Articles 2021

Aujourdʼhui
Aujourdʼhui

No, AI is Not Here to Take Your Job

  • 17 février 2019
  • Sébastien Budd

Tax litigator Sébastien Budd shares his experience on how AI technology sharpens his practice.

Student Forum, Technologies de l'information et le droit de la propriété intellectuelle

Digital Business Beware: New CRTC 2018-415 CASL Guidelines May Put Your Business At Risk

  • 14 février 2019
  • Satnam Dosanjh and Lisa Danay Wallace, WeirFoulds LLP

Telecom, internet service providers and digital businesses take note: CRTC's new guidance expands liability under Canada’s Anti-Spam Legislation for a number of digital product or service provider intermediaries.

Student Forum, Technologies de l'information et le droit de la propriété intellectuelle

Copyright Board Practice Update

  • 23 novembre 2018
  • Casey Chisick, Eric Mayzel and Jessica Zagar of Cassels Brock

Bill C-86 proposes amendments to the Copyright Act to facilitate streamlined hearings and timely decision-making. The authors highlight key aspects of the proposed reform in this timely article.

Student Forum, Technologies de l'information et le droit de la propriété intellectuelle

ONTARIO COURT OF APPEAL SUMMARIES (APRIL 2- APRIL 6)

  • 08 avril 2018
  • John Polyzogopoulos

Topics covered this week included franchise law and rescission, liability for wrongful patent enforcement, the duty to defend in the MVA context, family law (custody and access and breach of court orders), securities class actions, and mortgage enforcement. John Polyzogopoulos

Litige civil, Droit de la famille, Droit des franchises et 4 en plus, Technologies de l'information et le droit de la propriété intellectuelle, Droit des assurances, Droit international, Droit immobilier

“Consisting essentially of” in Canadian Claim Construction

  • 15 mars 2018
  • Lei Gao and Andrew Kaikai

Due to the flexible nature of the law of claims construction in Canada, the meaning of the commonly used transitional phrase "consisting essentially of" may surprise foreign lawyers and patent practitioners.

Student Forum, Technologies de l'information et le droit de la propriété intellectuelle

Keywork Advertising and Passing Off

  • 01 juin 2017
  • Sabrina Salituro

The British Columbia Court of Appeal (BCCA) in Vancouver Community College v. Vancouver Career College (Burnaby) Inc. recently decided that use of a trademark as a keyword advertisement constituted passing off of a trademark, unanimously reversing the trial judge’s decision. The BCCA held that trademark confusion occurs at the moment the consumer first encounters the trademark in the search results, and not the moment the consumer clicks on the link and arrives at the landing page.

Technologies de l'information et le droit de la propriété intellectuelle