
The IPKat is celebrating another little milestone. The blog's webcounter shows that in February it received 78,069 casual visits -- that's in addition to the 2,870 email subscribers and getting on for 2,000 RSS feeders. 78,069 is the highest number of such visits in a calendar month, though the Kats are slightly disappointed that February has only 28 days or the figure would have been higher. The IPKat says thanks to all his readers for continuing to visit this blog and for their comments, leads, ideas and general support. We couldn't have done any of this without you!


Left and right: two ways of looking at Pirate Bay, but the court will only opt for one of them
Thanks to Edward Farrington (Valea) for this information and for this link to the so-called Medina Report, which specifically names Pirate Bay, and calls it an "internet site which illegally disseminates works on line" (scroll down to the penultimate paragraph).
Midnight on Sunday is the deadline for entries to the haiku competition for which the prize is complimentary registration for CLT's conference on IP in the Educational Sector, 19 March 2009. Details of the competition and the conference can be found by clicking here and scrolling down to the second item).
Bound volumes of Sweet & Maxwell's European Copyright and Design Reports for 2008 have now been sent to subscribers. If you haven't got yours yet, you should be doing so soon.

* David Nelms (Potter Clarkson) has drawn the Kat's attention to the European Patent Office IPscore D-I-Y patent valuation pack here. More details will be posted on IP Finance tomorrow.
* John Blake (Brookes Batchellor) was first to spot this spat between the London Eye and its distant competitor, the shortly-to-be-renamed Nottingham Eye.
* All the way from Norway, via Solvår Winnie Finnanger (Patent Office), comes news
* Via Annsley Merelle Ward (a trainee solicitor with Gallant Macmillan LLP) comes further news of the ferment in the US over the reintroduction this week of the Patent Reform Act of 2009 yesterday. The Bill seeks to provide mechanisms for a more cost-effective patent system, from filing to litigation costs. Not everyone welcomes it, as this note on PatLit suggests. The Senate Judiciary Committee's reality TV show, “Patent Reform in the 11th Congress: Legislation and Recent Court Decisions” can be viewed live here this Tuesday 10 March.
* At the IPKat's disposal is Benoit Tabaka (PriceMinister.com), who draws attention to a study by that onlike marketplace with regard to anti-counterfeiting measures. Based on the analysis of all detections made by the PriceMinister anti-counterfeiting team during 2008, the study's main conclusions can be viewed from the slide show here, with pictures here.
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