ATRIP 2007 Congress has ended

26th International Association for the Advancement of Teaching and Research in Intellectual Property (ATRIP) Congress took place in Buenos Aires from July 16th to July 18th, 2007. The Congress attracted more than 300 hundreds IP and researchers from all five continents. The high-quality presentations impressed all the participants. The congress website is at http://www.atripbuenosaires.com.ar/ing/programa.asp.>>

An Yale ISP fellow, Hong Xue, presented on “Copyright Maze in Distance Education” and was re-elected as the Member of ATRIP’s Executive Committee (Exco). Among nine Exco Members, she is the only from Asia.

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ICANN San Juan Meeting Closed Curtain

Since July 2000, I have been attending almost all the ICANN meetings. I can make a long list of those meetings in different fancy locations. This time was in San Juan, Puerto Rico (June 23-29). Seven years later, I found I almost know more than 70% of the participants. Local participation is still limited and ICANN is still full of veterans.

I’ve been working with the ALAC since 2003. Since February 2007, I only working as an IDN Liaison of the Committee. In San Juan, I organized an IDN Workshop on June 28, presented at ALAC-Board Meeting on June 27 and public forum on June 28. An IDN WG is going to take off after San Juan and around 10 people have signed on.

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JimAllchin.com Finally Transfered Back

A Chinese domain name dealer registered the name of former Windows Chief Jim Allchin, which annoyed Mr. Allchin. But this is not a story of cybersquatting, at least not primarily. Instead, this reveals the deceptive practices of some registars or agents. When the registrant agreed to transfer back the domian name to Mr. Allchin, he was barred from doing so several times by the registrar/agent. In the extremely competitive domain name business, a registration can very cheap but there may well be some hidden charges attached to every transfer, correction or update.

http://www.sinofile.net/clients/amcweb.nsf/clpA/03B7F643FDCD37A448257300000C7142

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Authentic scholars’ reading of the Internet and the Politics

Internet politics is a new form of democratic politics. Blocking and sealing the net will not fulfill the need of Internet politics. These are the conclusion published on Beijing Daidly by 4 authentic Chinese scholars on laws, politics and sociology. Is it signalizing the change of the online weather? No clue.

http://news.sina.com.cn/c/2007-06-18/094213253766.shtml

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Yamaha case triggers the high damages for trademark infringement

The case took five years but just ended in a landmark decision by the Supreme People’s Court in China awarding Yahama Motor $1.1 million, the highest amount of damages ever awarded in China in a trademark dispute involving a foreign company.

The Chinese company….registered a shell company in Japan’s remote Ishikawa prefecture in 2000 under the same three characters used by Yamaha to render its name in Chinese. This Japanese shell company then signed a licensing agreement with Zhejiang Huatian, allowing it to market its scooters in China under that name. Zhejiang Huatian went a step further by printing Yamaha’s name in English letters on its scooters.

http://www.chinalawblog.com/chinalawblog/2007/06/china_court_kil.html

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