include: the Customs and Excise Management (Disposal of Goods) Act (CEMA); the Trade Related Aspects of IP Agreement popularly referred as the TRIPS Agreement; and the Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property. The TRIPS Agreement The TRIPS Agreement was established primarily to address the insufficiency of the international IP enforcement regime. A significant innovation of this agreement is the introduction of border measures. The agreement allowed genuine manufacturers or right holders, reasonably suspecting the importation or exportation of pirated/ counterfeited versions of their works, to make applications to the appropriate authorities (administrative or judicial) for the seizure of such counterfeits at borders by customs officials. Nigerian Customs Service and other agencies Customs is principally the ‘gatekeeper’ of every nation. Being the agency in charge of all goods entering, transiting and leaving the country through the international borders, its role in combating smuggling, and more specifically, counterfeiting, can never be overemphasised. In discharging this function the Nigerian Customs Service (NCS) has an enforcement, investigation, inspection, and intelligence department, which, among others, organises all anti-smuggling measures at international borders. It should be noted that irrespective of the NCS’s corroboration with various agencies in this regard (as will be examined shortly), the service performs the lead role. The NCS sets out various guidelines to assist in implementing its mandate. In 2010, the Presidential Task Force for 100% Inspection was established to prevent the importation of contraband goods and ensure the complete inspection of all consignments selected for physical examination. It involves a strategy where inspections are intensified on consignments with more tendencies to default, than on every shipment. was recorded that US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officers seized more than $430,000 of counterfeit perfumes at the Champlain Port of Entry and $65,200 dollars in fake $100 bills coming from Ecuador at John F. Kennedy International Airport. More recently, on 17 July 2015, it was reported that CBP officers seized more than 1,100 pieces of fake designer jewellry valued at approximately $562,729 (manufacturer’s suggested retail price) at the port of Louisville, Kentucky. The Business Action to Stop Counterfeiting and Piracy (BASCAP) has estimated the value of these illegal trades to be globally worth $1.7 trillion. It is therefore incontrovertible that counterfeiting is a global issue. However, what is worrisome is that Nigeria has become a dumping ground for counterfeit goods and a safe haven for perpetrators of this vice, a situation that can largely be attributed to the lack of sensitisation and weakness of the Nigerian intellectual property enforcement regime. 65 The NCS has additionally established an independent unit, the Customs Intelligence Unit (CIU), with trained officials who are responsible for obtaining and gathering information necessary to combat counterfeiting and piracy. A very significant development is the NCS’s partnership with other federal agencies such as the Standards Organization of Nigeria (SON), National Agency for Food and Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC), National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) and Nigeria Copyright Commission (NCC), in carrying out joint inspection of cargo at borders. For instance, it was reported in 2012 that with the combined efforts of the NCC and NCS, 13 containers stacked with pirated items were confiscated at different seaports in Nigeria. Similarly in January 2015, it was reported that more than 19 containers, containing counterfeit NigeriaPerspective pharmaceutical and medical products, worth more than N 270 million ($13.5 million) were impounded at the Apapa Ports in Lagos, Nigeria, by NAFDAC officials along with the NCS. Challenges in the border control regime instance, at the just concluded World IP Day seminar (April 2015) sponsored and widely publicised by the IP Committee of the Section of Business Law branch of the Nigerian Bar Association, where information and knowledge about IP protection is shared, only a few rights holders were present The various strategies employed to prevent the importation of counterfeits seem insufficient in light of the prevailing circumstances. Some of the key challenges encountered in the enforcement of these measures are worthy of mention. The fight against counterfeiting is largely multifaceted with border control being just one arm. Still, it is more effective to seize a consignment of counterfeit or pirated goods at borders or in transit than after circulation of the goods in the market. Providing a successful “ An improved coordinated border management scheme is highly recommended between the relevant agencies to improve communication and facilitate more efficient risk management procedures ” Amaka Okafor, Associate, Stillwaters Law Low integrity among the staff of most of the key agencies involved in this process is one of the greatest challenges faced in the enforcement of border measures. Integrity is not only limited to bribery and corruption but also includes the inefficacy of the services provided. This has resulted in the loss of public trust, non-compliance by stakeholders, unnecessary obstacles in the supposedly normal processes, loss of trade and investment, consequential revenue loss, and much more. The NCS also presently operates under the CEMA, which is largely outdated and fails to provide adequate legal frameworks for the discharge of its functions. There is no legal basis for the implementation of major international agreements to which Nigeria is a signatory. Unlike Nigeria, states such as Australia, Canada, New Zealand, South Korea, Switzerland, Turkey, South Africa, Indonesia and the US have included similar provisions in their substantive IP laws and/or have enacted special laws, too. The Canadian Combating Counterfeit Products Act and the South African Counterfeit Goods Act are a few examples in this regard. As a result, modern techniques and enforcement procedures such as the TRIPS Agreement provisions on border measures, which have gained tremendous success internationally, have not been effectively implemented in Nigeria. The collaboration of the NCS with other federal agencies is unarguably very beneficial for the purpose. However, this strategy has been heavily criticised for amounting to a needless duplication of process, resulting in unnecessary delays and a reduction in the efficiency of these agencies. The ignorance and/or unwillingness of rights holders to enforce their IP and explore available remedies are also part of the problem. For 66 border control system would go a long way to curbing counterfeiting and piracy as the large number of counterfeits currently being flooded into the country would be contained. To achieve this, the gaps in the present border control regime must be addressed. There is an eminent need for: an overhaul of the current NCS legislation; an improvement in the funding and training of the relevant agencies and their officers; provision of regulatory and supervisory measures to checkmate corruption and integrity issues; the creation of massive public awareness campaigns on the dangers of piracy and counterfeiting, the existence of IPRs as well as the remedies and enforcement measures available; adequate sensitisation of stakeholders such as the officers of the relevant agencies; and the adoption of the single window system, which requires customers to deal with a single agency at customs rather than different agencies, to curb unnecessary delays. In the alternative, an improved coordinated border management scheme is highly recommended between the relevant agencies to improve communication and facilitate more efficient risk management procedures. The importance of coordination of border control measures in this regard can never be overemphasised. Nevertheless, this strategy is more likely to succeed if it goes beyond federal agencies to include other relevant stakeholders such as manufacturers, right holders, exporters, importers, carriers, and so on. Such coordination, if achieved, will go a long way to addressing most of the hiccups encountered in the present regime and ultimately strengthening Nigeria’s stance in combating counterfeiting and the importation of pirated materials. IPPro PROTECTING GREAT IDEAS AROUND THE WORLD The world is full of ideas. Our idea is to help you turn your intangible assets into sustainable business value. So that you can create a long lasting difference between you and your competitors. That´s what we have been doing since 1870. Today we are represented in more than 120 countries. www.zacco.com TurkishTrademarks Game-changing decisions on trademarks continue The Turkish Constitution and trademark law are at odds, but the courts are making attempts to clear up the disputes, says Oktay Simsek of Destek Patent The Constitutional Court has recently cancelled two important provisions of Trademark Decree Law No 556, which was issued in 1995 and governs trademarks in Turkey, because terms prescribed in two of its articles violate the property rights of the individuals. The recent decisions of the Constitutional Court (2015/49 and 2015/46), which were issued in May 2015, in respect of freedom of conscience and religion, property rights and freedom of expression issues, are quite resounding and have a direct and substantive impact on the lives of individuals and society. Intellectual and industrial property rights have been also affected by the Constitutional Court’s approach. The first case is related to assignment matters. In Turkey, it was previously not possible for rights holders to assign one trademark while keeping other identical or confusingly similar trademarks. The Turkish Patent Institute would invite the assignor to assign its other identical or confusingly similar trademarks within two months to make it possible to record the assignment in the trademark registry. That is based on the principle of single ownership of a trademark in Turkish practice. Essentially, it was not possible to for two 68 identical or confusingly similar trademarks to be recorded in the registry under different owners. According to Article 16(5) of the Trademark Decree Law No 556: “While a registered trademark being transferred, if the same holder holds another identical or confusingly similar trademark registration for identical or confusingly similar goods and services such, as to mislead the public, those trademarks should be also transferred.” The first case was brought by the Ankara Third Court of Intellectual and Industrial Property Rights on the following observations: • Property rights and basic rights and freedoms cannot be the subject of decree laws in the Turkish Constitution, and this is a matter for trademark rights, which are a kind of property right. • The limits of Article 16(5) are not clear, objective or equally applicable. • The article has a function surpassing its aim (ratio logic) since it grants large power to Turkish Patent Institute on a relative matter, namely deciding on the similarities of the goods and services, which means an interference with the rights for the freedom of contract. • The article is in conflict with basic rights and freedoms and the free market economy, since the state authority is overruled on TurkishTrademarks • • the decision to whom a trademark will be granted or assigned. The subject matter is not prescribed in the contemporary trademark law and EU Trademark Directive, a reference source for the present decree law while it was being drafted, do not comprise a limitation of this kind. The currently applied single ownership principle in the trademark law is not in compliance with the modern trademark system and it remains ‘archaic’ since the registrability or assignability of a trademark is conferred on the public authority rather than on the trademark owner. This cancellation has opened a path for right holders to assign their rights for one or some of their trademarks while keeping others under their ownership. In Turkish trademark practice, a letter of consent, co-existence agreement or any other authorisation, is not allowed for registering an identical or confusingly similar trademark due to the single ownership principle. This hinges on Article 7(1)(b) of the same decree law, ie, any identical or confusingly similar trademark is not allowed for any identical or confusingly similar goods by the Turkish Patent Institute at the first instance of examination. The cancellation of Article 16(5) has made it possible to overcome provisional refusals by way of the ‘assign and assign-back strategy’. In other words, the party affected by the provisional refusal can, for awhile, have the rights of the trademarks indicated as grounds for refusal based on the agreement and assign them back after registering its own trademark. In another case, the Constitutional Court has cancelled Paragraph 1(i) of Article 7, which covers absolute grounds for refusal. Article 7(1)(i) states that a well-known mark within the meaning of Article 6 of the Paris Convention, unless authorised by its owner, are not allowed to be registered. • • • subject of decree laws in the Turkish Constitution and this is a matter for trademark rights, which are a kind of the property rights. The article has a function surpassing its aim (ratio logic) since it grants large power to Turkish Patent Institute on a relative matter, namely deciding on the similarities of the goods and services, which means an interference with the rights for the freedom of contract. Any examination under Article 7(1)(i) would be performed on the basis of the subjective view of the examiner in charge. A subjective approach cannot be accepted for absolute grounds and the matters are a subject of Article 8, where the relative grounds are considered after publication and in view of the observations and evidence provided by the parties. Any ex-officio refusal under Article 7(1)(i) would damage the essence of the rights, exceed the limits, and restrict individual rights and freedoms in a democratic state. The Constitutional Court has discussed the matter, deciding that Article 7(1)(i) should be cancelled due to the fact that decree laws cannot restrict property rights according to the constitution. The Turkish Patent Institute has not applied Article 7(1)(i) in too many of its decisions until now. In any case, the Turkish Patent Institute will not refuse well-known trademarks on absolute grounds any longer. Well-known trademark holders should be more attentive about monitoring identical or confusingly similar trademarks to have a chance of filing oppositions within three months after publication. The cancellations of the provisions of the two articles in question have also started a debate on the destiny of Article 7(1)(b), which has been criticised for its subjective and obsolete nature in view of the requirements of the modern commercial life and freedom of contracts. Based on this, the Turkish Patent Institute would refuse applications for well-known marks from third parties. Taking into account that the Constitutional Court has cancelled other articles of the decree law in the past, it appears that more articles will be under attack for cancellation in the near future. The case was brought to the agenda of the Constitution Court by the Ankara Third Court of Intellectual and Industrial Property Rights with a cancellation request with the following remarks: • Property rights and basic rights and freedoms cannot be the While the new draft trademark law has been pending in parliament since 2009, these recent rulings show how necessary it is to introduce it without further delay, so that uncertainties plaguing trademark matters can be clarified. IPPro “ Well-known trademark holders should be more attentive about monitoring identical or confusingly similar trademarks to have a chance of filing oppositions within three months after publication ” Oktay Simsek, Head of foreign affairs department, Destek Patent 69 An interview with Hugo T Berkemeyer What is your firm’s background? Since its foundation in 1951, Berkemeyer Attorneys and from Paraguay has provided expert legal services to clients at an international and local level, gaining a global reputation for quality, expertise and professionalism. Our firm provides legal advice on virtually all areas of law. As one of the largest and most prestigious law firms in South America, what number of active cases do you currently have in in your IP practice? Counselors Our practice also comprises intellectual property: trademarks, patents, the life sciences, copyright protection, utility models, industrial models and designs, domain names, franchising, enforcement, unfair competition and civil law, IP litigation, and sanitary registrations. At Berkemeyer Attorneys and Counselors we pride ourselves on our ability to meet clients’ needs directly, providing professional and practical advice of the highest quality, employing teamwork and collaboration to render the services in a thorough yet timely manner. How long have you been using the Patricia® software? Over 3,000 cases. What advice would you give to other large IP firms considering change? Regarding advice for other companies, Patricia® is recommended and useful for the daily internal work, especially related to the control of the processes. In what way is Patricia® fundamental to ensuring/ assisting your ongoing business success and how is it capable of helping you to monitor and improve levels of service to clients? Patricia® helps us to perform better administration of the cases which leads to a better control of the processes, including the due dates of trademark and patent maintenance payments. It helps us to provide faster and efficient answers to our clients. We implemented the Patricia® software in 2011. Which software did you use before and how does it compare? Patricia® replaced our in-house system which helps us in the daily work due to the functionalities that allow us to do way more than just docketing. One of the main messages about how Patricia® differs from typical ‘docketing’ systems is how it is so much more than just docketing. Patricia® is a full practice management solution. Which other areas of your practice, in addition to docketing, does Patricia® help you with? Patricia® replaced an in-house developed system which covered the basic needs regarding patents and trademarks. Its functionalities allowed us to improve and expand the offered services to our clients, and to improve the internal process as well. It enhanced the control of the processes step by step in attention to due dates, costs, invoicing, related documents, etc. and overall the ease of the system to follow. Although a growing company, Patrix has been eager to ensure that we always remain approachable at all levels. How do you find interacting with the Patrix team, from support up to the owner level? The team always provide a fast response to any inquiries from our users, which is very important when they have any issues to resolve. If you could give us one sentence which encapsulates your understanding of Patrix and Patricia® and what it does for your business, what would it be? Good! Patricia® has become a very useful tool in the daily improvement of our work. It supports us in the control and optimisation of our available resources. Would you swap Patricia® for any other IP software? We would not swap Patrix/Patricia® for any other IP software. Extended DMS When your needs for document management surpasses the functions featured in the standard Patricia® document tab, we are happy to offer you the Patricia® Extended DMS. Efficient document management made accessible. Focus Think of all the hours spent looking for the right documents. Now think about all the time you could save if searching for information was swifter and handling your documents was more efficient. Discover the potential of Patricia® Extended DMS. Sophisticated search Patricia® Extended DMS features a full-text search function that allows you to search for content within each document – or across the entire case document tree. Scanned PDF images can be transformed into text, and added to the search index. This means you’re also able to find scanned PDF documents by searching for text they contain. powerful preview Bringing traditional case management into the digital world, the preview function lets you flick through documents and view their content – just like browsing through a physical case file. A quick and intuitive way of finding and reviewing case documents. >> Find your document fast, see what it contains and compare it to other versions. Take complete control of your case documents with Patricia® Extended DMS. << Versioning Communication Not only does this feature allow you to track previous versions of documents without needing to access backup systems, it also lets you see the difference between versions. Documents can include a history of which user edited the document and on what date. Patricia® Extended DMS also features advanced email sending capacities: select your documents by checking their boxes and send them via email, directly from within Patricia®. You can also create PDF letters with your company’s letterhead (or other templates) directly from within Patricia®. Work where you want to business as usual Offline Work Mode lets you work on case documents outside the office. You can synchronize a case document folder before leaving the office, and work on the documents while you’re away. Then, when your laptop next connects to the office network, the Patricia® Extended DMS automatically synchronizes any local changes as a new version of the document to the server. Last but not least: you can continue using Patricia® just the way you’re used to. The advanced functionality of the Patricia® Extended DMS can be accessed when needed, but administrative staff can continue using the standard Patricia® document tab without needing to learn all the new features. Secure signatures The Patricia® Extended DMS allows application of secure digital signatures. A specified security model ensures that defined templates can only be signed by the person responsible – not by other Patricia® users. EuropE TEl: +46 31 50 77 60 Fax: +46 31 50 77 66 uSa TEl: +1 703 879 48 60 Fax: +1 703 997 25 79 E-mail: mail@patrix.com WEb: www.patrix.com With equal knowledge of IP and IT, Patrix provides world class IP Management Software with proven results. We have over 20 years of experience working with a wide international client base from large law firms and corporations to individual practices and smaller firms. Black Knight Media www.blackknightmedialtd.com Tired of keeping these turning on your own? So are we To find out more about IPPro Connects, contact: carlosnorthon@ipprotheinternet.com FirmProfiles Company description 101domain is the trusted provider of corporate domain and brand protection services for many of the world’s leading organisations. 101domain, Inc Tel: +1 760 444 8674 corporate@101domain.co www.101domain.co With a broad service suite of management and detection solutions, domain strategy creation and acquisition experience, 101domain has succeeded in fortifying, securing, and expanding brand owners’ online presence for over 10 years. For corporations, navigating and managing the challenges of brand abuse and misuse on the internet can be a full-time effort. Trust 101domain to provide world-class support and expert guidance in minimising both the time and investment required to protect your online assets. 73 FirmProfiles Company description bNamed.net Tel: +44 203 393 4858 info@bnamed.net www.bNamed.net At bNamed.net, we feel that protecting your brand online shouldn’t cost you an arm and a leg. We offer a fusion between a normal domain registrar and a high-profile online brand protection service. Contrary to most brand protection services, we have normal end-user registration fees, but offer high-end professional support. We prefer a personal approach, so brand protection clients most often have their own account manager with us, but due to our clear focus on domain names, all our staff members have a thorough understanding of all of the ins and outs of domain name registrations. Founded in 1999, we have 16 years of experience in domain name registrations and we know the domain name market inside out. We offer every possible extension, and those that are otherwise hard to obtain. Next to every-day domain name registrations, we also offer advice on online brand protection and assist with purchasing a domain name or with gaining control over a domain name that’s infringing your trademark. When needed, we partner with a outside intellectual property firms to manage dispute resolution cases or other legal actions, but we can successfully solve most cases without having to involve expensive lawyers, which keeps your costs low. We assist with centralising and optimising domain name portfolios. Due to our experience and many local contacts, we can bypass local presence requirements in almost all countries with such strict registration conditions, making otherwise impossible registrations possible. And we know all of ins and outs of the different transfer procedures. If a transfer is stuck because the losing registrar, for example, isn’t cooperating, most often there are other ways of getting the transfer done. Company description Christodoulos G. Vassiliades & Co. LLC Tel: +357 22 55 66 77 cgv@vasslaw.net www.vasslaw.com Christodoulos G. Vassiliades & Co. LLC is one of the leading law firms in Cyprus with expertise in corporate law, commercial law, trusts, mergers and acquisitions, and intellectual property law. Beyond the legal services offered, our firm also provides a full range of corporate administration and trust services. We are committed to professionalism and excellence in everything we do. We fully appreciate the diversity of legal and commercial needs clients have and are able to offer high standards of personalised advice in order to meet all our clients’ needs. The firm’s zeal towards innovation led to the founding of its IP department in 2008. Acknowledging the pivotal importance of protecting IP rights, we have established a team of enthusiastic IP experts, ready to assist with any type of right. Our key specialisations include community trademark services such as registration, renewals and oppositions, as well as international trademark services, namely registrations via the Madrid system. We pride ourselves in our effectiveness, efficiency and organisation, while recognising the need of our clients to remain ahead of important deadlines and obligations that constantly arise when maintaining IP rights. Our firm’s success in IP is to a great extent attributed to its circle of associates who share our passion for excellence, accuracy and promptness. This allows us to rely on and refer to them any matter requiring local counselling and representation. As a result, our firm may assist in any IP matter, not only confined within Cyprus and Europe but internationally as well. 74 FirmProfiles Company description D Young & Co Tel: +44 (0)20 7269 8550 mail@dyoung.com www.dyoung.com D Young & Co’s life sciences team is one of the leading intellectual property practices in Europe. Clients choose D Young & Co for IP services confident in the knowledge, experience and dedication that has characterised our work throughout our firm’s history. A depth of experience in all technical disciplines Attorneys in the life sciences team are highly qualified in a wide range of academic and technological fields, including biotechnology, chemistry, immunology, molecular biology, antibody technology, diagnostics, personalised medicine, stem cell technology, vaccines, food chemistry, optics, medical technology and pharmaceuticals. Many of our attorneys have practical experience working in academic environments, in the UK and European Patent Offices, and as in-house counsel for major companies. Our attorneys are able to use this experience to deliver strategic advice to clients, when and where it is required. A firm that is at the leading edge for patent prosecution. We are especially proud of our extensive experience before the EPO opposition division and technical boards of appeal. We regularly handle important and valuable contentious matters both for patentee and opponent, particularly in the fields of biotechnology, pharmaceuticals and petrochemicals. Clients value our commercial approach in guiding them through increasingly technical and complex regulation to ensure their IP rights are protected. A client base that is diverse and international D Young & Co has an enviable track record of working with academic and research institutions and spin outs, all of which have been at the forefront of innovation and life-changing discoveries. As well as servicing clients from all over the UK, we directly advise pharmaceutical, chemical and biotechnology companies across continental Europe, the US and Japan. A record that speaks for itself We are proud of the fact that D Young & Co is one of the very few IP firms to be ranked ‘top tier’ by all the independent major UK legal directories. These rankings are based on independent client feedback and this is what really counts. Company description Dennemeyer & Associates Tel: +352 27 6115 100 info@dennemeyer-law.com www.dennemeyer.com Dennemeyer & Associates is the premier resource for global intellectual property law services—worldwide. For more than 50 years, Dennemeyer & Associates has been providing the full range of legal services relating to the core of your intellectual property management: your intellectual assets. Our lawyers offer world-class expertise in the following areas of IP law: patents, trademarks, designs, copyrights, domain names, IP contracts, licensing and recordals. Working in unison with Dennemeyer Group, a leading IP service provider, we offer a worldwide single point of contact for the full range of IP services, from legal services to comprehensive outsourcing solutions like portfolio services, cutting-edge software solutions, IP consulting, temporary staffing or full outsourcing of entire departments. Our main services include: Prosecution: searching, drafting applications (patents, utility models, designs, trademarks), monitoring third party applications, patent mapping, freedom-to-operate studies, filings, replies to office actions, translations, oppositions and appeals, European patent validations, grant and registration procedures, recordals, oral proceedings, intellectual property docketing, foreign filing and a web-based platform for PCT nationalisation, European patent validations and translations. Litigation: nullity actions, cancellation proceedings, court actions, counterfeits and cross-border action. Licensing law: licence contracts, coexistence agreements, copyrights. We have offices in seven countries: Luxembourg, Germany, the US, Japan, Poland, Romania and Australia. We have established a worldwide network of highly experienced professionals enabling us to cover almost all jurisdictions of the world in terms of prosecution and contentious work. We offer complete cost transparency and efficiency because we file and prosecute directly with many national patent and trademark offices. Our experts are qualified to work for you in the following technical and scientific fields, among many others: biochemistry, chemistry, pharmaceuticals, electrical engineering, electronics, mechanical engineering, IT and telecommunications. Whatever your industry, we are able to provide support in all technical areas and we continue to expand our service offerings, adapting to customers’ needs and providing cost-efficient solutions. 75 FirmProfiles Company description Destek Patent Tel: +90 224 270 6600 global@destekpatent.com.tr www.destekpatent.com Destek Patent has been a major force in intellectual property management and protection in Turkey, and has been providing a full range of IP services, including patents, trademarks, domain names, industrial designs and licensing, for both Turkish and overseas clients since 1983. The firm is a member of LES, AIPPI, INTA, MARQUES, PTMG, GRUR, EPI, VPP and TOBB. We understand clients’ needs and expectations on expert counselling, fast response, clear communication and cost effective quality IP services, an independent indicator of which is our high clients’ satisfaction rate. Company description Dreyfus & associés Tel: +33 1 4470 0704 contact@dreyfus.fr www.dreyfus.fr Founded in 2004 by Nathalie Dreyfus, Dreyfus quickly became one of the top intellectual property law firms in France. The Dreyfus team is well equipped to assist companies with particular expertise in IP/ IT matters in France, the EU and worldwide. In an increasingly complex economic and legal environment, it has become imperative to efficiently protect, enhance and defend the essential assets of a company. The Dreyfus purpose is to support its clients with all the flexibility and reactivity that its structure allows, while offering the most up-to-date skill-sets, especially regarding international issues in the field of new technologies. When confronting problems, Dreyfus assists its clients in decision-making processes concerning the management and valorisation of their IP titles in the business realm and on the internet. With a worldwide network, Dreyfus will represent companies in arbitration centres and courts all over the world in disputes concerning trademarks, designs, patents, copyright, domain names, new gTLDs, social networks, Google AdWords and IT. Advising major traditional industrial actors as well as small and medium-sized firms impacted by the rise of e-commerce and the increasing use of trademarks on the web, Dreyfus has mastered all the issues related to the online presence of companies. In addition, Dreyfus has established the Dreyfus IPweb internet platform, an intuitive and interactive tool. This platform aims to consolidate and summarise all the information available to Dreyfus clients. The firm’s expertise, investment and creativity ensure optimal management of trademarks and domain name portfolios. Dreyfus is probably the most advanced French firm in the area of the management and protection of IP rights. 76 FirmProfiles Company description Goodrich, Riquelme y Asociados Tel: +52 55 5533 0040 mailcentral@goodrichriquelme.com www.goodrichriquelme.com With more than 75 years of experience, Goodrich, Riquelme y Asociados has a long tradition of standing alongside its clients when helping them make their business objectives a reality. By means of a cross practice among service areas and industry teams, our carefully trained lawyers achieve an innovative approach towards the rendering of contemporary legal services tailored to the demanding business community worldwide. We pride ourselves in knowing what drives key industry sectors and are able to provide on a daily basis, the best creative and cost-effective business solutions beforehand. Our clients are medium-size, as well as leading global companies of numerous nationalities and economic sectors. Company description Gorodissky & Partners Gorodissky & Partners, the leading Russian intellectual property law firm, provides a full range of intellectual property services, including prosecution and enforcement of IP rights. It has the largest IP practice in Russia and among top 10 in Europe. Tel: +7 495 937 6116 / 6109 pat@gorodissky.ru The firm’s main office is in Moscow, and it has branch offices in St. Petersburg, N. Novgorod, Krasnodar, Samara, Ekaterinburg, Perm, Kazan (all in Russia), Technopark Sarov and Kiev (Ukraine). www.gorodissky.com The firm provides clients and associates with professional and cost-effective services in wide variety of practice areas: patenting, inventions and utility models, trademarks, service marks and appellations of origin, industrial designs, plant varieties, copyright, technology transfer and licensing, IP valuation, litigation, domain names, and due-diligence, as well as patent searches, notarial services, translation of patent and scientific-technical documents. Gorodissky & Partners’s lawyers and patent/trademark professionals have significant experience in litigating IP matters before the civil courts and in arbitration proceedings. They have successfully represented foreign and domestic clients in a number of landmark cases related to the infringement of patent and trademark owners’ rights in Russia and abroad. Many of the firm’s lawyers and patent/trademark attorneys are post-graduates with advanced technical and legal degrees. They regularly attend IP courses and work with foreign law firms worldwide, they are frequent speakers at international IP conferences, and also authors of many publications in IP professional magazines. Gorodissky & Partners has an extensive national and worldwide experience in IP issues, including those arising in the post-Soviet territory (the Commonwealth of Independent States countries and Baltic states). The firm is responsible for around half of the foreign patent applications and one third of the trademark applications filed in Russia every year. The clients of Gorodissky & Partners range from major domestic, foreign and international companies to small and medium-sized businesses. 77 FirmProfiles Company description IPzen Tel: +33 1 84 17 45 32 contact@ipzen.com www.ipzen.com IPzen is a new intellectual property and management software. Designed by trademark attorneys for trademark attorneys, it is a modern web-based tool. It is cloud-hosted and available as a software-as-aservice solution. It will allow you to securely access your data from anywhere only by using a browser. IPzen includes all the features required by trademark attorneys—and even more. It is a modular system available in both enterprise and law firm editions, as well as a service in a shared environment. IPzen is an internet platform that aims at consolidating and summarising all information that IP law firms or organisations use to process. As a modular system, IPzen is also comprised of a docketing system, trademark management software, domain name management software, a diary to track deadlines and a monitoring module consolidating the entire trademark monitoring results. The Law Firm Edition includes specific features to control information published to clients and therefore guarantees confidentiality. Information may be published for client allowing users to access their data online and to save time on reporting. IPzen enables records traceability and instructions received by email and/or directly via the platform. Rights management is particularly fine-tuned, especially in limiting users’ access to certain folders or trademarks. IPzen services Harbor Technologies offers outsourcing services for the monitoring and management of intellectual property rights. These services are possible through the IPzen Ssoftware, which enables our clients to easily access their data and focus on legal matters rather than on the administrative tasks of portfolio management. Company description Julian Varbanov & Partners J. Varbanov & partners Tel: +359 2 986 5125 jvp@jvpatents.com www.jvpatents.com J. Varbanov & partners is one of the oldest and leading intellectual property firms in Bulgaria. We provide professional and cost-effective services and quality advices on all aspects of industrial property matters for the territory of Bulgaria as well as for the EU. Our team is dealing with establishment, protection and enforcement of industrial property rights derived from patents, trademarks, and industrial designs, including validation of European patents in Bulgaria. Our staff is made up of Bulgarian and European patent, trademark and design attorneys with great experience. We do filings and representations before the Bulgarian Patent Office, OHIM, WIPO and EPI We represent clients before custom authorities in connection with the application of boarder measures and all kinds of anti-counterfeiting activities. We are members of INTA, ECTA, EPI, UNION of European Practitioners in Industrial Property, AIPPI and PTMG. 78 FirmProfiles Company description Nico Halle & Co. Law Firm Tel: +237 33 42 64 79 hallelaw@hallelaw.com www.hallelaw.com Founded by its senior managing partner, Nico Halle in 1986, Nico Halle & Co. Law Firm is bilingual (English and French), and one of the oldest intellectual property firms licensed by the African Intellectual Property Organization (OAPI) to provide IP services in Africa. In order to provide integrated, cross-border services to meet our clients’ domestic, regional and global needs, our firm works in partnership with other renowned law firms in several countries across the globe. Noted for our diligent, expeditious, ethical, and professional services, and with a prolific and committed team of over a dozen IP attorneys and professionals, we provide comprehensive premium IP protection services in patents, trademarks, industrial designs, utility models, domain names, unfair competition, and plant varieties, as well as coordinating multi-jurisdictional disputes in parallel proceedings. Our main services for Patents, trademarks, utility models and industrial designs include: Acquisition and maintenance: searches, registration applications, translations, grant and registration procedures, recordations, and renewals and annuity. Litigation: drafting and oral submissions for restorations, oppositions and claim to ownership actions, nullity actions, cancellation proceedings, appeals, counterfeits, and cross-border actions. We represent a diverse clientele that is made up of the biggest and leading brands in industries including, but not limited, to biotechnology, pharmaceuticals, mechanical and electrical engineering, apparel and allied corporations, fashion accessories, liquor, food and beverages, consumer goods, banks and accounting, computer software, telecommunication, electronics, cosmetics, telecommunications, telemarketing, entertainment, and media. Company description Park IP Translations, a Welocalize company Tel: +1 212 581 8870 7722 info@parkip.com www.parkip.com Park IP Translations, a Welocalize company, provides translation, litigation and filing solutions for patent and legal professionals. We protect our clients’ most valued assets and global brands in nearly every jurisdiction in the world. We provide complete translation services in more than 157 languages and filingready documentation for more than 60 countries. We are a leader in patent prosecution and validation, litigation language services, patent translations and filing. We also provide general legal services for all types of corporate and legal documents. Park IP has 13 global locations in the US, Europe and Asia. Park IP delivers the highest quality translation as a result of our ISO 9001:2008 certification. Park IP Translations, a Welocalize company, is a world leader in expert legal translation and foreign filing language services. Welocalize, founded in 1997, offers innovative translation and localisation solutions. Translating nearly one billion words a year, Welocalize and Park IP Translations provide specialised services to thousands of multinational corporations and global law firms. According to Common Sense Advisory, Welocalize is the fourth largest language service provider in the US and ninth largest in the world. 79 FirmProfiles Company description Patricia is widely regarded as the most user friendly, powerful and versatile intellectual property management software available today. Patrix Tel: +46 31 50 7760 / +1 703 879 4860 mail@patrix.com www.patrix.com From the CEO through to the support staff, the Patrix team has extensive previous IP experience having each worked in the corporate and/or practice areas of IP. You can therefore be sure that they fully understand your requirements at every level. Patricia is an enterprise-wide solution that provides you with swift and secure access to your case data and automatic tracking of IP lifecycles, including laws/regulations, standard forms, time and cost registration, invoicing, customisable reports, document creation, document management, and powerful batch processing functionality. Patricia is designed to easily accommodate and harmonise your best practice and procedures including collaboration both inside and outside of your organisation. Created by IP professionals for IP professionals, Patricia is a fully customisable IP management system uniquely delivered on Windows and web platforms or a combination of both. Company description Pointer Brand Protection Tel: +31 20 30 319 35 enquiries@pointerbp.nl www.pointerbp.com Pointer Brand Protection offers a full online brand protecting solution. Our monitoring and enforcement anti-piracy software covers social media, online marketplaces, domains, web shops and download platforms. With our advanced and customised filters, we detect, prioritise and act against counterfeits and other brand abuses. Innovation within our company is one of our key successes. We protect brand owners better by implementing the newest technologies, methods and legislations. We do this not only with our software development, internal processes and projects, but also by knowing what new platforms and tools counterfeiters are using. Our strategy is to collect all online sales and content and prioritise the biggest infringers. Our dedicated brand protection analysts take immediate action against infringements from our customised brand protection dashboard. With an investigative perspective, we protect brands better online. 80 FirmProfiles Company description RWS Group and innovia www.rws.com www.inovia.com RWS and inovia are the world’s leading experts in intellectual property translations and foreign patent filing. For more than 70 years combined, we have led the industry and helped more than 10,000 clients protect their IP and enforce their IP rights around the world. • • • Ensure top quality; Cut costs and save resources; and Simplify and streamline. Company description Stillwaters Law Firm Tel: +234 1 454 7179 info@stillwaterslaw.com www.stillwaterslaw.com Stillwaters is a leading law firm in Nigeria that specialises in intellectual property, technology transfer, distributorship or franchising, licensing, boarder enforcement measures, customs-related assistance, regulatory compliance, litigation, company and commercial law, and tax. The firm operates from the commercial cities of Lagos and Abuja in Nigeria, with associate offices in Accra in Ghana and Duala in Cameroon. Professionalism, flexibility and innovation are the hallmarks of our practice. We value professional excellence, outstanding results and realise they both require creativity and hard work. We strive to gain every legal advantage for our clients while upholding the principles behind the practice of law. Over the years, we have acquired considerable experience and an enviable reputation for rendering quality legal services in our areas of specialisation. Practice representative clients include more than 660 foreign multinationals, publicly quoted companies, financial institutions, industries, small- and medium-size businesses and private entrepreneurs. Our practice is adequately equipped and well positioned to meet the challenges of legal practice in an everchanging technological age. 81 FirmProfiles Company description WebTMS Ltd Tel: + 44 118 958 2002 sales@ippo.com www.webtms.com WebTMS Limited and Intellectual Property Online have been providing and developing trademark management systems since 1997 and have regularly appeared at the top of independent user surveys of trademark management software. Additionally, we have over 500 unique clients globally, based on all continents using our flagship product: WebTMS. WebTMS is a comprehensive trademark management suite that builds on record keeping and docketing to support efficient trademark management with modules for every type of IP. As well as our award winning WebTMS software, the team are also renowned for their excellent customer support, expertly managed migration/conversion projects, and industry knowledge. We also listen to our clients’ feedback about our software to continually develop and progress the software to constantly meet clients’ expectations and needs. WebTMS offers software subscriptions, hosted systems, and installed systems, so you can choose the best solution for managing your trademarks and related IP data. Our software is used by brand owners (including many companies from the top 100 most valuable brands), law firms (including a number of the largest international law firms), and trademark attorneys (from all around the globe). However, we have a solution for everyone regardless of your portfolio size. Some clients have under 100 records, others have in excess of 300,000 records. We also cater for everything in-between. WebTMS is ISO 9001:2008 certified and a member of ITMA, INTA, MARQUES, NDA, and PTMG. Get in touch today for your free demo account and/or presentation. Black Knight Media www.blackknightmedialtd.com Tired of using one of these? So are we To find out more about IPPro Connects, contact: carlosnorthon@ipprotheinternet.com HP IPPro connect ADvert.indd 1 82 29/09/2015 16:05 Trademark Renewals: Find your flavor When it comes to renewing your trademarks, you are in control. Find out whether the cost-efficient Standard Renewals or the no-compromise Premier Renewals suits your organization better. Standard Renewals Premier Renewals Our most affordable service yet. Maximum flexibility. No compromises. • Obtain unrivaled savings for portfolios of at least 200 records • • Keep track of your receipts and instructions via our 24/7 Portal Vast array of customizations to make sure it readily fits your requirements • Optional services (assignments, mergers, reclassifications, e-billing etc.) available on request • Over five decades of experience and highly qualified staff • Dedicated client contact and personalized service Learn more: http://www.dennemeyer.com/contact/