Intellectual Property Watch

Intellectual Property Watch is a Geneva-based publication reporting on policy issues and influences relating to international organizations (IOs), especially those in Geneva such as the World Intellectual Property Organization, World Trade Organization, World Health Organization and International Telecommunication Union. It also follows policy developments outside Geneva, and does some investigative reporting.

IP-Watch
TypeDaily Blogs/Monthly Reporter
Format16 page reporter/online articles
EditorWilliam New
Founded2004
Political alignmentNeutral
HeadquartersGeneva, Switzerland
ISSN1661-7355
Websitewww.ip-watch.org

Besides almost daily articles and occasional special columns, they publish a monthly reader about intellectual property and the policies that affect it.

IP-Watch is an editorially independent news agency whose startup funding came from several sources, the MacArthur Foundation, the Rockefeller Foundation,[1] and the Open Society Institute.[2] Currently, they accept subscription fees for their Monthly Reporter and a subscriber-only online content area, but do not take anonymous donations nor donations from any private corporations, except in the form of subscriptions to their reporting services.[3] Most of their online content is open access, published under the Creative Commons license.

Intellectual Property Watch has no formal owner, and their board of directors meets twice a year to discuss business and legal matters.[4]

On their website, they openly present both industry and industry critics in their "Inside Views" section. They also provide interested developing countries with free copies of their newsletter.

Their founder and board chair is Carolyn Deere.[3]

IP-Watch v. USTR

IP-Watch, represented by Yale Law School's Media Freedom and Information Access Clinic, is suing the United States Trade Representative to compel disclosure of documents pertaining to the Trans-Pacific Partnership under the Freedom of Information Act.[5]

gollark: Wireless modem packets contain the distance (in CC and maaaaybe OC? I don't know) so if you have a setup of 4 computers with known positions which give their positions when pinged, you can find your own position given those positions and distances.
gollark: Basically, it uses trilateration.
gollark: No, I mean the way CC does it, not actually with CC.
gollark: CC-style wireless GPS?
gollark: Tablets can have keyboards anyway.

References

  1. Rockefeller Foundation website, IP Watch Association. Consulted on 11 March 2011.
  2. 2004 Initiatives Report, p. 132. Consulted on 11 March 2011
  3. IP Watch website, About Us. Consulted on 11 March 2011.
  4. IP Watch website, About Us ("Governance" part). Consulted on 11 March 2011.
  5. Electronic Frontier Foundation website, IP-Watch v. USTR. Consulted on 14 March 2016.
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