CIP – The Anton Mostert Chair of Intellectual Property

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Supreme Court of Appeal Losing Its Shape

INTRODUCTION The Supreme Court of Appeal has been blessed for the past few decades by having in its ranks judges who have experience and expertise in the field of Intellectual Property Law. One thinks of Judges like Chris Plewman and Louis Harms who had a wealth of experience in handling IP cases while practising as […]

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Posted in IPStell, Trade Marks Tagged case, judgement, judgment, mark, mettenheimer, nestle, pioneer, SCA, Supreme Court of Appeal, trade, zonquasdrift

Opened With Expectation and Closed With Profit

Speech delivered by Judge Mabel Jansen at the book launch of Dean & Dyer Introduction to Intellectual Property Law “In our court building, when one wanders in the judges’ corridors, the photographs of all judges who served on the Bench, adorn the walls. One looks at the photographs of judges Galgut, Holmes, Hoexter and many […]

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Posted in IPStell Tagged book, Dean & Dyer, introduction to intellectual property law, Judge, launch, Mabel Jansen

Keyword Advertising: The Next Instalment in the Interflora v M&S Saga

A few days after the first South African case to consider the issue of Internet keyword advertising (Cochrane Steel Products (Pty) Ltd v M-Systems Group (Pty) Ltd & Another Case 39605/13, 29 October 2014), we had the next instalment – from the English Court of Appeal – in the dispute between Interflora and Marks & […]

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Posted in IPStell, Trade Marks Tagged adwords, infringement, interflora, keywords, marks, SEO, spencer, trademark

A limited victory: IP and exchange control

In the culmination of a widely followed case, on 1 October 2014 the Supreme Court of Appeal ordered the South African Reserve Bank (SARB) to repay Mark Shuttleworth over R250 million plus interest. The money had been levied against Shuttleworth when he applied to transfer his assets out of the country in 2009. He had […]

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Posted in Editorial, IPStell Tagged capital, control, exchange, IP, shuttleworth, tax

The First Step

This is an editorial article contributed to the 50th year Commemorative Edition of Responsa Meridiana. “A journey of a thousand miles begins with a first step”. So said Lao-tzu, the Chinese philosopher, who lived in the fifth century BC. How true this can be of a legal career and indeed of any on-going venture. When […]

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Posted in Editorial, IPStell Tagged career, intellectual, intellectual property, IP, law, meridiana, responsa

Open Letter – Plain Packaging Legislation and the Constitution

NOTE: The following open letter has been delivered by email to the office of the Minister of Health of the Republic of South Africa on 31 July 2014. The contents of this letter is published here in furtherance of the debate on plain packaging legislation and the potential impact on the Constitutional rights of the […]

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Posted in IPStell, Publications, Trade Marks Tagged alcohol, baby, ban, beverage, brand, cigarette, constitution, food, legislation, packaging, plain, plain packaging, trade mark

Literal Extortion

The verb “extort” means “obtain (money, a promise, a concession, etc.) from a reluctant person by threat, force, importunity, etc.)” The noun form, “extortion”, means “the act or an act of extorting money etc.” (The New Shorter Oxford English Dictionary published by Clarendon Press, 1993). Requiring someone to pay copyright royalties for a manner of […]

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Posted in Copyright, IPStell Tagged Copyright, exception, exemption, extortion, foreign work, literal, publish, quotation, quote, statute

A Spoon Full of Sugar for Plain Packaging

History has taught us that the South African Government, and the Legislature in particular, will not hesitate to make bad law. The volume of carelessly drafted, ill conceived, unconstitutional and overtly political laws that the public has been force-fed in recent years is so great that recourse to the Constitutional Court has become a pedestrian […]

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Posted in IPStell, Patents, Trade Marks Tagged Australia, cigarette, plain packaging, tobacco, trade mark

Patents and Public Health – The New Frontier

The long-awaited South African draft National Policy on Intellectual Property (the draft IP Policy) which was published on 4 September 2013 (read the policy here) has recently led to an unfortunate furore in the press. On 17 January 2014 Money MSN published a report based on a document that was leaked from the Innovative Pharmaceutical […]

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Posted in Editorial, IPStell, Patents Tagged DNPIP, draft, health, patent, Pharmaceutical, policy, public

Unveiling The Wolf

The erstwhile Intellectual Property Laws Amendment Bill (“IPLAB”), generally known as the “Traditional Knowledge Bill”, became an Act when it was published in the Government Gazette as having been assented to by President Jacob Zuma on 10 December 2013. This despite vociferous objection from the IP community and other informed sources. (Read more about IPLAB […]

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Posted in IPStell, Traditional Knowledge Tagged department of trade and industry, disaster, DTI, failure, fraud, IK, indigenous knowledge, mistake, rob davies, South Africa, TK, traditional knowledge
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The views and opinions expressed on the CIP website are strictly those of the page author(s) and content contributor(s). The contents of the CIP website have not been reviewed or approved by Stellenbosch University.

© 2025 CIP – The Anton Mostert Chair of Intellectual Property, Stellenbosch University All Rights Reserved

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The Anton Mostert Chair of Intellectual Property is an independent research unit of the Faculty of Law, Stellenbosch University. For more information visit the About page, or contact us: ipchair@sun.ac.za

Notice

The views and opinions expressed on the CIP website are strictly those of the page author(s) and content contributor(s). The contents of the CIP website have not been reviewed or approved by Stellenbosch University.

© 2025 CIP - The Anton Mostert Chair of Intellectual Property, Stellenbosch University All Rights Reserved

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