The International Trademark Association (INTA) and International Chamber of Commerce have issued a release on ACTA urging countries to drop the de minimis provision that is designed to allay fears of iPod searching border guards. The two associations argue that the exception "sends the wrong message to consumers."
Post Tagged with: "Counterfeit"
ACTA Round of Talks Concludes: Next Meeting in U.S.
The ninth round of ACTA talks concluded yesterday in Lucerne, Switzerland. The usual statement followed the talks with confirmation that talks focused on the main IP enforcement issues. The statement denied that ACTA will have an impact on medicines shipments and personal border searches. The next round of talks will […]
IP Watch on NGO Meeting on ACTA
IP Watch reports on the NGO meeting on ACTA held in Geneva, Switzerland earlier this week. My talks at the event should be posted shortly.
Report on Meeting With ACTA Negotiators in Lucerne
Several civil society organizations met with 21 ACTA negotiators earlier this week. They provide a full report on the meeting which includes an indication that patents may be removed from the border measures chapter, that the Internet chapter is here to stay, and they may need to change their domestic […]
Developing Country Opposition to ACTA Mounts
Just as the G8-G20 meetings conclude in Muskoka and Toronto, another round of negotiations on the controversial Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement resumes in Switzerland today. In the aftermath of the last round of discussions in New Zealand, a draft version of the ACTA text was publicly released, temporarily quieting criticism about the lack of transparency associated with an agreement that currently touches on all forms of intellectual property, including patents, trademark, and copyright.
While the transparency concerns are no longer in the spotlight, my weekly technology law column (Toronto Star version, homepage version) notes that mounting opposition to the agreement from the developing world, particularly powerhouse economies such as India, China, and Brazil, is attracting considerable attention. The public opposition from those countries – India has threatened to establish a coalition of countries against the treaty – dramatically raise the political stakes and place Canada between a proverbial rock and hard place, given its close ties to the U.S. and ambition to increase economic ties with India and China.