Search for: "Blanks v. United States of America" Results 81 - 93 of 93
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27 Jan 2009, 9:00 pm
 The United States is far from a truly  free nation; nor are any other nations. [read post]
12 Dec 2008, 8:00 am
  Global - Patents Open Innovation Network unveils Linux Defenders to protect open source from patent suits by establishing prior art and participating in patent peer review (Ars Technica) (Securing Innovation)   Bulgaria RARBG, ArenaBG and other BitTorrent trackers forced to shut down or relocate following police action (TorrentFreak) (TorrentFreak)   Cameroon Third-level domain names come to Cameroon (Afro-IP)     Canada   Copyright Board… [read post]
23 Aug 2008, 1:23 am
You can separately subscribe to the IP Thinktank Global week in Review at the Subscribe page: [duncanbucknell.com]   Highlights this week included: DRM for streaming music dies a quiet death: (Electronic Frontier Foundation), (Techdirt) CAFC decides Apotex and Impax infringed AstraZeneca’s Prilosec patents: (Law360), (Patent Prospector), (Patent Docs), (GenericsWeb), CAFC upholds lower court’s decision finding USPTO was within its rights to subject a Cooper patent to… [read post]
20 Jun 2008, 8:07 am
: (Spicy IP), Latin America: Merck Serono signs distribution agreement with Bristol-Myers Squibb for portfolio of established pharmaceutical brands in Latin America: (IP tango), US: Biotech industry growth to slow due to funding pressures and competition from biosimilars: (Managing Intellectual Property), US: House Commerce Committee posts responses to its questions on biogenerics; not surprisingly, the views run the gamut: (FDA Law Blog), US: Biosimilar debate heats up at BIO:… [read post]
25 Jul 2007, 8:15 am
United States of America (The Bahamas) [2007] UKPC 52 (23 July 2007) Source: www.bailii.org [read post]
15 Jul 2007, 5:57 am
It's an obligation when they take that oath to faithfully uphold and defend the Constitution of the United States. . . . [read post]
19 Dec 2006, 12:00 am
In mid-2006, a 5-4 majority of the the United States Supreme Court chillingly upheld Kansas's requirement to issue a death sentence where the jury unanimously finds beyond a reasonable doubt that aggravating and mitigating circumstances for a death sentence are in equipoise, rather than finding that the aggravating circumstances outweigh the mitigating circumstances. blank">Kansas v. [read post]