Jane Wang
There is a growing wave of criticism and unfavourable opinions of the current IP case adjudication system, which could result in the overhaul of the Intellectual Property Case Adjudication Act. The act was introduced in 2008, in response to the need for relatively speedy trials in IP cases, and in addition to the Civil, Criminal, Administrative Procedure Codes
Background
There have only been two minor amendments to the act in the 12 years since it came into force. The first was in 2011, which expressly stipulated that summary proceedings do not apply to administrative actions concerning intellectual property – this is the remit of an ordinary proceeding. The second was in 2014, which addressed the following issues and led to:
U.S. recognizes Taiwan s efforts in trade secret protection
05/01/2021 03:56 PM
Image taken from Wikimedia Commons
Washington, April 30 (CNA) The Office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR) recognized Taiwan s efforts in trade secret protection in the latest annual Special 301 Report released Friday.
In the first Special 301 Report released by U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai (戴琪) under the Biden administration, the USTR highlighted a recent case under the amended Trade Secret Act in which a court in Taiwan found that a Taiwanese semiconductor company and three former employees were guilty of stealing trade secrets from a U.S. company to enable the development of electronics chips by a Chinese state-owned enterprise.
Plus: Verkada flaw finder cuffed and Apple boss may have leaked secrets Share
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In brief It s looking like the exploitation of critical Exchange flaws that Microsoft revealed at the start of the month could be much worse than folks first suspected.
An analysis by Slovak security shop ESET claims that six advanced criminal hacking groups, thought to have some level of state sponsorship, used the zero days to attack government and industry sites before the flaws were patched. At the time, Microsoft claimed that only one Chinese-based hacking group, dubbed Hafnium, had illicitly exploited the dodgy code. You can see the timeline below.
Apple sues former MacBook designer for allegedly selling trade secrets ANI | Updated: Mar 14, 2021 22:05 IST
Washington [US], March 14 (ANI): American multinational technology company Apple recently sued one of its former MacBook designers, alleging that he sold unreleased product details to a journalist in return for favorable coverage, after he left the company for a startup.
According to Mashable, Simon Lancaster had been Advanced Materials and Prototyping lead at Apple until he resigned in November 2019. The lawsuit accuses him of copying trade secrets from other projects so that he could supply them to an outside media correspondent , who is currently unnamed.
After he left Apple, Lancaster joined Arris Composites as Head of Consumer Products. The company developed a system that was called Additive Molding. In it composite structures could be manufactured with a mixture of continuously aligned fibers, electronics, and metallic componen
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