Archive for: rychlicki.net

Meet the Bloggers IV

Thursday, May 15th, 2008

May 19, 2008.From 20:30 to 22:30 at Potsdamer Platz 1, 10785 Berlin. Herzlich willkommen. There will be representatives of:
Afro-IP
Catch Us If You Can !!!
Class 46
IMPACT
IP Finance
IPEG
IPJUR
IPKat
Lucentinus
Naked Law
Petit Musee des Marques
Peter Groves
Seattle Trademark Lawyer
SOLO IP
Spicy IP
The Trademark Blog
Transblawg
TTABlog
The first “Meet the Bloggers” was held in San Diego in 2005. Marty Schwimmer (The Trademark Blog) and John Welch (TTABlog) were the first one to meet.

Talking cat

Thursday, June 7th, 2007

I read a judgement in the case Miles v. City Council of Augusta, 551 F. Supp. 349 (D. Ga. 1982) sometime ago. A subject matter of this case and Judge Bowen’s comments in footnote 1 induced me to dedicate this post to a person I know. Jeremy Phillips is a friend, mentor a big authority for me, not to mention that he is also co-author and creator of the famous www.ipkat.com blog.

In ruling on the motions for summary judgment, the Court has considered only the evidence in the file. However, it should be disclosed that I have seen and heard a demonstration of Blackie’s abilities. The point in time of the Court’s view was late summer, 1982, well after the events contended in this lawsuit. One afternoon when crossing Greene Street in an automobile, I spotted in the median a man accompanied by a cat and a woman. The black cat was draped over his left shoulder. Knowing the matter to be in litigation, and suspecting that the cat was Blackie, I thought twice before stopping. Observing, however, that counsel for neither side was present and that any citizen on the street could have happened by chance upon this scene, I spoke, and the man with the cat eagerly responded to my greeting. I asked him if his cat could talk. He said he could, and if I would pull over on the side street he would show me. I did, and he did. The cat was wearing a collar, two harnesses and a leash. Held and stroked by the man Blackie said “I love you” and “I want my Mama.” The man then explained that the cat was the sole source of income for him and his wife and requested a donation which was provided. I felt that my dollar was well spent. The cat was entertaining as was its owner. Some questions occurred to me about the necessity for the multiple means of restraint and the way in which the man held the cat’s paw when the cat was asked to talk. However, these are not matters before the Court and are beyond the purview of a federal judge. I do not know if the man whom I saw with the cat was the plaintiff Mr. Miles.

This sequence has not been considered as evidence or as an uncontroverted fact in the case. It is simply stated for the purpose of a disclosure to the parties of the chance contact.

Posting break

Monday, May 21st, 2007

I’m in New York City until Saturday. I’ll attend there the Thomson Compumark’s IP Law Educational Forum, “Trademark Law and The Internet” on May 22. I’m also going to chill a lot with my friends so there will be a short break in posting. Cheers!

Some mess in Internet press

Monday, April 16th, 2007

Some of my recent posts, especially the one titled iPhone icons versus Zawiasinski, made some “press mess” in the Internet. It was commented on at www.yahoo.com, www.washingtonpost.com, www.pcworld.com, www.arstechnica.com, and many other websites. Of course, there were also e-mail comments, for which I would like to thank you all. I personally enjoy mostly the posts that were written by my friends. Go to Marcin Sochacki’s website and read about his findings regarding visits to my website, and some interesting opinions of Piotr Waglowski (in Polish). It’s truly an interesting read. In the meantime I sit and wait for Apple’s reaction. More about it in the future, so stay tuned.

Legum Magister

Saturday, February 10th, 2007

Some readers asked me about the scope of material during the LL.M. program in International Intellectual Property Law. I can briefly write that I had to take among other classes:

  • Intellectual property law - professor Graeme Dinwoodie.
  • Patent law - professor Timothy Holbrook.
  • US Trademark and unfrair competition law - professor Richard W. Renner.
  • US Copyright law - professor Ronald Staudt.
  • E-commerce law - professor Richard Warner.
  • International copyright law - professor Jean-Luc Piotraut.
  • International trademark law - professor Jean-Luc Piotraut.

Some more information about Master of Laws title.

Information

Saturday, January 20th, 2007

I live in Chicago currently, where I started classes at Chicago-Kent College of Law to pursue LL.M. in International Intellectual Property Law. I will not be able to update this website regularly in the next week. Anyway warm greetings from the Windy City.

EMI experiments

Friday, December 8th, 2006

As you can read in the article at www.arstechnica.com website, EMI, the music gigant is experimenting on selling music in MP3 file format, without so-called “DRMs” (the proper term should be rights-management information systems but as you can see it is really hard to say for the average man in the street). I wonder if it is a sign of change of views? What about the “legal trash” as article 7 of the Directive 2001/29/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 22 May 2001 on the harmonisation of certain aspects of copyright and related rights in the information society (Official Journal L 167 , 22/06/2001 P. 0010 - 0019)? We will see.
In passing, I would like to invite those readers who will be around to my lecture titled “Legal aspects of FLOSS licences”. The lecture is arranged by the Koło Naukowe Prawa Własności Intelektualnej UG. It is scheduled on December 8, ETA 3PM, room no 1039 at the Faculty of Law and Administration, University of Gdansk.

Boys are blogging

Friday, December 8th, 2006

Ok, I admit, I am not a supporter of a blog term. But I am very happy to introduce to my readers two websites of very nice and interesting people. Marcin Sochacki - one of my best friends and Grzegorz Jarosław Pacek. Good luck boys with writing.

Not so scary scans

Sunday, October 8th, 2006

As you can read at www.slashdot.org website some publishers have nothing against Google Print project, currently known as Google Book Search. A director of Oxford University Press says it has a positive impact on selling books. As I am writing about this publisher I can brag about my small article which is scheduled to be published in Journal of Intellectual Property Law and Practice (I know I am not a modest person). It is not a big issue but gives fun.

How to get legal information from the net?

Thursday, August 3rd, 2006

I will write about some ways to get free information releated to law because I do not want to leave some of you without daily news I have published here before. If you are looking for “something” in the Net I am pretty sure that first URL you will type in your browser will be www.google.com, without any doubt. I would like to stress that this post is about freely available sources so I will not write about such professional websites, services as www.westlaw.com and www.lexis.com. If you still want actively look for any legal sources you will probably check websites found via Google or any other search engine, newsgroups and legal websites fora. There are plenty of each. I will not give you speciic URLs there is no need. I got all URLs I prefer to read bookmakred. I use Firefox browser available at www.getfirefox.com. website for my security and comfort of work. The easiest way to read all bookmarked websites is to open them using “open in tabs” option. This is how I do my daily roundup. That’s all when you “ask” about information.
There are some standards and tools available which automate access to content of many websites since some time. I use ATOM at first place (does anybody know the answer why? ;) and RSS. Those features are implemented in many legal websites, almost each blogging platform has it, many patent offices, IP law releated organizations publish its content this way. I am pretty sure you will find suitable ATOM/RSS reader for you. Google has created Google Alerts service some time ago. It is available at www.google.com/alerts website. You can use as keywords such terms as: patent, trade mark, open source, etc. You can also subscribe to all newsletters you may be interested in. It is another way that news are “pushed” to you. Well this is it in a very very brief way. Please send me an e-mail if you know any other free legal reasearch techniques. You know how to contact with me.

Changes

Thursday, August 3rd, 2006

As I promised. Now the answer what changes I am going to apply “here”. I will not publish judgements of the Court of Justice of the European Communities and the Court of First Instance. If some is interested you can find it on the Court’s website. I will write some comments on a intresting case sometimes maybe. But please do not count on me if you care about judgement’s date.
The same applies to news concering Polish Patent Office, OHIM, EPO, WIPO. Unless something interesting, worth publishing, funny, will happen. If you look for information from those offices just check appropriate websites.
I do not want to duplicate too many news from other websites. I know it is impossible to keep away from such sources (I am not the Associated Press).
You may ask why there are such changes. Well, there are some reasons. This website does not serve as a hudge collection of links to good websites for me anymore. I write more in a traditional way. I got some other issues to live with it and to work on it (no I didn’t get married). I will give you some tips about searching for news in the next post.

Rychlicki.net.2.0 style

Tuesday, August 1st, 2006

All right. As you see it is time for changes. I moved my website to a “state-of-the-art semantic personal publishing platform with a focus on aesthetics, web standards, and usability”. Shortly www.wordpress.org. Great tool for publishing. I think there will be some other changes not only in the code. I will write about it in the next post. And yes this logotype I’ve made in the topic is a joke. I am not gonna go web 2.0 style. Hell no!