List of Expired Trademarks As of 2021 131

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

List of Expired Trademarks As of 2021 131 LIST OF EXPIRED TRADEMARKS AS OF 2021 S/N FILE ID MARK NAME EXPIRATION DATE 1. UG/T/ 2008/30570 WESTIN 02/01/2015 2. UG/T/ 2008/30884 Rhino (and logo) 20/03/2015 3. UG/T/ 2008/30900 GAUNGQI HONDA AUTOMOBILE 01/04/2015 CO., LIMITED 4. UG/T/ 2008/30901 GAUNGQI HONDA AUTOMOBILE 01/04/2015 CO., LIMITED 5. UG/T/ 2008/30908 UTi (and logo) 03/04/2015 6. UG/T/ 2008/30912 VY-KING (and logo) 07/04/2015 7. UG/T/ 2008/30927 SMILING FEET 08/04/2015 8. UG/T/ 2008/30932 PEARL (and logo) 11/04/2015 9. UG/T/ 2008/30933 MTN Access 4 Life (and logo) 14/04/2015 10. UG/T/ 2008/30934 MTN Broadband. (and logo) 14/04/2015 11. UG/T/ 2008/30935 MTN CashBack (and logo) 14/04/2015 12. UG/T/ 2008/30936 MTN Friends & Family (and logo) 14/04/2015 13. UG/T/ 2008/30937 MTN HOME & AWAY (and logo) 14/04/2015 14. UG/T/ 2008/30938 AMERICAN - CIGARETTE 14/04/2015 COMPANY (OVERSEAS) LTD. 15. UG/T/ 2008/30940 TERRASSE AU SOLEIL 21/04/2015 16. UG/T/ 2008/30959 CLOVIREX (and logo) 23/04/2015 17. UG/T/ 2008/30960 CLOVIREX (and logo) 23/04/2015 18. UG/T/ 2008/30968 25/04/2015 19. UG/T/ 2008/30971 GLOW SAFETY MATCHES (and 28/04/2015 logo) 20. UG/T/ 2008/30973 KANE (and logo) 29/04/2015 21. UG/T/ 2008/30985 SONENICRAFT (and logo) 05/05/2015 22. UG/T/ 2008/30986 SONENICRAFT (and logo) 05/05/2015 23. UG/T/ 2008/31049 KPT (and logo) 22/05/2015 24. UG/T/ 2008/31067 OGILVY (and logo) 26/05/2015 25. UG/T/ 2008/31118 IWAY AFRICA (and logo) 13/06/2015 26. UG/T/ 2008/31217 HIKVISION (and logo) 02/07/2015 27. UG/T/ 2008/31222 WEEDER 04/07/2015 28. UG/T/ 2008/31225 THE CHARTERED INSTITUTE 04/07/2015 OF LOGISTICS & TRANSPORT IN UGANDA (and logo) 29. UG/T/ 2008/31226 RIALLI (and logo) 04/07/2015 30. UG/T/ 2008/31229 GENUS (and logo) 08/07/2015 31. UG/T/ 2008/31236 PYNGO 09/07/2015 32. UG/T/ 2008/31239 KULULA WEALTH 11/07/2015 33. UG/T/ 2008/31240 KULULA WEALTH (and logo) 11/07/2015 34. UG/T/ 2008/31241 KULULA WEALTH 11/08/2015 35. UG/T/ 2008/31246 SILVER SPRING (and logo) 15/07/2015 36. UG/T/ 2008/31247 Quick CASH (and logo) 15/07/2015 37. UG/T/ 2008/31248 KRUNCHER (and logo) 16/07/2015 38. UG/T/ 2008/31251 MARSHAL (and logo) 16/07/2015 39. UG/T/ 2008/31259 RECORD TV (and logo) 17/07/2015 40. UG/T/ 2008/31260 DOWN TOWN BAGS 17/07/2015 41. UG/T/ 2008/31285 SAVO 24/07/2015 1 LIST OF EXPIRED TRADEMARKS AS OF 2021 42. UG/T/ 2008/31311 Angel (and logo) 28/07/2015 43. UG/T/ 2008/31319 ALPINE (and logo) 29/07/2015 44. UG/T/ 2008/31377 MULTINET (and logo) 13/08/2015 45. UG/T/ 2008/31378 VOGUE CARACTERE 14/08/2015 46. UG/T/ 2008/31379 HARDWARE WORLD (and logo) 14/08/2015 47. UG/T/ 2008/31392 Africana Tea (and logo) 21/08/2015 48. UG/T/ 2008/31393 CHAI KIKUMI (and logo) 21/08/2015 49. UG/T/ 2008/31394 UGANDA Safari Tea (and logo) 21/08/2015 50. UG/T/ 2008/31395 UGANDA Safari Tea (and logo) 21/08/2015 51. UG/T/ 2007/29695 BIDDY'S (and logo) 20/03/2014 52. UG/T/ 2006/29142 Stoli Blueberi (and logo) 11/09/2013 53. UG/T/ 2003/25901 VASELINE (and logo) 15/07/2010 54. UG/T/ 2003/25904 MUSAWO 15/07/2011 55. UG/T/ 2003/25917 YOGUS 18/07/2017 56. UG/T/ 2003/25482 TMT (and logo) 22/01/2020 57. UG/T/ 2003/25483 OVIDA (and logo) 22/01/2020 58. UG/T/ 2003/25541 MALLOWS (and logo) 20/02/2020 59. UG/T/ 2003/25542 WONDER BAR 20/02/2020 60. UG/T/ 2003/25543 FIZZ POP 20/02/0020 61. UG/T/ 2003/25554 DELL (and logo) 27/02/2020 62. UG/T/ 2003/25640 TINGLY RED 10/04/2020 63. UG/T/ 2003/25656 AVALIERS (and logo) 17/04/2017 64. UG/T/ 2003/25812 TURTLE WAX (and logo) 01/07/2020 65. UG/T/ 2003/25829 RIDAKE 01/07/2020 66. UG/T/ 2003/25866 KNORR-NAEHRMITTEL 09/07/2020 AKTIENGESELLSCHAFT 67. UG/T/ 2003/25867 KNORR-NAEHRMITTEL 09/07/2020 AKTIENGESELLSCHAFT 68. UG/T/ 2002/25195 Radio SIMBA (and logo) 25/09/2019 69. UG/T/ 2002/24859 REYOUNG (and logo) 15/05/2019 70. UG/T/ 2002/24860 DIAN FOSSEY CONSERVATION 15/05/2019 CENTER 71. UG/T/ 2002/25398 PROFAM (and logo) 04/12/2019 72. UG/T/ 1994/18033 CROQUETTES 12/01/2015 73. UG/T/ 1994/18045 MULTI CHOICE 13/01/2015 KALEIDOSCOPE (and logo) 74. UG/T/ 1994/18046 MULTI CHOICE 13/01/2015 KALEIDOSCOPE (and logo) 75. UG/T/ 1994/19019 HARD ROCK CAFE 19/04/2015 76. UG/T/ 1994/19023 SUNBEAM (and logo) 19/04/2015 77. UG/T/ 1994/19027 SUN MOON STARS 26/04/2015 78. UG/T/ 1994/19028 NESCAFE (and logo) 28/04/2015 79. UG/T/ 1994/19029 NESCAFE (and logo) 28/04/2015 80. UG/T/ 1994/19031 DYAZIDE 03/05/2015 81. UG/T/ 1994/19033 REGGAE (and logo) 05/05/2015 82. UG/T/ 1994/19075 BERLEI 18/05/2015 83. UG/T/ 1994/19076 GOSSARD 18/05/2015 84. UG/T/ 1994/19154 PAUSERA 11/08/2015 2 LIST OF EXPIRED TRADEMARKS AS OF 2021 85. UG/T/ 1994/19155 CASH 16/08/2015 86. UG/T/ 1994/19157 COMBI 17/08/2015 87. UG/T/ 1994/19199 DOUBLE HAPPINESS (and logo) 07/10/2015 88. UG/T/ 1994/19212 YES 11/10/2001 89. UG/T/ 1994/19215 SWING 12/10/2015 90. UG/T/ 1994/19217 EXE (and logo) 17/10/2015 91. UG/T/ 1994/19218 DAEWOO MOTORS CO. LTD 19/10/2015 92. UG/T/ 1994/19295 VAN RAALTE 30/12/2016 93. UG/T/ 1994/19296 BLACK RADIANCE 30/12/2015 94. UG/T/ 1995/19301 SENTRACHEM 04/01/2016 95. UG/T/ 1995/19302 SENTRACHEM 04/01/2016 96. UG/T/ 1995/19310 ADVANCE 13/01/2016 97. UG/T/ 1995/19314 DUCADOS 18/01/2016 98. UG/T/ 1995/19322 Act-HIB 25/01/2016 99. UG/T/ 1995/19324 K.T.V (and logo) 30/12/2016 100. UG/T/ 1995/19325 K.T.V (and logo) 30/01/2016 101. UG/T/ 1995/19326 K.T.V (and logo) 30/01/2016 102. UG/T/ 1995/19327 K.T.V (and logo) 30/01/2016 103. UG/T/ 1995/19328 M-NET (and logo) 30/01/2016 104. UG/T/ 1995/19329 M-NET (and logo) 30/01/2016 105. UG/T/ 1995/19330 M-NET (and logo) 30/01/2016 106. UG/T/ 1995/19331 M-NET (and logo) 30/01/2016 107. UG/T/ 1995/19399 AIWA (and logo) 15/03/2016 108. UG/T/ 1995/19401 MALLINCKRODT (and logo) 15/03/2016 109. UG/T/ 1995/19403 MALLINCKRODT (and logo) 15/03/2016 110. UG/T/ 1995/19417 FEDEX WORLD (and logo) 30/03/2016 111. UG/T/ 1995/19423 CARAT 13/04/2016 112. UG/T/ 1995/19424 LYNX (and logo) 21/04/2016 113. UG/T/ 1995/19442 WINSTON (and logo) 28/04/2002 114. UG/T/ 1995/19450 LA FACE (and logo) 05/05/2002 115. UG/T/ 1995/19570 FUEL ECONOMY (and logo) 13/09/2016 116. UG/T/ 1995/19578 TRIQUIN 27/09/2016 117. UG/T/ 1995/19579 DYSTAR 27/09/2016 118. UG/T/ 1995/19675 SATO 5S 09/11/2016 119. UG/T/ 1995/19681 CYGNUS 09/11/2016 120. UG/T/ 1995/19683 BIOSTAR 09/11/2016 121. UG/T/ 1995/19686 ICI 14/11/2016 122. UG/T/ 1995/19687 ICI (and logo) 14/11/2016 123. UG/T/ 1995/19697 7UP (and logo) 22/11/2016 124. UG/T/ 1995/19698 7UP (and logo) 22/11/2016 125. UG/T/ 1995/19700 CB (and logo) 23/11/2016 126. UG/T/ 1995/19701 FIRESTONE HP 3000 16/07/2016 127. UG/T/ 1995/19709 DANONE (and logo) 29/11/2016 128. UG/T/ 1996/20177 BMG (and logo) 29/07/2017 129. UG/T/ 1996/20179 BMG (and logo) 29/07/2017 130. UG/T/ 1996/20180 HOECHST MARION ROUSSEL 29/07/2017 3 LIST OF EXPIRED TRADEMARKS AS OF 2021 131. UG/T/ 1996/20206 L&B (and logo) 19/08/2017 132. UG/T/ 1996/20208 GOLDEN VIRGINIA (and logo) 19/08/2017 133. UG/T/ 1996/20219 THE WORLD'S VACATION CLUB 29/08/2017 134. UG/T/ 1996/20220 RESORT CONDOMINIUMS 29/08/2017 INTERNATIONAL 135. UG/T/ 1996/20222 SPACE BANK 29/08/2017 136. UG/T/ 1996/20223 RCI (and logo) 29/08/2017 137. UG/T/ 1996/20231 STYLEFLEX 04/09/2017 138. UG/T/ 1996/20232 PARAWET 04/09/2017 139. UG/T/ 1996/20236 cK (and logo) 04/09/2017 140. UG/T/ 1996/20237 cK (and logo) 04/09/2017 141. UG/T/ 1996/20238 CK (and logo) 04/09/2017 142. UG/T/ 1996/20239 CK (and logo) 04/09/2017 143. UG/T/ 1996/20240 CK (and logo) 04/09/2003 144.
Recommended publications
  • Texting on a Smartwatch Versus a Smartphone: a Comparison of Their Effects on Driving Performance
    TEXTING ON A SMARTWATCH VERSUS A SMARTPHONE: A COMPARISON OF THEIR EFFECTS ON DRIVING PERFORMANCE A Dissertation by Joel Persinger Master of Arts, Wichita State University, 2014 Bachelor of Science, Eastern Kentucky University, 2005 Submitted to the Department of Psychology and the faculty of the Graduate School of Wichita State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy December 2017 ©Copyright 2017 by Joel A. Persinger All Rights Reserved TEXTING ON A SMARTWATCH VERSUS A SMARTPHONE: A COMPARISON OF THEIR EFFECTS ON DRIVING PERFORMANCE The following faculty members have examined the final copy of this dissertation for form and content, and recommend that it be accepted in partial fulfillment of the requirement for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, with a major in Psychology. _____________________________________________ Rui Ni, Committee Chair _____________________________________________ Alex Chaparro, Committee Member _____________________________________________ Barbara Chaparro, Committee Member _____________________________________________ Jibo He, Committee Member _____________________________________________ Jeremy Patterson, Committee Member Accepted for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences _______________________________________________ Ron Matson, Dean Accepted for the Graduate School _______________________________________________ Dennis Livesay, Dean iii DEDICATION To my beautiful wife, who has pushed me to go further than I ever thought I could. She has truly carried me though graduate school with love and encouragement. iv ABSTRACT The National Safety Council reports that 6 percent or more car crashes involved text messaging from a smartphone. In addition, many studies have found that cell phone while driving increases crash risk by 2.8–5 times (Klauer et al. 2006; Redelmeier and Tibshirani 1997; Violanti 1998; Violanti and Marshall 1996).
    [Show full text]
  • Luxury Brands Expansion in China
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Göteborgs universitets publikationer - e-publicering och e-arkiv Luxury brand’s expansion in China - Opportunities and possible strategies Bachelor thesis in International Business Spring 2011 Author: Dang, Xi-Er 890324-5085 Wan, Jessica 880226-4369 Tutor: Harald Dolles Acknowledgement This bachelor thesis has been written at the department International Business at the School of Business, Economics and Law at the University of Gothenburg. In the time frame of ten weeks, we have gained great knowledge about the luxury industry in general and luxury brands operating in China, in particular. Additionally, we have acquired a deeper understanding on how to conduct an academic research. We would like to thank our tutor Harald Dolles who has been of great help with assistance and guidance along the construction of our thesis. School of Business, Economics and Law, June 2011 ____________________________ ______________________________ Jessica Wan Xi-Er Dang 2 Abstract Since the economic reform of China in 1978, the country has been under a process of industrialization and modernization. The average household income has risen, where the proportion of middle-class households, earning more than RMB 3 500 per month, has increased. In addition, there is a great share of the „China elite‟, which consists of the upper middle-class and the very wealthy. Due to China‟s enormous market of 1.3 billion people and the growth of wealthier households, the country has become the largest market for luxury. Many luxury brands are established in the market today, some with a greater presence, others more limited.
    [Show full text]
  • Tobacco Labelling -.:: GEOCITIES.Ws
    Council Directive 89/622/EC concerning the labelling of tobacco products, as amended TAR AND NICOTINE CONTENTS OF THE CIGARETTES SOLD ON THE EUROPEAN MARKET AUSTRIA Brand Tar Yield Nicotine Yield Mg. Mg. List 1 A3 14.0 0.8 A3 Filter 11.0 0.6 Belvedere 11.0 0.8 Camel Filters 14.0 1.1 Camel Filters 100 13.0 1.1 Camel Lights 8.0 0.7 Casablanca 6.0 0.6 Casablanca Ultra 2.0 0.2 Corso 4.0 0.4 Da Capo 9.0 0.4 Dames 9.0 0.6 Dames Filter Box 9.0 0.6 Ernte 23 13.0 0.8 Falk 5.0 0.4 Flirt 14.0 0.9 Flirt Filter 11.0 0.6 Golden Smart 12.0 0.8 HB 13.0 0.9 HB 100 14.0 1.0 Hobby 11.0 0.8 Hobby Box 11.0 0.8 Hobby Extra 11.0 0.8 Johnny Filter 11.0 0.9 Jonny 14.0 1.0 Kent 10.0 0.8 Kim 8.0 0.6 Kim Superlights 4.0 0.4 Lord Extra 8.0 0.6 Lucky Strike 13.0 1.0 Lucky Strike Lights 9.0 0.7 Marlboro 13.0 0.9 Marlboro 100 14.0 1.0 Marlboro Lights 7.0 0.6 Malboro Medium 9.0 0.7 Maverick 11.0 0.8 Memphis Classic 11.0 0.8 Memphis Blue 12.0 0.8 Memphis International 13.0 1.0 Memphis International 100 14.0 1.0 Memphis Lights 7.0 0.6 Memphis Lights 100 9.0 0.7 Memphis Medium 9.0 0.6 Memphis Menthol 7.0 0.5 Men 11.0 0.9 Men Light 5.0 0.5 Milde Sorte 8.0 0.5 Milde Sorte 1 1.0 0.1 Milde Sorte 100 9.0 0.5 Milde Sorte Super 6.0 0.3 Milde Sorte Ultra 4.0 0.4 Parisienne Mild 8.0 0.7 Parisienne Super 11.0 0.9 Peter Stuyvesant 12.0 0.8 Philip Morris Super Lights 4.0 0.4 Ronson 13.0 1.1 Smart Export 10.0 0.8 Treff 14.0 0.9 Trend 5.0 0.2 Trussardi Light 100 6.0 0.5 United E 12.0 0.9 Winston 13.0 0.9 York 9.0 0.7 List 2 Auslese de luxe 1.0 0.1 Benson & Hedges 12.0 1.0 Camel 15.0 1.0
    [Show full text]
  • Supplementary Table 10.7
    Factory-made cigarettes and roll-your-own tobacco products available for sale in January 2019 at major Australian retailers1 Market Pack Number of Year Tobacco Company segment2 Brand size3 variants Variant name(s) Cigarette type introduced4 British American Super-value Rothmans5 20 3 Blue, Gold, Red Regular 2015 Tobacco Australia FMCs 23 2 Blue, Gold Regular 2018 25 5 Blue, Gold, Red, Silver, Menthol Green Regular 2014 30 3 Blue, Gold, Red Regular 2016 40 6 Blue, Gold, Red, Silver, Menthol Green, Black6 Regular 2014 50 5 Blue, Gold, Red, Silver, Menthol Green Regular 2016 Rothmans Cool Crush 20 3 Blue, Gold, Red Flavour capsule 2017 Rothmans Superkings 20 3 Blue, Red, Menthol Green Extra-long sticks 2015 ShuangXi7 20 2 Original Red, Blue8 Regular Pre-2012 Value FMCs Holiday 20 3 Blue, Gold, Red Regular 20189 22 5 Blue, Gold, Red, Grey, Sea Green Regular Pre-2012 50 5 Blue, Gold, Red, Grey, Sea Green Regular Pre-2012 Pall Mall 20 4 Rich Blue, Ultimate Purple, Black10, Amber Regular Pre-2012 40 3 Rich Blue, Ultimate Purple, Black11 Regular Pre-2012 Pall Mall Slims 23 5 Blue, Amber, Silver, Purple, Menthol Short, slim sticks Pre-2012 Mainstream Winfield 20 6 Blue, Gold, Sky Blue, Red, Grey, White Regular Pre-2012 FMCs 25 6 Blue, Gold, Sky Blue, Red, Grey, White Regular Pre-2012 30 5 Blue, Gold, Sky Blue, Red, Grey Regular 2014 40 3 Blue, Gold, Menthol Fresh Regular 2017 Winfield Jets 23 2 Blue, Gold Slim sticks 2014 Winfield Optimum 23 1 Wild Mist Charcoal filter 2018 25 3 Gold, Night, Sky Charcoal filter Pre-2012 Winfield Optimum Crush 20
    [Show full text]
  • Rurality, Class, Aspiration and the Emergence of the New Squirearchy
    Rurality, Class, Aspiration and the Emergence of the New Squirearchy Jesse Heley Submission for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Institute of Geography & Earth Sciences, Aberystwyth University 25th May 2008 For Ted, Sefton and the Wye Valley Contents 1 The coming of the New Squirearchy 1 1.1. The rebirth of rural Britain and the emergence of a New Squirearchy 2 1.2. Beyond the gravelled driveway 9 1.3. At play; beyond play? 15 1.4. From squirearchy to New Squirearchy; a reflection of changing class politics 25 1.5. Research goals 33 2 Class, identity and gentryfication 37 2.1. The New Squirearchy and the new middle class 37 2.2. A third way; through cultural capital to performing identity 43 2.3. Embodied rural geographies 48 2.4. Everyday performances and rural competencies 61 2.5. Tracking rural identity and accounting for experience 66 3 As I rode out … 75 3.1. Ethnography and rural geography 75 3.2. Eamesworth and the irony of a New Squirearchy 80 3.3. The coming of the commuter 84 3.4. On being a local lad 88 3.5. Gathering and interpreting evidence 91 3.6. The mechanics of data collection 94 3.7. The ethics of squire chasing 97 4 Out of the Alehouse 105 4.1. The pub, the squirearchy and the rural idyll 105 4.2. The Six Tuns 107 4.3. Office politics 110 4.4. Pass the port; the role of alcohol 113 4.5. Masculinity 115 4.6. New Squires; or archetypal middle class pub dwellers 119 4.7.
    [Show full text]
  • Current Status of the Reduced Propensity Ignition Cigarette Program in Hawaii
    Hawaii State Fire Council Current Status of the Reduced Propensity Ignition Cigarette Program in Hawaii Submitted to The Twenty-Eighth State Legislature Regular Session June 2015 2014 Reduced Ignition Propensity Cigarette Report to the Hawaii State Legislature Table of Contents Executive Summary .…………………………………………………………………….... 4 Purpose ..………………………………………………………………………....................4 Mission of the State Fire Council………………………………………………………......4 Smoking-Material Fire Facts……………………………………………………….............5 Reduced Ignition Propensity Cigarettes (RIPC) Defined……………………………......6 RIPC Regulatory History…………………………………………………………………….7 RIPC Review for Hawaii…………………………………………………………………….9 RIPC Accomplishments in Hawaii (January 1 to June 30, 2014)……………………..10 RIPC Future Considerations……………………………………………………………....14 Conclusion………………………………………………………………………….............15 Bibliography…………………………………………………………………………………17 Appendices Appendix A: All Cigarette Fires (State of Hawaii) with Property and Contents Loss Related to Cigarettes 2003 to 2013………………………………………………………18 Appendix B: Building Fires Caused by Cigarettes (State of Hawaii) with Property and Contents Loss 2003 to 2013………………………………………………………………19 Appendix C: Cigarette Related Building Fires 2003 to 2013…………………………..20 Appendix D: Injuries/Fatalities Due To Cigarette Fire 2003 to 2013 ………………....21 Appendix E: HRS 132C……………………………………………………………...........22 Appendix F: Estimated RIPC Budget 2014-2016………………………………...........32 Appendix G: List of RIPC Brands Being Sold in Hawaii………………………………..33 2 2014
    [Show full text]
  • 1 CO-OPERATION AGREEMENT Dated As of 27 September 2010
    CO-OPERATION AGREEMENT dated as of 27 September 2010 among IMPERIAL TOBACCO LIMITED AND THE EUROPEAN UNION REPRESENTED BY THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION AND EACH MEMBER STATE LISTED ON THE SIGNATURE PAGES HERETO 1 ARTICLE 1 DEFINITIONS Section 1.1. Definitions........................................................................................... 7 ARTICLE 2 ITL’S SALES AND DISTRIBUTION COMPLIANCE PRACTICES Section 2.1. ITL Policies and Code of Conduct.................................................... 12 Section 2.2. Certification of Compliance.............................................................. 12 Section 2.3 Acquisition of Other Tobacco Companies and New Manufacturing Facilities. .......................................................................................... 14 Section 2.4 Subsequent changes to Affiliates of ITL............................................ 14 ARTICLE 3 ANTI-CONTRABAND AND ANTI-COUNTERFEIT INITIATIVES Section 3.1. Anti-Contraband and Anti-Counterfeit Initiatives............................ 14 Section 3.2. Support for Anti-Contraband and Anti-Counterfeit Initiatives......... 14 ARTICLE 4 PAYMENTS TO SUPPORT THE ANTI-CONTRABAND AND ANTI-COUNTERFEIT COOPERATION ARTICLE 5 NOTIFICATION AND INSPECTION OF CONTRABAND AND COUNTERFEIT SEIZURES Section 5.1. Notice of Seizure. .............................................................................. 15 Section 5.2. Inspection of Seizures. ...................................................................... 16 Section 5.3. Determination of Seizures................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Bradford & Bingley V Rashid
    HOUSE OF LORDS SESSION 2005–06 [2006] UKHL 37 on appeal from [2005] EWCA Civ 1080 OPINIONS OF THE LORDS OF APPEAL FOR JUDGMENT IN THE CAUSE Bradford & Bingley plc (Appellants) v. Rashid (FC) (Respondent) Appellate Committee Lord Hoffmann Lord Hope of Craighead Lord Walker of Gestingthorpe Lord Brown of Eaton-under-Heywood Lord Mance Counsel Appellants: Respondents: Justin Fenwick QC Christopher Nugee QC Nicole Sandells William Hanbury (Instructed by Addleshaw Goddard) (Instructed by Williscroft & Co) Hearing date: 24 May 2006 ON WEDNESDAY 12 JULY 2006 HOUSE OF LORDS OPINIONS OF THE LORDS OF APPEAL FOR JUDGMENT IN THE CAUSE Bradford & Bingley plc (Appellants) v. Rashid (FC) (Respondent) [2006] UKHL 37 LORD HOFFMANN My Lords, 1. The chief question is whether a letter containing an acknowledgement of a debt for the purposes of section 29(5) of the Limitation Act 1980 is inadmissible on the ground that the letter formed part of a negotiation with a view to the creditor giving the debtor time to pay or accepting a lesser amount. In common with all of your Lordships, I consider that the letter was admissible. But there is some difference of opinion over the reasons and I must therefore state my own. There is also a subsidiary question as to whether the letters contained acknowledgements within the meaning of the Act. They are set out in the speech to be delivered by my noble and learned friend Lord Brown of Eaton-under-Heywood and I agree with him and my noble and learned friend Lord Hope of Craighead that references in the letter of 26 September 2001 to an “outstanding balance” and in the letter of 4 October 2001 to an “outstanding amount” are plain acknowledgements of the existence of a debt.
    [Show full text]
  • Securing and Managing Wearables in the Enterprise
    White Paper: Securing and Managing Wearables in the Enterprise Streamline deployment and protect smartwatch data with Samsung Knox Configure White Paper: Securing and Managing Wearables in the Enterprise 2 Introduction: Smartwatches in the Enterprise As the wearable device market heats up, wrist-worn devices Industries as varied as healthcare, such as smartwatches are leading the pack. According to CCS Insight, forecasts for global sales of smart wearable devices finance, energy, transportation, will grow strongly over the next five years, with the global public safety, retail and hospitality market reaching nearly $30 billion by 2023.1 are deploying smartwatches for While smartwatches for fitness and activity tracking are popular, consumer demand is only part of the equation. added business value. Enterprises are also seeing business value in wearable devices. In a report by Robert Half Technology, 81 percent of CIOs surveyed expect wearable devices like smartwatches to Samsung has been working to address these concerns and become common tools in the workplace.2 has developed the tools to make its Galaxy and Galaxy Active smartwatches customizable, easily manageable and highly secure for enterprise users. This white paper will look at how these tools address key wearable security and manageability challenges, as well as considerations for smartwatch 81% deployments. of CIOs surveyed expect wearable devices like smartwatches to become common tools in the workplace. Industries as varied as healthcare, finance, energy, transportation, public safety, retail and hospitality are deploying smartwatches for added business value, such as hands-free communication for maintenance workers, task management, as well as physical monitoring of field workers in dangerous or remote locations.
    [Show full text]
  • Apple and Nokia: the Transformation from Products to Services
    9 Apple and Nokia: The Transformation from Products to Services In the mid- to late 2000s, Nokia flourished as the world’s dominant mobile phone – and mobile phone operating software – producer. Founded in 1871 originally as a rubber boots manufacturer, by 2007 Nokia produced more than half of all mobile phones sold on the planet, and its Symbian mobile operating system commanded a 65.6 percent global market share. 1 But within half a decade, Nokia would falter and be surpassed in the smartphone market not only by Apple’s revolu- tionary iPhone but also by competitors including Google and Samsung. And in September 2013, Nokia would sell its mobile phone business to Microsoft for $7 billion. 2 Apple literally came out of nowhere – it sold exactly zero mobile phones before the year 2007 (the year Nokia held more than half of the global market share) – but by the first quarter of 2013, Apple had captured almost 40 percent of the US smartphone market and over 50 percent of the operating profit in the global handset industry.3 In fiscal year 2013, Apple would sell five times more smart- phones than Nokia: 150 million iPhones compared to Nokia’s sales of 30 million Lumia Windows phones. 4 In contrast to Nokia, Apple real- ized it wasn’t just about the mobile device itself, it was about leveraging software to create a platform for developing compelling mobile experi- ences – including not just telephony but also music, movies, applica- tions, and computing – and then building a business model that allows partners to make money alongside the company (e.g., Apple’s iTunes and AppStore) and, in so doing, perpetuate a virtuous cycle of making the iPhone attractive to customers over multiple life cycles through ever-ex- panding feature sets.
    [Show full text]
  • UI Design for Wearable Devices
    FACULTY OF ENGINEERING UNIVERSITY OF PORTO UI Design for Wearable Devices Vitor Mota Master in Informatics and Computing Engineering Supervised by: Miguel Pimenta Monteiro (Assistant professor) Pedro Rocha (GlinttHS) January 2015 2 Abstract Smartwatches have been around for some time now (Ranger 2015), but 2015 is the year this wearable technology will finally get its boom in terms of popularity and growth. Technology giants like Apple, Google and Samsung are betting on their own-line of products such as the Apple Watch, Android Wear and Gear respectively (Apple Inc 2015a; Google Inc 2015b; SAMSUNG 2015). All of these devices are computation capable electronics with very small touch capacitive screens, limited number of hardware buttons with varying screen sizes and even shapes. Our research focused mainly on these constraints and how to successfully develop user friendly GUI’s for such small screens. The goal was to develop a model with guidelines to help developers provide easy to use and user friendly applications at a visual and interaction level to end users. To successfully achieve this, we first took a deep look at the available technology within these devices, including the framework each of the major platforms provide and the underlying hardware capabilities such as sensors like GPS, gyroscope, the use of the touch screen or microphone for user input and whether the shape of the device (round or squared) can have different effects on the design and usability. We also analyzed the impact of placement and arrangement of interface components having in mind that this technology, since it is a wearable watch, can be worn on both wrists and therefore will be used with only one hand that may obscure a different portion of the interface depending on which wrist the user uses it (Chandra and Raghunath 2000).
    [Show full text]
  • Characterizing Smartwatch Usage in the Wild
    Characterizing Smartwatch Usage In The Wild Xing Liu1 Tianyu Chen1 Feng Qian1 Zhixiu Guo23 Felix Xiaozhu Lin4 Xiaofeng Wang1 Kai Chen25 1Indiana University Bloomington 2SKLOIS, Institute of Information Engineering, Chinese Academy of Sciences 3Beijing Jiaotong University 4Purdue ECE 5School of Cyber Security, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences ABSTRACT participants, we conduct an in-depth characterization of three key Smartwatch has become one of the most popular wearable aspects of smartwatch usage “in the wild”: usage patterns, energy computers on the market. We conduct an IRB-approved consumption, and network traffic characteristics. This is to our measurement study involving 27 Android smartwatch users. Using knowledge the most comprehensive and in-depth crowd-sourced a 106-day dataset collected from our participants, we perform in- study of smartwatches. Our key measurement results consist of depth characterization of three key aspects of smartwatch usage “in the following. the wild”: usage patterns, energy consumption, and network traffic. • We characterize the smartwatch usage patterns. An Android Based on our findings, we identify key aspects of the smartwatch watch can stay in one of the four states with diverse power ecosystem that can be further improved, propose recommendations, characteristics: fully awake, dozing (with dimmed watch face and point out future research directions. display and restricted system activity), sleeping (screen further turned off), and charging. We find that smartwatch’s wake-up CCS Concepts period accounts for only 2% of the overall usage period among • → the four states. The wake-up sessions are not only short, but Human-centered computing Ubiquitous and mobile also frequent (72 times per day on average).
    [Show full text]