If you're only getting one glass, it may as well be a big one ... |
This event is coming up so soon that there's no point in listing it on the IPKat's special Fothcoming Events page: it's the Institute of Trade Mark Attorneys (ITMA) Seminar and Drinks Reception with the UK Intellectual Property Office (IPO). This event is hosted by law firm Burges Salmon at One Glass Wharf, Bristol. Says Merpel: this presumably means that if you want a second glass, you'd better bring your own. Full details, for those who wish to have an informal drink with an IPO examiner, are available here. If you miss this event, you can catch up with the itinerant ITMA reception circus a week later when it hits Glasgow in time for Burness Night (no mistake: this event is hosted by Burness LLP). This time there are no examiners to meet; presumably they are all drying out after the Burges Salmon bash the week before. There is however a theme: "To write or not to write? That is the question". Further details are available here.
In case you were wondering: Michael Factor really does look like this ... |
IPKat reader Kenneth Yip has a good eye for an eyebrow-raising news item. He tells us how, in the vibrant and ever-awake city of Hong Kong, a D&G shop has made the astonishing claim that copyright protection allows it to forbid the local members of the public to take photos of its window display from a pedestrian walk -- a privilege which is open only to luxury goods purchasers from China's mainland (click here for CNN report). Hong Kong copyright law has many fine provisions for the protection of authorship, but this is not apparently among them: shopkeepers and window-dressers have no such power. Is this another unfortunate example of how a few copyright owners abuse the law and give copyright law a bad name? A brilliant way to draw attention to the creative content of one's window display -- or another reason why the man in the street, especially if he is armed with any sort of mobile device that lets him take photos, deserves to know more about copyright law?