Blackstone's Guide to the Community Trade Mark

Subjects:
Intellectual Property Law, Blackstone Legislation Guides
Contents:
Introduction to the Community trade mark
obtaining registration of a Community trade mark 1 - the basic conditions
obtaining registration of a Community trade mark 2 - registration procedure
features of the Community trade mark system
maintaining and losing a Community trade mark
infringement 1 - rights in a Community trade mark
infringement 2 - limitations, counterclaims and jurisdictions
appeals
transactions in a Community trade mark
the Madrid system
Community collective marks.
Appendices:
list of contracting parties to the Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property (1883)
list of members of the World Trade Organization
list of contracting parties to the Madrid Agreement Concerning the International Registration of Marks (1891)
list of contracting parties to the Protocol Relating to the Madrid Agreement Concerning the International Registration of Marks (1989)
Community trade mark application form
notice of opposition to a CTM
Madrid Protocol application form MM2
Madrid Protocol subsequent designation form MM4
CTM registration procedure
CTM opposition procedure
international application procedure
comparison of international and Community trade marks.

ISBN13: 9781854315809
ISBN: 1854315803
Published: January 1998
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Country of Publication: UK
Binding: Paperback
Price: £46.00

The Community Trade Mark Regulation came into force in March 1994, and the first CTM applcations will be accepted from 1st January 1996. By filing one application, a trade mark owner may obtain a single registration effective throughout the whole of the EC, and for the first time it will be possible to gain truly international protection for intellectual property rights.

Trade mark practitioners world-wide will require in-depth knowledge of the system in order to advise their clients how best to benefit from the Community Trade Mark. The Madrid Protocol comes into effect on 1st April 1996, providing a procedural shortcut to the multiple filing of national trade mark applications. The Protocol will eventually dovetail into the CTM system. This guide aims to help the practitioner to evaluate whether the CTM or the Madrid Protocol or both will best meet the commercial client's aims.