The federal government has adopted a draft law to modernise design rights. The Ministry of Justice announced on Wednesday that the design law should be brought... https://news.osna.fm/?p=36801 | #news #anticounterfeiting #design #digital #embrace
Germany Modernizes Design Law to Embrace Digital Innovation and Strengthen Anti‑Counterfeiting Protections - Osna.FM

Discover how Germany's new draft law modernizes design protection, streamlining rights and boosting innovation for creators and businesses.

Osna.FM
Q: Are you aware of any anti-counterfeiting measures in scanners in general or Brother scanners in particular which would cause them to refuse to scan checks?
Read on for additional info.
UPDATE: @ireneista figured it out. See https://adhd.irenes.space/@ireneista/statuses/01KD6R8ZKBJ24YJ2YPZQA4MHHM in the replies.
#infosec #anticounterfeiting #Brother #scanner (1/6)
Temu joins trademark association to strengthen IP protection: Chinese e-commerce platform becomes INTA corporate member and serves on Anti-Counterfeiting Committee starting July 2025. https://ppc.land/temu-joins-trademark-association-to-strengthen-ip-protection/ #Temu #IPProtection #Ecommerce #INTA #AntiCounterfeiting
Temu joins trademark association to strengthen IP protection

Chinese e-commerce platform becomes INTA corporate member and serves on Anti-Counterfeiting Committee starting July 2025.

PPC Land

Self-Assembly of Ag Nanoparticles Using Eu(III) Complexes for Anticounterfeiting

Composite materials with unique optical properties can be used for high-information-density anti-counterfeiting labels

https://www.chemistryviews.org/self-assembly-of-ag-nanoparticles-using-euiii-complexes-for-anticounterfeiting/

#anticounterfeiting #nanotech #chemistry #chemistryviews #chemviews

Self-Assembly of Ag Nanoparticles Using Eu(III) Complexes for Anticounterfeiting - ChemistryViews

Composite materials with unique optical properties can be used for high-information-density anti-counterfeiting labels

ChemistryViews

Japan is set to release new banknotes featuring prominent historical figures: Eiichi Shibusawa, Umeko Tsuda, and Shibasaburo Kitasato. These new designs symbolize advances in anti-counterfeiting technology, economic strategy, and social values. The Bank of Japan oversees this significant update. #JapaneseCurrency #NewYenBanknotes #EconomicStrategy #SocialValues #AntiCounterfeiting

https://joelhu.medium.com/the-launch-of-new-japanese-banknotes-a-blend-of-innovation-security-and-cultural-heritage-099638794409?sk=7b8c62c750f40f8c93c4e43acd19c088

The Launch of New Japanese Banknotes: A Blend of Innovation, Security, and Cultural Heritage

The Launch of New Japanese Banknotes: A Blend of Innovation, Security, and Cultural Heritage. On the cusp of a significant milestone, Japan is set to release its newly designed banknotes, featuring denominations of 10,000 yen, 5,000….

Medium

📣 There’s still time to register for the 2022 #EuropolIPConf in Rome!

Hosted in partnership with @IACC_GetReal & @GDF, this event explores #anticounterfeiting & #antipiracy enforcement in times of crises.

Event details & registration information here ⤵️
https://www.europol.europa.eu/publications-events/events/2022-europol-intellectual-property-crime-conference-%E2%80%93-rome-italy

🐦🔗: https://nitter.eu/Europol/status/1567804296858574848

2022 Europol Intellectual Property Crime Conference – Rome, Italy | Europol

Europol's Intellectual Property Crime Coordinated Coalition (IPC3) is pleased to announce the 2022 Europol Intellectual Property Crime Conference, organised in partnership with the International AntiCounterfeiting Coalition (IACC) and Guardia di Finanza. The Conference will be held on 27-28 October 2022, at the A.Roma Lifestyle Hotel in Rome, Italy. This 4th in-person edition of the conference will be the first opportunity...

Europol

📢 Save the date for Europol's #IPCrimeConf, organised with @IACC_GetReal & @GDF.

Experts from law enforcement, academia & the private sector will examine #anticounterfeiting enforcement challenges in times of crisis.

Details:
📅 27-28 October
📍 Rome
🔗 http://ow.ly/iiVI50Jsyen

🐦🔗: https://nitter.eu/Europol/status/1534550869756321795

2022 Europol Intellectual Property Crime Conference – Rome, Italy | Europol

Europol's Intellectual Property Crime Coordinated Coalition (IPC3) is pleased to announce the 2022 Europol Intellectual Property Crime Conference, organised in partnership with the International AntiCounterfeiting Coalition (IACC) and Guardia di Finanza. The Conference will be held on 27-28 October 2022, at the A.Roma Lifestyle Hotel in Rome, Italy. This 4th in-person edition of the conference will be the first opportunity...

Europol

RT @Europol: 📢 Save the date for Europol's #IPCrimeConf, organised with @IACC_GetReal & @GDF.

Experts from law enforcement, academia & the private sector will examine #anticounterfeiting enforcement challenges in times of crisis.

Details:
📅 27-28 October
📍 Rome
🔗 https://ow.ly/iiVI50Jsyen

🐦🔗: https://nitter.eu/EUHomeAffairs/status/1534551022437289986

Hackaday Links: March 27, 2022

Remember that time back in 2021 when a huge container ship blocked the Suez Canal and disrupted world shipping for a week? Well, something a little like that is playing out again, this time in the Chesapeake Bay outside of the Port of Baltimore, where the MV Ever Forward ran aground over a week ago as it was headed out to sea. Luckily, the mammoth container ship isn't in quite as narrow a space as her canal-occluding sister ship Ever Given was last year, so traffic isn't nearly as impacted. But the recovery operation is causing a stir, and refloating a ship that was drawing 13 meters when it strayed from the shipping channel into a muddy-bottomed area that's only about 6 meters deep is going to be quite a feat of marine engineering. Merchant Marine YouTuber Chief MAKOi has a good rundown of what's going on, and what will be required to get the ship moving again.

With the pace of deep-space exploration increasing dramatically of late, and with a full slate of missions planned for the future, it was good news to hear that NASA added another antenna to its Deep Space Network. The huge dish antenna, dubbed DSS-53, is the fourteenth dish in the DSN network, which spans three sites: Goldstone in California; outside of Canberra in Australia; and in Madrid, where the new dish was installed. The 34-meter dish will add 8% more capacity to the network; that may not sound like much, but with the DSN currently supporting 40 missions and with close to that number of missions planned, every little bit counts. We find the DSN fascinating, enough so that we did an article on the system a few years ago. We also love the insider's scoop on DSN operations that @Richard Stephenson, one of the Canberra operators, provides.

Does anybody know what's up with Benchy? We got a tip the other day that the trusty benchmarking tugboat model has gone missing from several sites. It sure looks like Sketchfab and Thingiverse have deleted their Benchy files, while other sites still seem to allow access. We poked around a bit but couldn't get a clear picture of what's going on, if anything. If anyone has information, let us know in the comments. We sure hope this isn't some kind of intellectual property thing, where you're going to have to cough up money to print a Benchy.

Speaking of IP protections, if you've ever wondered how far a company will go to enforce its position, look no further than Andrew Zonenberg's "teardown" of an anti-counterfeiting label that Hewlett Packard uses on their ink cartridges. There's a dizzying array of technologies embedded inside what appears to be a simple label. In addition to the standard stuff, like the little cuts that make it difficult to peel a tag off one item and place it on another -- commonly used to thwart "price swapping" retail thefts -- there's an almost holographic area of the label. Zooming in with a microscope, the color-shifting image appears to be made from tiny hexagonal cells that almost look like the pixels in an e-ink display. Zooming in even further, the pixels offer an even bigger (smaller) surprise. Take a look, and marvel at the effort involved in making sure you pay top dollar for printer ink.

And finally, we got a tip a couple of weeks ago on a video about jerry cans. If that sounds boring, stop reading right now -- this one won't reach you. But if you're even marginally interested in engineering design and military history, make sure you watch this video. What is now known to the US military as "Can, Gasoline, Military 5-Gallon (S/S by MIL-C-53109)" and colloquially known as the NATO jerry can, started life as the Wehrmacht-Einheitskanister , a 20-liter jug whose design addresses a long list of specifications, from the amount of liquid it could contain to how the cans would be carried. The original could serve as a master class in good design, and some of the jugs that were built in the 1940s are still in service and actively sought by collectors of militaria. Cheap knockoffs are out there, of course, but after watching this video, we've developed a taste for jerry cans that only the original will sate.

#hackadaycolumns #hackadaylinks #slider #anticounterfeiting #baltimore #benchy #canberra #deepspacenetwork #dsn #everforward #evergiven #hp #ip #jerrycan #madrid #shipping

Hackaday Links: March 27, 2022

Remember that time back in 2021 when a huge container ship blocked the Suez Canal and disrupted world shipping for a week? Well, something a little like that is playing out again, this time in the …

Hackaday