During Shanghai Expo, the State Intellectual Property Office led the National Copyright Administration of the PRC and other 6 units to form a special inspection team to research IPR protection
Recent litigations involving Chinese equivalents of foreign trademarks being squatted or used without authorization have caught the attention of professional circles.
Increase is a high-tech pharmaceutical conglomerate featuring research and development, production and sales and is headquartered in Beijing’s Zhongguancun Science Park.
Only when the trademark holders receive legal protection can they commit themselves to the research and development of high quality goods, thus promoting the prosperity of the goods.
Intellectual property, as we know it, is not so much about the property right for the intellectuals as it is an instrumentality for competition in the marketplace; for a share of the economical pie.
Whether there will be changes in the current pattern and whether traditional arts can walk out of the shadow of copyright disputes, will perhaps be answered in time.
Many European companies are keen to enter the China market and develop long-term partnerships in China. They are often willing to transfer their latest technology to Chinese subsidiaries.
Numerous important trade fairs and exhibitions take place in Germany’s exhibition venues, including, for instance, the computer fair, CeBit in Hannover and the Frankfurt Car Show.
It is not hard to sense it from interviews over the past two years with the drug multinationals that are struggling to find a way out by minimizing potential losses.