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WIPO’s international registration system : what now, what next?
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Hylly
  • AKTEKIN SA-IN45
Henkilönnimi
  • Aktekin, Ugur.
Nimeke- ja vastuullisuusmerkintö
  • WIPO’s international registration system : what now, what next?
Julkaistu
  • 2014.
Ulkoasutiedot
  • 58-59.
Sarjamerkintö ei-lisäkirjausmuodossa
  • Intellectual Property Magazine, ISSN 2044-7175 ; June
Huomautus sisällöstä, tiivistelmä tms.
  • Historically, the protection of trademark rights has been dependent upon territorial registration. International brands and businesses have been obliged to protect their trademark rights on an individual country- by-country basis, registering their trademarks at national IP offices. For decades, there has been growing demand for the institution of a trademark registration system ensuring protection on a global scale by registration of an international trademark with the World Intellectual Property Organization (“WIPO”) known as the Madrid System, which facilitates obtaining territorial registrations by extending international registration to the member countries. The Madrid System allows for trademark filing in multiple worldwide jurisdictions simultaneously. Its legal foundations are the Madrid Agreement (1891) and the Madrid Protocol (1989). The Madrid Agreement established a union between states, laying a foundation from which “nationals of any of the contracting countries may, in all the other countries party to this agreement, file and secure protection for their marks applicable to goods or services, registered in the country of origin through WIPO”.
Asiasana - Kontrolloimaton
Henkilönnimi
  • Arikan, Pinar.
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