China’s new trademark law entered into force on 1 May 2014 and ushers in key changes in the areas of trademark registration, anti-piracy, well-known marks, proceedings and enforcement. This new law strengthens the position of trademark holders to act against infringement. And procedures will be shortened in time and carried out more efficiently. The new law is of great importance for companies that want to do business in China. However, there is much uncertainty amongst Chinese practitioners how the law will work in practice and what it will mean for the registration process. We will continue to monitor and report on developments.
China has long been criticised for being a safe harbour of counterfeit and trademark hijacking and for trademarks rights being violated on a large scale without repercussions. The rights of trademark holders will now be protected more effectively and efficiently. The new law is based on international standards, and De Brauw contributed to drafting the new law before the parliamentary committee in China. There are now substantial changes for rightsholders to strengthen their trademark protection and other new provisions, some of which are highlighted below.
Automakers trademark names all the time, whether they want to protect some part of their past or if they are considering a model even far in the future. But occasionally a trademark pops up that is much more enticing than the rest. For example, General Motors recently reserved the name Zora for "motor land vehicles, namely, automobiles," according to the United States Patent and Trademark Office.

The name Zora in association with GM immediately calls to mind the Corvette. Zora Arkus-Duntov is generally considered the father of the 'Vette, at least as the performance car we know it today. He helped get the Chevrolet V8 in the first-generation model to provide a performance boost over its relatively anemic inline-six. He also spearheaded the Grand Sport program that aimed to make the second-generation a world-class racing success.


http://www.autoblog.com/2014/06/10/chevy-corvette-zora-grand-sport-trademark/

IFone Trumps IPhone In Mexico Trademark Ruling

Mexico's intellectual property agency said Friday it has ruled in favour of a small local firm's rights to the 'iFone' name, saying that ads for Apple's iPhone have encroached on the trademark.

The Mexican firm iFone SA de CV registered the name in 2003 to cover specialised telephone service for call centres and businesses, well before Apple registered the similar iPhone moniker in 2007 for its popular mobile handset. iFone doesn't make mobile telephones.

Mexico's Institute for Intellectual Property ruled Thursday that the two names are phonetically identical, and thus there was a trademark encroachment.


http://jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/20140608/business/business33.html
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