Sat.Oct 07, 2023 - Fri.Oct 13, 2023

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Trader Joe’s Charges Crypto Company with Fraud, Trademark Infringement/Dilution

IP Watchdog

A trademark lawsuit filed by popular grocery store chain, Trader Joe’s, against a cryptocurrency platform called “Trader Joe”—which the complaint alleges is a deliberate reference to the supermarket—has come to light this week. Trader Joe’s claims that the crypto firm buried its origin story in order to win international litigation over the domain name, traderjoexyz.com.

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3 Count: West End Controversy

Plagiarism Today

Pet Shop Boys call out Drake over song lyrics, Ubisoft sneaks Denuvo in after reviews, and Reddit releases latest transparency report. The post 3 Count: West End Controversy appeared first on Plagiarism Today.

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OTT Platforms and Digital Piracy

Biswajit Sarkar Copyright Blog

The advancement of technology has brought sweeping changes to the broadcasting industry. The increase in internet penetration and demand for on-the-spot entertainment have allowed the Over the Top (OTT) broadcasting industry to prosper. When audio or video content is streamed directly through the internet, it is said to have been broadcast over the top.

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Copyright Developments in Taiwan: Fighting Piracy and Coming to Grips with AI

Hugh Stephens Blog

Image: Shutterstock I had the opportunity to visit Taiwan in August, where I once (in the last century) served as Director of the Canadian Trade Office in Taipei, aka the Canadian Representative to Taiwan. (The word “Ambassador” cannot and shall not be used for obvious diplomatic reasons).

Copyright 296
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Software Composition Analysis: The New Armor for Your Cybersecurity

Speaker: Blackberry, OSS Consultants, & Revenera

Software is complex, which makes threats to the software supply chain more real every day. 64% of organizations have been impacted by a software supply chain attack and 60% of data breaches are due to unpatched software vulnerabilities. In the U.S. alone, cyber losses totaled $10.3 billion in 2022. All of these stats beg the question, “Do you know what’s in your software?

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Celebrating 500 Videos at erikpelton.tv

Erik K Pelton

Erik shares a new milestone for erikpelton.tv along with information on what you can find at our channel. Let us know what topics you would like to see more of in the comments! The post Celebrating 500 Videos at erikpelton.tv appeared first on Erik M Pelton & Associates, PLLC. Erik shares a new milestone for erikpelton.tv along with information on what you can find at our channel.

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UK Teacher Banned After Plagiarizing on Behalf of Students

Plagiarism Today

A UK teacher has been banned from teaching after she plagiarized on behalf of two students, without the students' knowledge. The post UK Teacher Banned After Plagiarizing on Behalf of Students appeared first on Plagiarism Today.

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Advocate General vs. German Supreme Court – Does the use of four rings on a car grille infringe Audi’s trademark?

The IPKat

Not too long ago, the German Supreme Court held in Kühlergrill (I ZR 61/18, discussed here ) that the sale of the following radiator grille for an Audi A6 infringed Audi’s rights to its figurative trade mark consisting of four interlocking rings. The ring-shaped device is for mounting the original Audi logo. The Supreme Court found that the shape of the mounting device created a likelihood of confusion.

Art 130
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Regulations Alone Can’t Fix Bill C-18: Why News Media Canada’s “Surrender” May Not Be Enough to Stop Google From Blocking News Links in Canada

Michael Geist

After months of urging Heritage Ministers Pascale St-Onge and Pablo Rodriguez to stand up to Google and Meta’s response to Bill C-18, News Media Canada – the lead lobbyist for the legislation – appears to have waved the surrender flag as it is now urging the government to accommodate Google’s concerns with draft regulations. The shift in approach unquestionably marks a retreat for the group, which literally drafted a version of the bill for the government and wielded the power of maj

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HHS Proposes New Research Integrity Guidelines

Plagiarism Today

In the US, the HHS is proposing new research integrity guidelines that include a change to the definition of plagiarism. The post HHS Proposes New Research Integrity Guidelines appeared first on Plagiarism Today.

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Federal Circuit Continues to Strike Down Patents as Abstract Ideas

The IP Law Blog

The Federal Circuit Court of Appeals has again relied on the Supreme Court’s Alice case to invalidate patents on the grounds that they are directed to an abstract idea. Realtime Data LLC v. Fortinet Inc. ( Fed. Cir. 8/2/2023) 2023 U.S. App. LEXIS 19857. Realtime owned several patents covering systems and methods for digital data compression. In 2017 and 2018, Realtime sued a number of entities in the District of Delaware for infringement of five of its patents.

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IPO Diversity in Innovation Toolkit

Women and diverse employees have the technical skill and knowledge, yet their contributions are not patented at the same rate as those of their male counterparts.This toolkit can help organizations move the needle on achieving gender parity in innovation.

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Council approves EU Regulation for Non-Agri Geographical Indications

The IPKat

Earlier today, the Council has approved the new Regulation on geographical indication (GI) protection for craft and industrial products, also known as non-agri GIs. The adopted text, discussed by The IPKat here and here , is available at this link. The Regulation introduces an EU-wide system of GI protection for products such as cutlery or ceramics, a system that will be managed by the European Union Intellectual Property Office (EUIPO).

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How Generative AI Challenges Standards Publishers

Velocity of Content

In early May, CCC hosted “ Workflow of the Future: Sustainable Business Models ,” the latest event in a series designed to help facilitate important conversations on critical topics related to standards. This event focused on standards publishers and how they are responding to the needs of their stakeholders in an increasingly digital and connected world.

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How Google’s Web Environment Integrity Proposal Could Change the Web

Plagiarism Today

Google's new Web Environment Integrity (WEI) proposal has been almost universally derided. Here's what it could do to the web. The post How Google’s Web Environment Integrity Proposal Could Change the Web appeared first on Plagiarism Today.

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The History and Importance of the Jury Trial System – An Excerpt from a Patent Infringement Trial

Patently-O

I was reading through a recent trial transcript and enjoyed the following historical introduction to the jury system offered by Judge Gilstrap. He was talking to the potential jurors as voir dire was just about to begin. — Dennis = = = We are engaged or about to be engaged this morning in the selection of a jury in the civil case involving allegations of patent infringement.

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[Audio] Podcast - The Briefing: Unmasking Luxury Knockoffs – Amazon Sues Influencers for Promoting Counterfeit Goods

JD Supra Law

Amazon is suing two social media influencers for promoting the sale of counterfeit luxury goods on the platform. Scott Hervey and Jamie Lincenberg discuss this case on this episode of The Briefing.

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Movie Piracy is Strongly Linked to Box Office Revenue

TorrentFreak

Over the past 18 years, we’ve seen our fair share of piracy studies and research, but a finding presented this week ‘obviously’ stands out. Piracy research firm MUSO looked into the link between movie piracy volume and box office revenues. With piracy data on hundreds of films, the UK firm sits on a research goldmine. The company decided to put this to work by calculating the correlation between movie piracy and box office attendance.

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3 Count: Demythed Empire

Plagiarism Today

Indian court tells Humans of Bombay no copyright in ideas, Adobe unveils new AI options and Studio Wildcard settles Myth of Empires lawsuit. The post 3 Count: Demythed Empire appeared first on Plagiarism Today.

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Is Congress Protecting Big Radio and Forgetting Musicians—Again?

The Illusion of More

Cars and music are so symbiotic that many contemporary vehicles could be mistaken for high-tech sound systems that also happen to take us places. I remember when popular music was only available on AM radio stations, and we’d listen to Steve Miller or Wings or the Jackson 5 playing through tiny, sibilant speakers mounted in […] The post Is Congress Protecting Big Radio and Forgetting Musicians—Again?

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SCOTUS Won’t Rule on Whether Lanham Act Applies to Celebrity Personas

IP Watchdog

The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday denied a petition asking the justices to weigh in on whether the Lanham Act prohibits “the unauthorized use of a celebrity’s persona advertising third party brands with logos in a commercial motion picture as a trademark infringement?” The case stems from a suit brought by the partner of Christopher Jones, an actor in the 1960s, who was referenced in the film Once Upon a Time. in Hollywood (the film), written and directed by Quentin Tarantino.

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Pirate IPTV Owners Sentenced to 36 Months in Prison & $18m Damages

TorrentFreak

The theory that “nobody likes a snitch” depends heavily on individual circumstances, motivation, and who stands to benefit. Whistleblowers, on the other hand, are often portrayed in more sympathetic light. What prompted an anonymous tip to anti-piracy group Nordic Content Protection (NCP) in 2019 isn’t clear. But for NCP members including pay-TV company C More (previously Canal+), Warner Bros.

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3 Count: Slowpoke’s Statement

Plagiarism Today

British MPs urge action on infringing NFTs, Irish pub hit with damages and French regulator credited with reducing BitTorrent piracy. The post 3 Count: Slowpoke’s Statement appeared first on Plagiarism Today.

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Laura Loomer Loses Litigation (Again)–Loomer v. Zuckerberg

Technology & Marketing Law Blog

Loomer produces trash content, which got her banned at Facebook and Twitter. In response, she has brought several trash lawsuits, which have gone as well as you’d expect. Her latest trash lawsuit claimed that social media, the government, and Procter & Gamble were all doing the RICO against her. It’s never the RICO. The court dismisses the lawsuit on several grounds, including res judicata.

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Other Barks & Bites for Friday, October 13: Caltech and Apple End Patent Infringement with Dismissal; Google Plans to Take Responsibility for Copyright Infringement Cases Caused by Generative AI; Draft Text of NO FAKES Bill Released

IP Watchdog

This week in Other Barks & Bites: U.K. politicians warn of widespread copyright infringement on NFT marketplaces; Google announces it will assume legal responsibility to offer customers protection from copyright disputes caused by the tech firm’s generative AI; Caltech and Apple jointly file a request to dismiss the patent infringement lawsuit between the two.

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Pirate Sites Exploit ‘Interplanetary File System’ Gateways, Publishers Warn

TorrentFreak

The InterPlanetary File System, more broadly known as IPFS , has been around for the past eight years. While the name may sound otherworldly to the public at large, the peer-to-peer file storage network has a growing user base among the tech-savvy. In short, IPFS is a decentralized network where users make files available to each other. The system makes websites censorship resistant and not vulnerable to regular hosting outages.

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SEPs & FRAND: Misnomers & Maladies

SpicyIP

Often the discussion around SEPs and FRAND is muffled because of the surrounding technicalities, and accompanying jargon and only rarely does one come across a work that is able to explain the nitty gritty of SEP and FRAND in a simple manner. We recently came across one such short paper on “ SEP Litigations & Issues in Determining the FRAND License ” published in the September 2023 issue of the Journal of Intellectual Property Rights (see here ) and extended a guest post invitati

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accusing someone of patent infringement can be actionable disparagement if you know the patent's invalid

43(B)log

Cap Export, LLC v. Zinus, Inc., 2023 WL 6381821, No. 2:21-cv-07148-JWH-MRWx (C.D. Cal. Sept. 28, 2023) Cap Export alleged that Zinus fraudulently obtained a patent after Zinus used the public domain bed-in-a-box sets of a non-party as the basis for its patent application. Before it prevailed in the underlying patent litigation, Cap Export alleged that defendants disparaged Cap Export and its products as an infringer/infringing.

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This Week in Washington IP: Hispanic-American Contributions to the U.S. Innovation System, Intelligence Strategies in Space, and Expanding Your Market into Mexico Through IP

IP Watchdog

This week in Washington IP news, Congress is wrapping up a district work period, but there are still a handful of interesting IP-related events. The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) recognizes the contributions of Hispanic Americans to the U.S. economy and innovation system. Elsewhere, the Brookings Institution compares and discusses the competing visions of the United States, the European Union, and China regarding international norms.

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How An Undercover Lawyer Helped to Topple Denmark’s Torrent Tracker Scene

TorrentFreak

Last Thursday, a Danish court sentenced a 24-year old programmer from Silkeborg to 60 days probation for his role in operating the torrent tracker ShareUniversity. The sentencing is the latest in Denmark following an unprecedented crackdown on local torrent trackers that has already resulted in more than a dozen prosecutions, with more yet to come. The National Unit for Special Crime (NSK) reports that it’s happy with the conviction.

Copyright 105
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UNH Law School: "Section Two Small: Exploring the New Constitutional Limits on Trademark Law" - November 3rd.

The TTABlog

The Franklin Pierce Center for Intellectual Property at the University of New Hampshire Franklin Pierce School of Law invites you for its upcoming trademark law symposium, "Section Two Small: Exploring the New Constitutional Limits on Trademark Law" on Friday, November 3, 2023.The event will consist of panels on topics expected to include the threat of further constitutional challenges to Section 2, the Lanham Act’s core provision on trademark registration, expressive use of trademarks in the wa

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Kirkland's Jim Hurst Returns After Stint Away From Law

IP Law 360

Prominent Kirkland & Ellis LLP trial lawyer Jim Hurst is back at the firm, just months after announcing that he was leaving the practice of law, according to the firm's website and court filings.

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Joe Hand Promotions Sues Shift Restaurant and Bar for Cable and Satellite Piracy

Indiana Intellectual Property Law

Feasterville, Pennsylvania – Plaintiff Joe Hand Promotions, Inc. is suing Lawrenceburg, Indiana Defendants Shift Restaurant and Bar , Matt Euson, and Nicholas Roberts for allegedly committing “ Cable Piracy ” and “ Satellite Piracy ” as is defined in the Communications Act of 1934 ( 47 U.S.C. § 553 and U.S.C. § 605 ). According to the complaint, Joe Hand Promotions is a company specializing in the licensing and distribution of premier sporting events to commercial establishments.

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Anti-Piracy Agency Credited With BitTorrent Victory, IPTV & Streaming Take on Both

TorrentFreak

With millions of monthly users, BitTorrent’s reign at the top of the file-sharing seemed unstoppable in 2007, but the French government had other plans. Presented to the Senate in June 2008, what would later become France’s Hadopi law envisioned a crackdown on peer-to-peer file-sharing via a ‘graduated response’ mechanism, with around eight million local BitTorrent users the primary targets.

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Copyright Protection in Food Plating

IP and Legal Filings

Introduction Chefs across the world pay special attention to the plating of their food. That is because the plating makes the first impression of the dish on the consumer. The entire experience of consuming a dish begins with smelling its aroma and looking at it. The plating of a dish entices the consumer to eat it, therefore, the culinary industry focuses a lot on plating.

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Jury Hits Cloudera With $240M Verdict In Coding Patent Case

IP Law 360

A Western District of Texas jury found Friday that California-based hybrid data cloud company Cloudera infringed three separate coding patents and owes a patent-holding company $240 million.

Patent 98
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The Toyota KPI Dashboard—Quality

Christopher Roser

In this third post of my series on the Toyota dashboard we will be looking in more detail at quality. The quality of Japanese car makers in general and Toyota in particular is quite a bit better than the rest of the world’s. After safety, quality is the second-most-important issue at Toyota, definitely before productivity. Read more The post The Toyota KPI Dashboard—Quality first appeared on AllAboutLean.com.

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